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Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom

Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom is a continuum of belief ranging from the opposition to certain political policies of the European Union to the complete opposition to the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union. It has been a significant element in the politics of the United Kingdom (UK). A 2009 Eurobarometer survey of EU citizens showed support for membership of the EU was lowest in the United Kingdom, alongside Latvia and Hungary.[1]: 91–3 

Levels of support for the EU have historically been lower in the UK than most other member states. UK citizens are the least likely to feel a sense of European identity, and national sovereignty is also seen as more important to British people than that of people from other EU nations. Additionally, the United Kingdom was the least integrated EU member state with four 'opt-outs' – the most of any EU member state.

A referendum on the UK's membership of the European Community was held in 1975, with a majority voting in favour of continued membership of the EC (which later evolved into the European Union). A referendum on membership of the EU was held in 2016, with a majority of voters voting to leave the European Union.

The decision of the electorate to vote in favour of Brexit marks the first time in history that a member state has decided to leave the European Union. The UK formally left the EU on 31 January 2020.

History edit

In the United States, an ideological divide between reverence for continental European refinery and classics and xenophobic sentiment has existed for centuries, but Euroscepticism is different from the anti-Europeanism more prevalent in American culture.[2] In the late 19th century Britain's foreign policy stance of minimal involvement in European affairs was characterised as "splendid isolation".[3]

The European Unity movement as a political project after 1945 was supported and inspired by British figures such as Winston Churchill who pledged in his 1946 Zurich speech for "a kind of United States of Europe" led by France and Germany but who did not see a need to involve Britain.[4] The ambivalent position of Britain has been described as "wishing to seem to be a major part of Europe without wanting actually to take part".[5] The othering of European unity as a Continental issue and somebody else's problem has been a recurrent theme.[6] Pro-European British politicians and citizens have faced various defeats and humiliations with regard to Britain's steps in the direction of increased European integration.[7] Even parties like the Liberal Democrats with a clearly pro-European platform, have members that share the British lack of enthusiasms "of all things European".[8] After joining the EU, confrontational attitudes of British politicians, as in the UK rebate controversy, gained further popularity among the British public, and many Britons feel a much stronger affection for the Commonwealth of Nations than they ever have for the EU.[5][failed verification]

After 1945 edit

 
The United Kingdom (dark green) in the European Union (light green)

Britain was urged to join and lead Western Europe in the immediate aftermath of World War II. The American Committee for a United Europe and the European Conference on Federation led by Winston Churchill were among the early endeveaours for European unity with British participation. Churchill also participated in the Hague Congress of 1948, which discussed the future structure and role of a proposed Council of Europe.[9] British governments and political mainstream players, while advocating stronger integration of the Continent, did not intend to take part themselves. Britain never had a strong pro-European movement like the one founded in post-war Germany. During the postwar years up to 1954, the UK was occupied with the dissolution of its global empire. It was not among the six founding member states of the European Communities in the early-1950s (described as the "Inner Six"). The six member states signed the Treaty of Paris, creating the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), on 18 April 1951; but failed to create a European Defence Community.

Whilst after the war Churchill was an early supporter of pan-Europeanism[9] and called for a "United States of Europe" and the creation of a "Council of Europe",[9] he did not have Britain join the ECSC in 1951.

We have our own dream and our own task. We are with Europe, but not of it. We are linked but not combined. We are interested and associated but not absorbed.[10]

In the years before, only the British extreme right – in particular, fascist politician Oswald Mosley – were rather outspoken, based on the Union Movement and the Europe a Nation slogan, for a stronger integration of Britain with Europe.[11][12] The British elites did not assume Britain should or could take part as a simple member in the European communities at that time.[13] The reservation was based less on economic considerations, since European integration would have offset the decreasing importance of trade within the Commonwealth of Nations trade,[14] but rather on political philosophy.[14] In Britain, the concept of unlimited sovereignty, based on the British legal system and parliamentary tradition was, and is, held in high esteem and presents a serious impediment to attempts at integration into a Continental legal framework.[14]

