EU
Cannot Be Serious! The
Truth About Europe Say NO To
Europe And The Euro
EUROPEAN
UNION
A DREAM FOR BRUSSELS BUREAUCRATS
BUT A NIGHTMARE FOR BRITAIN
1.
Why was the European Union formed? [
Index ]
There are so few good arguments for
being in the European Union (EU) today that it is hard to remember
why it started. The two most important reasons belong to the
last century and are now out of date.
First, in 1945 the French wanted to
stop the Germans starting another war in Europe. They thought
they could tie Germany down within a union of all European countries.
Second, the Americans wanted to support a
bloc in Europe against the threat of the Soviet Union. EU believers
still claim that the EU is crucial to keeping peace in Europe.
But wars are not started by democracies. They often begin when
different nations are forced together. Yugoslavia is the latest
of many examples. Even in the UK, the recent troubles in Northern
Ireland are a horrible reminder that living under the same roof
is no guarantee of a happy marriage. To cram the British together
with the French, Germans, Italians, Greeks and Spaniards would
be asking for trouble.
A third reason for the EU was the creation
of the Single Market - the duty free exchange of goods and freedom
of travel across Europe. That was a good idea. But it didn't
- and still doesn't - need to lead to a single government for
all of Europe.
2.
Why did Britain join the EU?
[
Index ]
It was understandable that Britain
wanted to join the Single Market. However, there was no need
to join the EU and Britain made a big mistake in doing so. Most
people thought that the EU was a natural extension of the Single
Market. They did not realise that, as a result, Britain would
lose its sovereignty and independence.
3.
Can Britain veto decisions we don't agree with?
[
Index ]
Britain's right to protect itself has
been steadily eroded. We can still block decisions in a few
areas but even these are under threat. In most cases, Britain
can be outvoted by other EU countries. (1)
The House of Commons is then compelled to put the EU's decision
into law.
It is not just that Britain often loses to
the other EU countries. We also have to fight the bureaucrats
who work for the EU institutions: the Commission, Council, Court
and Parliament. They are committed to building a single government
for Europe, giving them increasing power over us. They approach
every problem with this goal in mind.
4.
Is there any protection for minority interests like the UK under
European law? [
Index ]
The EU does have a special Court to
hear this kind of appeal. Unfortunately, it invariably finds
in favour of the 'ever closer union of the peoples of Europe'
as required by the Treaty, rather than protecting the rights
of individual nations.
Britain has a long history of protecting
the rights of its citizens, going back to Magna Carta in 1215.
But the EU's new Charter of Fundamental Rights will override
all our legislation.
One key element of our tradition is 'Habeas
Corpus'. This means that British people are treated as innocent
until proven guilty. But the EU has an idea called 'Corpus Juris'
which would destroy our traditions. If an EU country wants to
arrest you, our police would have to give you up even without
any evidence.
5. Would
our trade suffer if we left the EU?
[
Index ]
There is no need to worry about future
trade with the EU if we withdraw from it. We buy far more of
their goods than they buy of ours. (2)
If trade stopped altogether, the EU countries would lose far
more than we would.
The Germans will still want to go on selling
to us their Mercedes, BMWs and Volkswagens, the Italians their
Fiats and the French their Renaults, wines and perfumes. We
could easily enter into a Free Trade Agreement with them, because
they would be mad not to. Indeed, the EU has just entered into
a Free Trade Agreement with Mexico, for example, which would
suit Britain very well. Even without negotiating a Free Trade
Agreement, the UK would be better off if we exported to the
Single Market from outside the EU because our contributions
to the EU outweigh our trade advantages by about £2 billion
per annum. (3)

Only about 14 per cent of everything Britain
produces (Gross Domestic Product - GDP) is exported to the EU.
This amount is declining and in deficit. Another 14 per cent
goes to the rest of the world. The remaining 72 per cent of
our GDP is our domestic economy. We should not let the mangy
EU tail go on wagging our healthy UK dog. They need us far more
than we need them. (4)
6. If we
left the EU would we lose out on its aid to the UK?
