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Blair steps up campaign against old Europe
By Chris Marsden and Julie Hyland
22 June 2005
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Prime Minister Tony Blairs speech to Parliament on June
20 made clear that his demand for reform of the Common Agricultural
Policy (CAP) and insistence on keeping Britains European
Union rebate was only a device for pursuing more fundamental economic
and geo-strategic aims.
Having successfully scuppered last weekends EU summit
by insisting that any discussion on reducing Britains rebate
had to be tied to CAP reform, particularly the amount of subsidies
given to France, Blair is now attempting to restore his previously
friendly relations with the eastern European accession countries.
The former Stalinist regimes are considered to be natural allies
of Britains campaign against European political and economic
union under the hegemony of Germany and France. They are viewed
as favourable to the unregulated free-market nostrums championed
by Blair and to his US-oriented foreign policy.
However, the east European states are economically dependent
on EU subsidies in general and have been looking forward to gaining
a greater share of CAP finances under the new budget arrangements.
Though relatively small sums are involved, these are crucial for
states anxious to prop up their ailing economies and pay for restructuring
and infrastructure projects.
Thus, Blair was dismayed at Brussels by the support offered
by Poland and the rest of eastern Europe to French President Jacques
Chirac, despite his previous attacks on them for supporting Washington
over the Iraq war.
In his speech to Westminster, Blair maintained his intransigent
and bellicose tone towards Brussels, while making clear that he
is ready to discuss concessions that will allow the budget to
be passed during Britains up-coming six-month presidency
of the EU. Blair is to make his inaugural speech in this capacity
on June 23.
He told parliament that he had no regrets, and that, without
a commitment to CAP reform, the EU budget was one he simply
could not recommend to this house. He dismissed what he
called the usual cobbled-together compromise over
the budget, but stressed, I understand fully the concerns
of the new European countries. They want an agreement. We will
do our best to secure such an agreement and make sure it is one
that meets their needs.
He even had no objection in principle to Luxembourgs
compromise proposal to freeze Britains rebate at slightly
below its present level for the lifetime of the budget. And under
a new deal it may be the case that Britain would have to pay more.
Blairs readiness to abandon his supposedly intransigent
stance confirms that he knew all along that the rebate was indefensible.
The prime minister had complained that it was unfair that some
40 percent of EU subsidies went towards financing farming, which
represents less than 2 percent of EU output.
His figures are misleading as the EU budget represents just
1 percent of the EUs total GDP, and agriculture is the only
area that has been transferred from the budgets of national governments
to the EU budget. And, far from the EU refusing to tackle agricultural
subsidies, in the last period CAP has been slashed almost in half,
from 70 percent to 40 percent of the budget.
For Chirac to accept further inroads against CAP would have
been tantamount to political suicide. Agricultural subsidies have
long been used to shore up support for the Gaullists and to provide
a social base in the rural bourgeois and petty-bourgeois strata
to counter the pressure from the working class. To agree to a
further reform of this arrangement was not possible
under conditions where Frances ruling political elite have
suffered a major blow with the rejection by the working class
of the proposed EU constitution and its attendant prescriptions
for greater cutbacks in social protections.
Blair is seemingly oblivious to the dangers of provoking a
social explosion in Europe. As far as he is concerned, Chiracs
difficulties, the no vote in the Netherlands and the
losses suffered by Germanys ruling Social Democratic Party
in recent pollsforcing Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
to go for early elections in Septemberare all merely an
opportunity to press ahead with Britains plans for the EU.
This is confirmed by the reaction of Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw and Britains EU commissioner, and one of Blairs
closest allies, Peter Mandelson.
Following the EU summit, Straw said, Out of this sad
day there is an opportunity to reconnect. Divisions within
Europe were essentially between whether you want a European
Union that is able to cope with the future or a European Union
that is trapped in the past.
Writing in the Guardian, Mandelson said that the crisis
could be used to cathartic effect. The EU faced a
stark choice: painful reforms, or economic decline.
The British government is openly basing its prospects for success
on regime change in France and Germany. It hopes for the defeat
of Germanys Social Democrats in Septembers elections
by the right-wing Christian Democratic Union led by Angela Merkel,
who has made favourable statements regarding Blairs economic
policies and his orientation towards Washington.
Similarly, it counts on the possibility that Nicholas Sarkozy
will replace a hamstrung Chirac in 2007. The Gaullist party chief
is noted for his right-wing economic policies and his belief that
the old Franco-German alliance has outlived its usefulness. He
reacted to the failure of the EU summit by stating that there
should be no further EU expansion and that the way forward was
to create a new motor for the building of Europe based
on Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and the Benelux countries.
As Mandelson put it, A new consensus can be found in
Europe. You dont have to know much about the political situation
in France and Germany to realise that. The time is ripe for the
British government to go out on the front foot.
The sharpening of antagonisms between the major European powers
is indicated by the enthusiastic support for Blairs position
from the normally anti-EU Conservative opposition and also from
the pro-European Liberal Democratic Party. Conservative leader
Michael Howard declared that, for once, there were more
aspects that we can agree on than usual, whilst Blairs
parliamentary remarks were cheered by backbench Tories.
Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy insisted that it was
necessary to support the government, adding that whereas the
responsibility is ours to try and build a new consensus ... being
pro-European in no sense excludes being pro the reform of European
institutions for the better.
Most of the British press has welcomed Blairs decision
to appeal to European public opinion over the heads of the leaders
of what is referred to as old Europe, mimicking US
Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfelds pejorative reference
during the Iraq war.
Blair has described his campaign in his usual flowery rhetoric
as an appeal to the Peoples Europe. But he is
only speaking to the right peoplethe representatives of
major business interests in Europe and internationally. He is
seemingly oblivious to the fact that the majority of Europes
population is hostile to his demands for economic restructuring
that they will be forced to pay for through cuts in wages and
vital social services.
The recklessness of his position is emphasised by his indifference
to the very real difficulties confronting his European counterparts
in imposing such measures on a hostile and combative population.
Blairs slash-and-burn policy sets out to destroy a complex
series of postwar social and political arrangements that were
not only about freeing up markets and ensuring the necessary collaboration
between the European powers. They were essential in order to stabilise
the continent in the aftermath of World War II and to head off
the threat of social revolution at a time when the European bourgeoisie
and the profit system itself had been discredited by the horrors
of fascism.
For Blair this is all a thing of the past. A pliant tool of
the financial oligarchy, he is motivated by the most narrow pragmatic
considerationsa desire to utilise his relations with Washington
to bolster British influence in Europe. He has no conception of
the forces his actions threaten to unleash. At the very point
where the European bourgeoisie requires a degree of unity against
their most important enemythe European working classhe
has embarked on a course that threatens the political and social
destabilisation of the continent.
See Also:
Budget conflict splits European Union
[21 June 2005]
Sharp conflicts precede European Union
summit
[16 June 2005]
The political consequences of the French
no vote
[1 June 2005]
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