The Labour Party leader Hugh Gaitskell once declared that joining the European Economic Community (EEC) would mean "the end of a thousand years of history".[15] Some Gaitskellites (including the later founders of the Social Democratic Party), were favourable to British involvement. Labour later moved from its opposition towards the European Community and began to support membership. Important groups of Conservatives also opposed joining the Common Market. One of the earliest groups formed against British involvement in Europe was the Conservative Party-based Anti-Common Market League, whose president Victor Montagu declared that opponents of the Common Market did not want to "subject [themselves] to a lot of frogs and huns".[16] Conversely, much of the opposition to Britain's EU membership came from Labour politicians and trade unionists who feared bloc membership would impede socialist policies, although this was never the universal Labour Party opinion. In 2002, a minority of Labour MPs, and others such as Denis Healey, formed the Labour Against the Euro group in 2002, opposing British membership of the single currency.[17] The Trades Union Congress remains strongly pro-EU.[18]

Impact of the Suez Crisis 1956 edit

Even before the events of the Suez Crisis in 1956, the United Kingdom had faced strains in its relationship with the U.S. After the Suez conflict it had finally to accept that it could no longer assume that it was the preferred partner of the United States and underwent a massive loss of trust in the special relationship with the U.S.[19] Britain, Denmark, Ireland, and Norway then started to prepare for a trading union, the European Free Trade Association (EFTA). British politicians, such as Labour's George Brown were in 1962 still of opinion, that Britain should not only be allowed to join, but be welcomed to lead the European Union, and met then with ridicule.[6]

In the 1960s the membership attempts of Conservative UK governments faced strong resistance from the Continent, especially from the French president, Charles de Gaulle.[13] Instead of being offered a leadership role, Britain was put on a yearlong waiting list, a major political humiliation for pro-European Britons. De Gaulle's veto in 1963 was a devastating blow for Harold Macmillan,[7] who, according to Hugo Young, was not the last Tory politician to end his or her career as a result of European affairs. The UK faced a major economic decline and a row of disturbing political scandals as well. The combination did not help much with Europe's image in the UK, and vice versa. With Georges Pompidou replacing de Gaulle, the veto was lifted and negotiations began in 1970 under the pro-European Conservative government of Edward Heath. The question of sovereignty had been discussed at the time in an official document (FCO 30/1048) that became open to the public many years later in January 2002, under the rules for availability after thirty years. It listed among "Areas of policy in which parliamentary freedom to legislate will be affected by entry into the European Communities": Customs duties, Agriculture, Free movement of labour, services and capital, Transport, and Social Security for migrant workers. The document concluded (paragraph 26) that it was advisable to put the considerations of influence and power before those of formal sovereignty.[20] Among disagreements that Heath had to deal were those relating to the Common Agricultural Policy and the remaining relationship with the Commonwealth of Nations. In 1972 the accession treaties were signed with all but Norway.[21]

Admission and 1975 EC membership referendum edit

 
1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum
National result
Choice Votes %
Yes 17,378,581 67.23%
No 8,470,073 32.70%
Registered voters and turnout 40,086,677 64.67%

Despite the decision to join the European Community, internal Labour divisions over EEC membership prompted the Labour Party to propose a referendum be held on the permanence of the UK in the Communities. Proposed in 1972 by Tony Benn,[22] Labour's referendum proposal led the anti-EEC Conservative politician Enoch Powell to advocate a Labour vote (initially only inferred) in the February 1974 election,[23] which was thought to have influenced the result, a return to government of the Labour Party. The eventual referendum in 1975 asked the voters:

Do you think the United Kingdom should stay in the European Community (the Common Market)?

British membership of the EEC was endorsed by 67% of those voting, with a turnout of 64.5% and was a major defeat for the anti-marketers at the time with only two of the 68 counting areas returning "No" majority votes.

From 1975 to 1997 edit

 
Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister from 1979 to 1990, was considered as a symbol of Euroscepticism. She was an opponent of the Maastricht Treaty, which was ratified by the UK in 1993.