[
Index ]
Don't fall for that one. We give to the EU
more than we receive. We pay about £11 billion annually to the
EU from which it gives us back about half. (5)
So there really is no such thing as 'EU aid'. We would be far
better spending our money ourselves, without the costly and
corrupt bureaucratic filter of Brussels. The net amount of money
we give them would buy over 50 hospitals every year for example.
Surely this would be a much better way of spending our money?
7.
What do we pay our contribution for?
[
Index ]
Much of it is wasted running the absurdly
over-regulated bureaucracy of the EU. The EU is like a paper-making
factory. The number of regulations, directives and legal acts
issued by the EU has increased more than tenfold since Britain
joined and there are now over 25,000 in force. (6)

The EU spends most effort on the least important
subjects. The Ten Commandments run to 300 words and the American
Declaration of Independence to just under 1330. In contrast,
the EU directive on the export of duck eggs runs to over 26,900
words - a time-consuming bureaucratic blizzard of bumf.
8.
Is it really true that there is a lot of fraud and corruption
in the EU? [
Index ]
The EU Commission has admitted to fraud of
about £500 million a year (7)
, enough to build 5 hospitals a year in Britain. But experts
in the House of Lords think that the true figure is at least
seven times as much. The EU Court of Auditors refused to pass
the EU accounts for several years and every member of the Commission
had to resign in 1999 because of the scandalous record. The
EU's £7 billion annual foreign aid budget is also grossly mismanaged;
much of the money does not arrive at its destination. (8)
9. Have we
benefited from the Common Agricultural Policy?
[
Index ]
The CAP is a complete nonsense. The
EU pays some farmers not to produce food. It pays others to
produce food which is not worth growing. For example, the EU
obliges us to provide only 85 per cent of the milk we need,
while our farmers spray milk onto fields to avoid exceeding
their quota.
The result is that British people pay more
for food than they should. The CAP costs the average UK family
an extra £1000 a year in food costs. We need the CAP like a
hole in the head. (9)
10.
What has happened to our fisheries? [
Index ]
Fishing was the livelihood of thousands
of British workers and indirectly of thousands more. The EU's
Common Fisheries Policy has destroyed most of this. We can no
longer simply catch fish in our waters. Instead, the EU tells
us what we can and cannot catch.
Britain used to own over three quarters of
the fish in EU waters. Now we are allowed to catch only one
third of the EU's fish. (10)
By the end of 2002, all the EU's fishing fleets will be able
to fish in our twelve mile coastal belt.

The Brussels bureaucrats who designed this
absurd policy thought they could conserve fish by limiting the
numbers landed in port. They did not realise that most fish
are dead when they come up in the nets, so millions of tonnes
of fish are thrown back dead into the sea each year in the name
of EU conservation.
11.
Have we benefited from the EU in any other industries that might
compensate for the loss of our fishing waters?
[
Index ]
On the contrary, the cancerous influence
of Brussels has also affected adversely our waste disposal,
beef, herbal medicines, lorries, dairy farmers, whisky distillers,
market gardeners, cheesemakers, paper rounds, boat builders,
hotels, art market, duty free shopping and many other British
interests.
12.
If the EU has its way, will we still have the capacity to wage
war or defend ourselves?
[
Index ]
The current plan is for the EU to have a
force of 60,000 soldiers. It will be used only for humanitarian
purposes. But the long term aim of creating a single European
government means that we can expect demands for a single EU
army. In this event, NATO, which has kept the peace in Europe
for many years, would be severely undermined. The men and women
in our armed forces might be required to fight a war under a
French or German general for a cause in which we do not believe.
We might also find it difficult to help our allies, like America.
13.
Is there another way of continuing trade preferentially with
the Eurozone? [
Index ]
Norway is a successful example of this
approach. They twice voted against joining the EU but are still
members of the European Economic Area and enjoy full tariff-free
access to the Eurozone. Norway's exports to the EU have been
at record levels since then. (11)
Norway enjoys good relationships with the
EU but does not have to contribute to the EU budget and is not
part of Common Agricultural Policy and Common Fisheries Policy.
