Dear All
If Coronavirus has taught us one thing politically, it is
that the EU has been ineffective as an entity and that member states have had
to go it alone. Coronavirus has served one purpose, it exposed the EU project
as fundamentally broken, too slow to react and too big to manage. Brexit has
taught those who run the EU nothing in my opinion, they still cling to a
furlong hope that even if they can’t get the UK back, they can put in measures
to fleece us financially. The negotiations have been long, tedious, lacking in
goodwill and so far unproductive. As a Brexiteer, I consider that campaign I
fought in 2016 as rather special because in essence, it was a fight about
sovereignty being restored. The idea of ‘Brexit’ isn’t just a British idea,
likeminded people in other European countries have begun to recognise as we
did; the EU doesn’t work on behalf of the people.
This begs the question, who does the EU ‘work’ for if not
the people of member states?
The short answer is big business, huge corporations and
their various offshoots, EU rights such as employment rights can simply be
swept away from people, as seen in the ‘Viking Case’. Once you look passed the
window dressing of ‘EU rights’, you see that in the UK ,
our UK
rights in many cases surpass the EU. Check it out online and be made aware of
what Remainers, the pro EU lobby in the UK are trying to do to deceive you.
Their latest pitch is ‘freedom of movement’ and how wonderful it is, but ask
yourself this, how many people in the UK travel to Europe to work and back?
Very few!
The fight about ‘freedom of movement’ is not about free
movement, it is about residency, what ‘freedom of movement’ does is over
saturation of the jobs market. Ask yourself this, if you were applying for a
job which would you prefer, applying against five other people or applying
against five hundred people? What about other areas such as housing, same
thing, applying against five other people or applying against five hundred
people? You see, what working class people know is that ‘freedom of movement’
doesn’t help them, it hinders their life chances right across the social
sphere. If life chances are being hindered in the UK , it is logical to assume that
this must apply in some degree to other working class people in countries in
the EU block.
The UK
has shown the way in leaving, which has prompted others such as the Italians to
reassess what value EU membership has for them. The Italians are losing faith
in the EU; they like the UK
are travelling the same journey. When Covid-19 came to Europe it was Italy that was
hit first and hit really hard, the virus spread rapidly and death toll in some
parts seemed to be like a set of a horror movie. Italians weren’t slow to
recognise as the virus ravished the nation that little help came from its
European neighbours in those first weeks in February and March. Neighbours
weren’t helping and the EU was ineffective and if we are being blunt negligent.
Italians were left to fight the battle as hospitals in the north were
overwhelmed.
Coronavirus just didn’t kill the people which were bad
enough, it also killed the economy stone dead; everything had to close down bar
essential services and food distribution. Italy is a beautiful country; you
could list many places of interest, it is a country that is steep in history
which has been part of many world events. But Italy
has a problem, it isn’t Germany ,
its economy is different, so even before the virus hit, Italy like many countries in Southern
Europe was struggling. The economies of southern Europe don’t fare
well because of Euro; Greece
is a model of how the EU has utterly failed to protect a member state. In
trouble, the Greeks were given loans which failed to turn it around, and
importantly destroyed democracy. Powers that the Greeks should have kept were
handed over to the EU on important decisions like setting a budget.
"I have changed my mind a little on Europe .
We are facing an absolute emergency, and seeing countries turning their backs
on each other is really awkward."
Marco is currently receiving nine weeks' redundancy pay from
the government at 80% of his normal salary. He needs to sell houses, and he
can’t do that if people have no jobs and the economy is depressed. How long
will he be unemployed? How many more thousands of Italians will join him?
A problem which most people don’t talk about is the myth of
continual growth. Continual growth is an illusion sold to people by
politicians. Just as history teaches us of the rise and fall of an empire, it
also applies to companies. How many businesses have you heard that are doing
out of business, and we aren’t talking maw and pa enterprises, we are talking
brand name companies? Continual growth; and the myth of continual growth
couldn’t save them as they were too big and not enough cash flow reserves to
serve their debts.
According to a survey of 1,000 Italians conducted in April
by Tecné, 42% of respondents said they would leave the EU, up from 26% in
November 2018. People are starting to wake up regarding the EU, the country's
economic output will fall by 8% this year, but right across Europe
others will experience a downturn, but let’s face it that is no comfort to the
Italians. That scale of downturn will bloat Italy 's public debt this year to
the tune of almost 155.7% of GDP. There isn’t enough money being generated to
service debts, and the downward spiral leads to the nightmare of taking EU loans.