The debate between Eurosceptics (known as anti-marketeers until the late 1980s) and EU supporters (known as pro-marketeers until the late 1980s) is ongoing within, rather than between, British political parties, whose membership is of varied standpoints. The two main political parties in Britain, the Conservative Party and the Labour Party, each have within them a broad spectrum of views concerning the European Union.

In the 1970s and early 1980s the Labour Party was the more Eurosceptic of the two parties, with more anti-European Communities MPs than the Conservatives. In 1975, Labour held a special conference on British membership and the party voted 2 to 1 for Britain to leave the European Communities, with more MPs supporting withdrawal than opposing it and only seven out of 46 affiliated trade unions supporting staying in the Common Market.[24][25] The views of many leaders and activists within the party were reflected by Tony Benn, who claimed during the 1975 EEC referendum that unless Britain voted to leave, "half a million jobs lost in Britain and a huge increase in food prices (would be) a direct result of our entry into the Common Market".[25] In 1979, the Labour manifesto[26] declared that a Labour government would "oppose any move towards turning the Community into a federation" and, in 1983,[27] it still favoured British withdrawal from the EEC.

Under the leadership of Neil Kinnock after 1983, the then opposition party dropped its former resistance to the European Communities and instead favoured greater British integration into European Economic and Monetary Union. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher gained much popularity with the so-called UK rebate in 1984. Britain then managed to reduce its contributions to the Union to a certain extent, as it was then the EU's second poorest member and, without much agriculture, benefited little from farm subsidies.[28]

A speech by Jacques Delors, President of the European Commission, at the TUC conference in 1988 helped to weaken the eurosceptic inclination in the Labour Party.[29] In the speech he argued for financial transfers to deindustrialising regions and for all workers to be covered by collective agreements. In response, the formerly eurosceptic union leader Ron Todd declared that "in the short term we have not a cat in hell’s chance in Westminster. The only card game in town at the moment is in a town called Brussels". As President of the Commission, Delors pushed for stronger pan-European regulations in areas including industrial relations, health and safety, the environment and consumer protection. In addition he played a key role in the incorporation of the Community Charter of the Fundamental Social Rights of Workers into the Treaty of Maastricht, enshrining a series of workers' rights into European law.[25] In the context of Thatcher's Conservative premiership, when policies to reduce the power of the trade unions were pursued, Delors' advocacy of a "social Europe" became attractive to many.[30] In 1989, the Labour Party officially dropped support for a withdrawal from the EEC: by 1998, only three per cent of the party's MPs supported leaving the EU.[25]

The UK rebate was also held up by Thatcher's successors as prime minister.[28] Thatcher had worked with Delors in building a single market and supported the Single European Act of 1986, but by 1988 believed that the single market would cause greater political integration which she opposed. That year she warned in the Bruges speech of "a European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels".[31] In late October 1990, just before her premiership ended, Thatcher reacted strongly against Delors' plans for a single currency in the House of Commons.[32] Her stance contributed to her downfall a few weeks later,[33] but Thatcher influenced others such as Daniel Hannan, whose Oxford Campaign for an Independent Britain (1990) may be the start of the Brexit campaign.[31]

Role of the Post-Maastricht Blues edit

The overall acceptance of the European Union in all member states saw a strong increase of support till the 1990s and a major decline afterwards, support sinking to 1980s levels then.[34] Due to the timely connection with the Maastricht Treaty 1992, it has been called the post-Maastricht-Blues.[34][35] The European integration process faced a major defeat with the failed Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe and eurosceptical opinions gained more impact overall. The role of public opinion had been lower before but gained importance with state referendums, as in the rejection of the constitution by French and Dutch voters in 2005.[34]

Since 1997 edit

The financier Sir James Goldsmith formed the Referendum Party as a single-issue party to fight the 1997 General Election, calling for a referendum on aspects of the UK's relationship with the European Union. It planned to contest every constituency where there was no leading candidate in favour of such a referendum, and briefly held a seat in the House of Commons after George Gardiner, the Conservative MP for Reigate, changed parties in March 1997 following a battle against deselection by his local party. The party polled 800,000 votes and finished fourth, but did not win a seat in the House of Commons. The United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), advocating the UK's complete withdrawal from the European Union, had been founded in 1993 by Alan Sked, but initially had only very limited success. Due to a change in the election principle, the 1999 European Parliament election allowed for the first UKIP parliamentary representation.[citation needed] Many commentators[who?][36] believe over-interest in the issue to be an important reason why the Conservative Party lost the General Election of 2001. They argue that the British electorate was more influenced by domestic issues than by European affairs.[citation needed]