Clever Norway!

14.
Is the EU working well?
[
Index ]
Far from it. On average there are twice as
many people unemployed in European countries than in the USA.
(12)
Europe is in fact lagging behind America in every respect. It
has more people out of work. Its people earn lower wages and
suffer higher taxes. It is behind in the key industries of the
future such as the internet.

15.
Can Britain go it alone?
[
Index ]
Of course we can. Britain is one of
the world's strongest countries. We have the fourth largest
economy in the world. (13)
The City of London is one of the world's leading financial centres.
We sit on the United Nations Security Council with the world's
other leading countries. We founded the Commonwealth and English
is spoken by over one billion people.
This year Britain has twice been voted the
second best place in the whole world to do business. In a recent
survey by the Economist Intelligence Unit, Britain's prospects
for the next five years were rated second only to the Netherlands.
Germany and France were 10th and 15th respectively. (14)
We lead Europe in the industries of the future,
such as the internet. (15)
Britain has expert knowledge in advanced technology, art, science,
engineering, telecommunications and medicine.
Before too long we would not miss the EU
Single Market. It already costs very little to trade with most
countries around the world. The World Trade Organisation is
aiming to remove the last remaining duties. Trading blocs like
the EU will become a thing of the past. But until then we should
have no difficulty in negotiating a new Free Trade Agreement
with Europe. Because we buy more of their goods than they do
of ours, they would be mad to let us withdraw without one.
On our own we would be free from the crushing
bureaucracy of Brussels and free from having to pay billions
of pounds towards its costs. This money could be far better
spent in our economy.
Britain has had to fight many wars to preserve
the right to govern ourselves. We should not give up our sovereignty
lightly. Our current leaders do not seem to have grasped that
our freedom is at stake. The British people themselves need
to take a stand.

16.
Isn't joining EMU more about trade than politics?
[
Index ]
That is what most politicians tell
you. They say that Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) is only
a commercial project. But in Europe all politicians accept that
it is designed to create a single European government, with
its own foreign and defence policies and its own legal system.
You have only to listen to what some of the key people in the
EU have been saying for years:
A previous President of the EU, Jacques Delors,
said: 'Yes, we have to have transfers of sovereignty to achieve
economic and monetary union.'
More recently, the new President of the European
Commission, Romano Prodi, told the European Parliament: 'We
must now face the difficult task of moving towards a single
economy, a single political unity.'
Wim Duisenberg, President of the
European Central Bank, said: 'The process of monetary union
goes hand in hand, must go hand in hand, with political integration
and ultimately political union. EMU is, and was always meant
to be, a stepping stone on the way to a united Europe.'

Hans Tietmeyer, former President of
the German Central Bank, said: 'A country that merges its currency
with that of another currency cannot be politically independent.'
Gerhard Schroeder, the new Chancellor of
Germany, said: 'The introduction of the euro is probably the
most important integrating step since the beginning of the unification
process...it is certain that the times of independent nation
states are definitely over...the internal market and the common
currency demand joint co-ordinating action.'
So who do our Euro-enthusiasts think they
are kidding, other than themselves?
17.
Would interest rates fall if we joined EMU?
[
Index ]
The problem with EMU is that it allows
only one interest rate for 11 diverging economies, all growing
at different rates at different times. The 'one-size-fits-all'
interest rate will never be right for all 11 countries.
At present, the German economy is in difficulties
with unemployment twice that of the UK, while the Irish economy
is booming. The Germans need lower interest rates to stimulate
their economy, while the Irish need higher rates to avoid a
property crash. In EMU, they must both have the same rate, whether
they like it or not.
If the UK joins the Single Currency, we would
certainly be forced to accept an interest rate (as we had to
in the ERM) that would be wrong for our economy. If it is too
low as is currently likely, we would be stoking inflation.
If we continue to fix our own interest rate,
our economy will not be put at risk. For this reason, the Governor
of the Bank of England said recently that he was 'relieved'
we did not join the euro when it started.