Italy
could end up in deep trouble; they want the creation of coronabonds, which
would have been underwritten by all eurozone members to share the burden of
economic recovery.
“Asking for coronabonds was the perfect way to have the door
slammed in his face. Mutualisation of debt is forbidden by EU treaties and Germany 's
constitution. I think Conte used it as a weapon in negotiations."
Italian PM Giuseppe Conte told the BBC that the outbreak
threatened the future of Europe . Now the bad
bit for Italy ,
on 18 March, the European Central Bank launched a €750bn (£660bn; $800bn) bond
purchase programme to help the eurozone's more indebted countries by pushing
down borrowing costs. Two days later, the European Commission announced the
suspension of rules on public deficits, thus allowing countries to inject as
much money as they needed into their economies. Then, on 8 April, the Eurogroup
of eurozone finance ministers agreed on a €540bn rescue plan. It was made up of:
€200bn as a new credit line for companies, provided by the
European Investment Bank
€100bn in loans to support temporary unemployment schemes
€240bn as a credit line provided by the European Stability
Mechanism (ESM) to fund eurozone health systems
This bailout package is to suck weak countries in which is
why the political debate in Italy
has focused mostly on that last part of the package. The unpopular ESM is
an intergovernmental bailout fund. This bailout fund is the mechanism that
provided loans to Greece
and some other EU countries during the financial crisis and dates back to 2012.
You can understand why the Italians are upset; everyone saw how badly the EU
treated Greece
under the guise of ‘help’. One thing which sticks in my mind about the Greek disaster
was the reports of pensioners searching for food in bins, Greece , an EU country, a cradle of
civilisation and some of its people reduced to this.
I remember commenting years ago that this isn’t the European
dream.
Do you know what led to Brexit, it was ordinary people;
millions of people who had enough of the EU, likewise, the movement to leave if
it gets going in Italy will come from ordinary people. They will setup stalls,
print their leaflets and hold rallies. They will be the driving force as it was
in the UK .
It will come from people like Italian Valentina Rosi has recently lost her job and
her faith in the EU. She said:
"Europe is proving
once more to be useless, so we should leave the EU."
When enough Italians see the light, then a political figure
will emerge to spearhead it, and then the real push for a referendum will
start. Already an Italexit campaign ‘No Europe - For Italy’ is being organised
and launches on Thursday with advice from Nigel Farage who was a key player in
Brexit. Gianluigi Paragone, a former senator for the anti-establishment 5Star
Movement, said Italy would
no longer be "blackmailed" by the Brussels bloc. He added:
“This is the way forward: we can no longer be blackmailed by
tax havens that allow themselves to offend the great prestige of Italy . For this
reason, on July 23, at 10 am, in the press room of the Chamber of Deputies, I
will officially launch my party for Italexit, presenting the name and logo.”
Finally, the EU is an organisation which is unwilling to
reform; I labelled it an organisation which is anti country and anti worker. While
it remains unaccountable and divorced from the concerns of ordinary people
dissent and distrust will grow. The loss of a founding member such as Italy is a huge blow, it could be what the
countries in southern Europe need to kick
start their own exit campaigns. I found campaigning against the EU to be rather
easy, because their record is a matter of public record, their failures, their
mindset and their attitude will be their undoing. I hope the Italians find the
courage to have that referendum on EU membership.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
5 comments:
Welcome back George. Other member states must be getting fed up with the EU.
Spot on as usual, George. I see the cultists are demanding that Indyref2 is held, erm, next week followed by immediate return to the EU by January. If Italy does leave the EU then it might finally destroy the political swamp and get us back to a simple trading bloc.
I wonder how Sturgeon will react if Italy does leave the EU. What countries will then follow suit? I'll hazard a guess at Greece, Portugal and Spain. That will cause tension and might have a detrimental impact on the Euro. That will screw Ireland, whose economy is based on housing.
If the EU falls apart it will destroy the current argument for independence, and most especially the currency question, the one that no one in the SNP has been able to answer.
I hope that Italy follows suit and shows Scotland that returning to the EU is a bad idea.
Simple and to the point, no bravehearts swinging claymores [or dangling from bridges for that matter] just FACTS pure and simple.
Read Wings latest article, this time by Kenny MacAskill. Read some of the comments as well; they have a similar theme to the 1930s. Boycott is the buzzword.
A few of them think Scotland is guaranteed EU membership.
George Galloway however is back on the scene. And he is about the only person Salmond worries about. Sturgeon wouldn't last five minutes.
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