After the electoral defeat of the UK Conservatives in 2001, the issue of Eurosceptism was important in the contest to elect a new party leader. The winner, Iain Duncan Smith, was seen as more Eurosceptic than his predecessor, William Hague. As opposition leader, Iain Duncan Smith attempted to disaffiliate the British Conservative Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) from the federalist European People's Party group. As MEPs must participate in a transnational alliance to retain parliamentary privileges, Duncan Smith sought the merger of Conservative MEPs into the Eurosceptic Union for a Europe of Nations (UEN) group. Conservative MEPs vetoed this move because of the presence within the UEN of representatives of neo-fascist parties who do not share similar domestic politics. In 2004, Duncan Smith's successor, Michael Howard, emphasised that Conservative MEPs would remain in the EPP Group so as to maintain influence in the European Parliament. Michael Howard's successor David Cameron pledged to remove Conservative MEPs from the EPP Group and this has now been implemented.[citation needed]

UKIP received 16% of the vote and gained 12 MEPs in the 2004 European Election. The party's results improved in the 2009 UK European Election, coming in second, above the incumbent Labour Party.[37] In the 2014 European Parliament elections UKIP support reached a new high water mark, coming first ahead of the Labour party, and gaining 26.6% of the vote.[citation needed]

"Awkward partner" status edit

Professor Stephen George states in his 1990 book An Awkward Partner: Britain in the European Community that the UK is an "awkward partner" within the European Union, emphasising that although the UK is not the only EU member state to oppose further EU integration, it is less enthusiastic than most other members.[38] Factors contributing to "awkward partner" status include the distinctiveness of the identity and culture of the UK in contrast to that of continental Europe. According to a 2003 profile in The Guardian, historian Robert Conquest favoured a British withdrawal from the EU in favour of creating "a much looser association of English-speaking nations, known as the Anglosphere.[39] Examples of closer ties include the "special relationship" with the US. Additionally, the UK has not experienced the major political upheavals of continental Europe.[40]

British government officials have often been hostile towards further European integration, supporting intergovernmental cooperation as opposed to supranational authority, and a single market rather than the EMU. Great importance has also been attached to the defence of national sovereignty, i.e. where ultimate decision-making authority is located in the United Kingdom as a nation state.[40]

The UK has also experienced limited influence in EU negotiations; on key EU policies (e.g. the EMU), British governments have not set the agenda but reacted to proposals from others by attempting to slow the pace of integration, or limit its impact. Although influential in some areas – e.g. the single market and defence – the UK is often in a minority of states opposed to change, and has not developed durable alliances to counter the Franco-German partnership.[40]

The UK does not have the consensus among the elite of the country on the benefits of EU membership, as opposed to other EU member states. As Andrew Williamson notes, the issue has caused divisions within Labour in the past and the Conservatives today, and is most prominent in the Conservatives and the UK Independence Party (UKIP).[40][41]

Levels of support are lower in the UK than most other member states, as well as having less knowledge about the institution. UK citizens are the least likely to feel a sense of European identity, and national sovereignty is also seen as more important to British people than that of people from other EU nations, with many major newspapers taking Eurosceptic positions.[40] Cambridge historian David Abulafia states: "The concept of European identity [among British people] arouses puzzlement."[42] Among the many differences is the very different legal tradition European nations have from that of the UK. A product of English history, common law is uncommon among the other members of the EU.[42]