The EU 'Tax Misery' Index
| Country |
Personal Tax range %
|
Corp. Tax range %
|
Employee soc.sec. range
%
|
Employer soc.sec. range
%
|
Index
|
| France |
10.5 - 59 |
40 |
15 - 18 |
35 - 45 |
180 |
| Belgium |
25 - 35 |
40 |
13 |
35 |
159.2 |
| Austria |
10 - 50 |
34 |
18 -22 |
22 - 28 |
148.3 |
| Greece |
5 - 45 |
35 - 40 |
16 |
27 |
142.2 |
| Spain |
20 - 56 |
35 |
6 |
31 |
142.4 |
| Italy |
19 - 46 |
37 |
9 |
30 - 34 |
140 |
| Germany |
29 - 53 |
45 |
13 |
13 |
138.7 |
| Sweden |
31 - 56 |
28 |
7 |
33 |
137.8 |
| Neths |
7 - 60 |
35 |
8 |
20 |
136.1 |
| Finland |
5.5 - 56 |
28 |
8 |
23 |
128 |
| Portugal |
15 - 40 |
34 |
11 |
24 |
120.8 |
| Lux. |
5.2 - 47 |
30 |
11 - 13 |
11 - 14 |
115.1 |
| Denmark |
40 - 58 |
34 |
8 |
0 |
111.1 |
| Ireland |
24 - 46 |
32 |
4.5 |
12 |
105 |
| UK |
20 - 40 |
30 |
3 -10 |
3 - 10 |
100 |
|
|
|
Scource : Calculations of Sachverstandigenrat,
based on OCED Reveue Statistics1965-1997 Edition 1998.
See also Global Competitiveness
Report 1999, World Economic Forum, p.91.
18.
Will our taxes go down if we join EMU?
[
Index ]
You may have been told that our taxes
will be left alone if we join EMU, but take no notice. The true
position was clearly stated by someone who ought to know - Hans
Tietmeyer, the former President of Germany's Central Bank. He
said: 'A European currency will lead to member nations transferring
their sovereignty over financial and wage policy, as well as
in monetary affairs. It is an illusion to think that states
can hold on to autonomy over taxation policy.' Very recently,
the French government announced that tax harmonisation was a
priority for its Presidency of the EU. If this happens our taxes
will go up by over 18 per cent. (16)
Believe it or not, at present the UK has
the lowest taxes in Europe and is a comparative tax haven. Britain's
corporation tax for business is 30 per cent and is the lowest
of any major industrialised country in the world. The EU average
is about a third as much again.

The countries using the Single Currency
cannot reduce their tax burden in the future because, unlike
Britain, they have not set aside enough for their pensions.
Britain has more money put aside in private pensions than the
rest of the EU put together. (17)
If France and Germany do not take action,
they will find themselvs spending more and more on pensions
as their populations get older. This will require even higher
taxation.
Europe's leaders are openly arguing for control
of Britain's tax policies. The European Commission already has
plans to impose VAT at a uniform rate of between 15 per cent
and 25 per cent on all goods, including children's clothes,
books, newspapers, travel fares, new houses, and food, all of
which are at present exempt in Britain. If we want to keep low
taxes, we have to stay out of EMU.
19. Would
joining EMU help our inflation rate?
[
Index ]
Only if you want to double it! At present
the UK's inflation rate of under 1 per cent a year is the lowest
in Europe and is about half the European average.
20.
What will happen to our pensions if we join EMU?
[
Index ]
Like most things in the EU it will
cost us dearly. At present, UK pensions are the best funded
in Europe. By 2030, Germany will have to spend three times as
much as us just to keep their pensions at their present rate.
(18)
As populations age, this pensions timebomb
in Europe will lead to either reduced benefits or higher taxes.
If we join EMU, there is an obvious danger that we will end
up, one way or another, having to make substantial contributions
to the pensions deficits of Germany, France and Italy.
|
21.
