Michael Heseltine: Fifty years ago, we joined the
EU – today, I deplore the deception of Brexit
I look back to 1973 as the post-war year when Britain
accepted the loss of its empire and chose a new European destiny
Michael
Heseltine
Sunday 01
January 2023 12:16
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/brexit-michael-heseltine-europe-trade-deal-b2254240.html
Fifty years
ago today, on 1 January 1973, the United Kingdom joined the European Economic
Community. To understand the enormity of that event, one must stand back and
reflect on a thousand years of our history.
Of course,
economics is never far below the surface of political self-interest, but that
history is about territory, religion, power, and the wars they provoked. The
20th century saw bloodshed on an unprecedented scale and the involvement of
civilian populations hitherto unimagined. By the end of the Second World War,
the peoples of occupied, defeated Europe, who had experienced the horrors of
conflagration three times in three-quarters of a century, responded to the
imperative that it must never happen again. We should never forget that that is
why modern Europe was born.
I lived
through the Second World War and grew up in a Britain that recognised a huge
debt for the loyalty of the Commonwealth but had to come to terms with an
empire unwilling to accept imperial status. There was a growing awareness of
the disparity of power between ourselves and the United States and an
uncomfortable reluctance to throw in our lot with the rapidly recovering
Europe.
New Year’s
Day 1973 gave us a new sense of hope and purpose. I became the first British
minister to speak about our new relationship in the United States and
confronted the issues by addressing the World Affairs Council in Los Angeles. I
explained my conclusion that such were the resources of the world’s major
powers that we would find it increasingly difficult to maintain an advanced
industrial base. The solution was to mould together a partnership of nations
that, in total, would equal the competition to which the world will
increasingly expose us.
The
resources of 50 million British people – however proud we may be of what we have
achieved – will never match the technologies and capabilities available by one
or two major powers. I concluded that it offers a new and more meaningful
partnership. Rereading that speech today, I would not change those words.
As
president of the European Movement UK, I deplore the deception that Brexit
represents. I look back to 1973 as the post-war year when Britain accepted the
loss of its empire and chose a new European destiny. A fresh generation of
politicians saw a better future for our country by pooling our sovereignty with
our neighbours to build something that would not replace our national identity
but would be greater than the sum of the parts. Over the next 20 years, that is
what we did.
The rules
that constrained travel in Europe, that propped up airlines and stopped you
from taking more than £50 spending money on your foreign holiday, were all
junked, and airlines like easyJet brought European holidays to millions who had
never been abroad.
A whole new
market developed in professional services – with the UK at the centre of it.
The creation of the single market in 1986 was arguably Margaret Thatcher’s most
outstanding achievement. It was, particularly, the opportunity for British
financial companies to serve a much larger European market which they seized
with energy and skill.
But
something less tangible also happened. I felt it as a minister in Mrs
Thatcher’s government. We had a seat at the table and had influence again.
Post-Brexit, we see the growing international issues of the environment and
global warming being discussed by our European neighbours in our absence.
It is easy
to look back and list the unfulfilled promises. American concerns over the
Northern Irish protocol have scuppered the US free trade deal, and the
agricultural deal with Australia that even the minister who negotiated it has
said is bad for Britain. Virtually no detail has emerged six years after we
were told a bonfire of red tape would energise our economy. Instead, we are
left with rumours and speculation that deter investment and provoke the concern
of bodies such as the National Trust, the Wildlife Trust, and the RSPB.
Regulation
is what separates the law of the jungle from civilised society. Three current
issues will push the government to act; avian flu, the Grenfell Tower report
and the collapse of the cryptocurrency company FTX are topical examples of why
governments seek to regulate and protect us.
Control of
our borders was the essential Brexit issue. We were not promised the miserable,
humiliating mess that our immigration policy has become. The British people
were deceived, and that becomes clearer every day. Every day the need to change
direction becomes more urgent. It is harder to measure the economic impact
because of the pandemic and the consequences of the Russian invasion of
Ukraine. But if you look closely, the truth is emerging.
The UK
economy is over 5 per cent smaller, says the Centre for European Reform, than
it would have been without Brexit. The consequence of erecting trade barriers
with the EU means, says the Resolution Foundation, “a broad-based reduction in
workers’ pay and productivity” that it estimated as a loss of £470 per worker
per year. That is nearly a thousand pounds for the average couple.
The Office
for Budget Responsibility says that the weak UK-EU Trade and Cooperation
Agreement means that our trade with the EU will fall by 15 per cent. And on top
of all that, the sterling has plummeted by around 20 per cent from its value in
2016, adding to inflation. A survey of its members by the British Chamber of
Commerce published last week found that Britain’s Brexit trade deal fails to
help more than three-quarters of companies increase sales or grow their
business.
Brexit is
not irreversible, and public opinion is moving. Sixty-five per cent think the
government is handling Brexit poorly, 45 per cent think we should rejoin
compared with 32 per cent in favour of staying out, and 58 per cent think we
were wrong to leave compared with 42 per cent who think we were right.
We need to
start rebuilding bridges. It is time for a pragmatic, constructive policy
towards Europe, one rooted in our shared history and with an appetite for
restoring this country’s place at its heart.
Michael
Heseltine was deputy prime minister under Margaret Thatcher, first secretary of
state and is now president of the European Movement UK
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