What will happen to our gold reserves if we join EMU?
[
Index ]
Can't you
guess? They will be
transferred to the European Central Bank which will 'hold
and manage the official reserves of the Member States'.
For the UK, this would mean surrendering control of our
gold reserves of £28 billion. (19)
This is one of the many reasons
why joining EMU would be irreversible.
|
22. Is it
true that foreign investment into the UK would suffer if we
did not join the Single Currency, and that jobs would be lost?
[
Index ]
Foreign investors know what they are
doing. They are attracted to the UK because we have by far the
lowest business taxes in Europe and a reliable workforce. We
also have considerably less regulation and bureaucracy and we
are comparatively free of corruption. In addition, we speak
the world's most popular commercial language - already 80 per
cent of all electronically stored information is in English.
(20)
We continue to receive the lion's share of
inward investment in the EU. Last year we received twice as
much inward investment as France and three times as much as
Germany. (21) Our share has not
been affected by foreign investors already knowing that the
majority of the British people are against joining the euro.
Companies like Honda, Vauxhall, Marconi and Ford have all announced
big investments in Britain because of our much more favourable
business climate.
There will undoubtedly be a new Free Trade
Agreement with Europe if we don't join EMU and leave the EU.
The interests of present and future investors would be fully
protected, so they will go on investing in the UK.

23.
Would joining EMU help reduce unemployment?
[
Index ]
Many trade unionists have now realised that
'EMU' also stands for 'Even More Unemployment'. Countries using
the Single Currency have a much higher unemployment rate than
Britain. Since we left the ERM, Britain has created more jobs
than the rest of the EU put together.
24.
Did we learn anything from our membership of the Exchange Rate
Mechanism, the forerunner of EMU?
[
Index ]
One crucial lesson - it is absolutely
vital to keep control of our own interest rates. Our two year
membership of the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) was disastrous
for Britain. It cost one million jobs and made 100,000 businesses
bankrupt. Since we were liberated from the ERM by market forces
the British economy has prospered far better than Europe.
Last year the UK overtook France as the world's
fourth largest economy. We achieved this since leaving the ERM,
because we have had the right level of interest rates for our
economy and the right exchange rate for developing our world
trade. This would not have been possible within the Single Currency.
25.
If EMU is such bad news for the UK, why does the Prime Minister,
some leading politicians, and a number of leading businessmen
argue in its favour? [
Index ]
The Prime Minister is no longer content with
his role as Mr UK. He wants to play the political game on a
bigger stage and sees himself as Mr Europe. ( See ... Murder
Of Dr David Kelly )

The Conservatives took us into the
EU. Like most politicians, they are not very good at admitting
their mistakes. They also fear that a movement to withdraw now
would be seen as too right wing and would frighten the voters.
They are wrong about this too - polls indicate that, if forced
to choose, more British people would vote to leave the EU than
join EMU. This is in spite of being told for 25 years that the
EU is vital to the national interest. If a fraction of the money
spent on propaganda had been spent on explaining the 'get-out'
case properly, popular support for it would be overwhelming.
Businessmen who support EMU are in the main
from big global businesses. Independent surveys show that only
a quarter of all UK businessmen want to adopt the euro. Three
quarters want to keep the pound. Most small to medium-sized
businesses are against the euro and it is they who are today's
job creators.
The businessmen who say they like the Single
Market are usually just expressing their belief in free trade,
which could in any event be preserved by negotiating a Free
Trade Agreement if we left the EU.
26.
If EMU is such bad news, why are France and Germany keen on
it? [
Index ]
As in the UK, you have to distinguish
between the politicians and the people. After a tremendous amount
of Government spending on the case for EMU, European France
voted against Maastricht. Those in favour reached just over
50 per cent because of votes from Guadeloupe and Martinique.
In Germany, there is growing disquiet as
unemployment continues to be a major problem and as the mark
falls in value with the euro.
27.
Can you think of any argument in favour of the Single Currency?
[
Index ]
Not on balance. There are three main points
in its favour but there are far more against. There would be
some savings on business transaction costs. It would be easier
to compare European prices with our own. We would not need to
incur the cost of changing pounds into other Eurozone currencies.
However, when put on the scales against being forced to accept
the wrong interest rate for the UK, the loss of exchange rate
flexibility, higher taxes, higher unemployment costs and massively
increased regulation and bureaucracy, there is an overwhelming
case against joining.
28. At some
point in the future, can we leave EMU, like we left the ERM,
if it does not work out well for us?
[
Index ]
No, if we join EMU, it will be irreversible.
We will lose the pound, our gold reserves and domestic monetary
control forever. EMU is the ERM without the escape hatch.
The nightmare will be permanent. It will
be no good saying: 'What a shame - I wish I had thought about
it a little more before I cast my vote.'
Index
01. Why was the European Union formed?
02. Why did Britain join the EU?
03. Can
Britain veto decisions we don't agree with?
04. Is there any protection for minority interests
like the UK under European law?
05. Would our trade suffer if we left the EU?
06. If we left the EU would we lose out on its aid
to the UK?
07. What do we pay our contribution for?
08. Is it really true that there is a lot of fraud
and corruption in the EU?
09. Have we benefited from the Common Agricultural
Policy?
10. What has happened to our fisheries?
11. Have we benefited from the EU in any other industries
that might compensate for the loss of our fishing waters?
12. If the EU has its way, will we still have the
capacity to wage war or defend ourselves?
13. Is there another way of continuing trade preferentially
with the Eurozone?
14. Is the EU working well?
15. Can Britain go it alone?
16. Isn't joining EMU more about trade than politics?
17. Would interest rates fall if we joined EMU?
18. Will our taxes go down if we join EMU?
19. Would joining EMU help our inflation rate?
20. What will happen to our pensions if we join
EMU?
21. What will happen to our gold reserves if we
join EMU?
22. Is it true that foreign investment into the
UK would suffer if we did not join the Single Currency, and
that jobs would be lost?
23. Would joining EMU help reduce unemployment?
24. Did we learn anything from our membership of
the Exchange Rate Mechanism, the forerunner of EMU?
25. If
EMU is such bad news for the UK, why does the Prime Minister,
some leading politicians, and a number of leading businessmen
argue in its favour? (
See ... Murder
Of Dr David Kelly
)
26. If EMU is such bad news, why are France and
Germany keen on it?
27. Can you think of any argument in favour of the
Single Currency?
28. At some point in the future, can we leave EMU,
like we left the ERM, if it does not work out well for us?
WHAT CAN YOU DO ABOUT
IT ?
There is very little that one person
can do on their own but if we get together a great deal can
be achieved. Politicians change their policies when they are
faced with a tidal wave of public opinion. You can help to create
that wave and this is how you can do it.
| 1.
Pass this pamphlet on to a friend
who might be unsure about the EU and EMU. Ask your friend
to carry on the good work and pass it on to another friend |
|
2. Write
to your MP at the House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA and make
your views clear.
3. Write
to the BBC (Fraser Steel, Head of Programme Complaints, BBC,
Broadcasting House, Portland Place, London W1A 1AA), or ITV
(Programme Complaints Department, ITC, 33 Foley Street, London
W1P 7LB) if you think any of their programmes are biased or
the full case is not being presented fairly.
4. Vote
against EMU if and when there is a Referendum and try to persuade
your family and friends to help preserve the pound.
5.
Never vote for any political party that is intent on closer
integration with Europe.
6.
If you are against the EU or EMU make a donation of whatever
you can spare to The Democracy Movement, Freepost LON 10777,
London SW6 1YZ. We arranged for the production and distribution
of this booklet and have been working tirelessly to promote
the anti-EU cause. With your help we will be able to step up
our campaign substantially and make sure that the Government
gets a resounding NO from the Electorate when they call for
a Referendum on giving up the pound.
EUROPEAN UNION - A DREAM FOR
BRUSSELS BUREAUCRATS
BUT A NIGHTMARE FOR BRITAIN