Campaigns for withdrawal edit

 
Vote Leave signs in 2016

The two main anti-EU campaigns during the UK referendum on EU membership were Vote Leave and Leave.EU, both of which received limited support from Nigel Farage, leader of the UK's largest Eurosceptic political party.[43] Vote Leave was a cross-party group working with the campaigns Labour Leave, Conservatives for Britain and Business for Britain.[44] Its donors include former Conservative treasurer and banker Peter Cruddas, Labour donor John Mills and spread betting tycoon Stuart Wheeler, who was a major donor to the Conservatives before becoming UKIP treasurer.[45] It was also the preferred campaign of UKIP's then only Member of Parliament, Douglas Carswell.[45]

The Grassroots Out campaign launched as of 23 January 2016 in Kettering as a national, cross party with the aim of bringing together all leave groups, founded by Conservative MPs Peter Bone and Tom Pursglove and Labour MP Kate Hoey following in-fighting between Vote Leave and Leave.EU.[46]

The Left Leave Campaign (or Lexit) brought together Eurosceptic voices on the British left, sponsored by the Rail, Maritime and Transport trade union, [47] the Socialist Workers Party and the Communist Party of Britain. The Campaign launched to unite anti-austerity voices and those critical of the European Union's response to the 2015 European Migrant Crisis. [48]

The Better Off Out campaign, a non-partisan organisation campaigning for EU withdrawal, lists its reasons for EU withdrawal as freedom to make trading deals with other nations, control over national borders, control over UK government spending, the restoration of the British legal system, deregulation of EU laws and control of the NHS among others.[49] Similarly, the Democracy Movement, the UK's largest non-party anti-EU campaign in the years prior to the 2016 EU referendum, highlighted the EU's economic decline, the broad reach of EU regulation, the UK's lack of influence over new EU laws and the EU's plans for further integration.[50] Get Britain Out and the Campaign for an Independent Britain are similar non-partisan campaigns.

The perceived democratic deficit in the European Union, including legitimacy problems of the European Commission and the European Parliament and the supremacy of EU law over national legislation are some of the major objections of British Eurosceptics. The EU is also argued to have a negative financial impact due to rising costs of membership,[51] and an alleged negative impact of EU regulatory burdens on UK business.[citation needed]

Opponents of the EU have accused its politicians and civil servants of corruption. A media scoop of this sort was 2005 Nigel Farage MEP request of the European Commission to disclose the individual Commissioner holiday travel, after President of the European Commission, José Barroso had spent a week on the yacht of the Greek shipping billionaire Spiro Latsis.[52] The European Court of Auditors reports about the financial planning are among the topics which are often scandalised in the British press.[53]

2016 EU membership referendum edit

 
Comparison of results in 1975 and 2016 referendums
 
2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum
National result
Choice Votes %
Leave the European Union 17,410,742 51.89%
Remain a member of the European Union 16,141,241 48.11%
Registered voters and turnout 46,500,001 72.21%
Source: Electoral Commission 29 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine

On 23 June 2016, the United Kingdom EU membership referendum was held, giving support for Britain leaving the European Union by a margin of 51.9% to 48.1%, with slightly over 72% turnout. Subsequently, after Theresa May was appointed Prime Minister, she named three Cabinet ministers with new roles, all Eurosceptics, to negotiate the UK out of the EU: David Davis was appointed Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, Liam Fox was appointed Secretary of State for International Trade and Boris Johnson was appointed Foreign Secretary.[54]

Opinion polling edit

The assessment of attitudes to the European Union and European Parliamentary Election voting intentions is undertaken on a regular basis by a variety of opinion polling organisations, including ComRes, ICM, Populus and Survation. For detailed polls between 2013 and 2015 see here, for polls conducted between 2016 and 2020 see here and for polls conducted between 2020 and today see here.

Opinion poll results edit

Polling on this issue has typically produced narrow majorities in favour of remaining within the EU, although some polls have found the reverse result. According to an Opinium/Observer poll taken on 20 February 2015, 51% of the British electorate said they would most likely vote the United Kingdom to leave the European Union if they were offered a referendum, whereas 49% would not (the figures exclude 14% who said they were unsure). These studies also showed that 41% of the electorate view the EU as a positive force overall, whereas 34% saw it as negative,[55] and a study in November 2012 showed that while 48% of EU citizens trusted the European Parliament, only 22% of the UK trusted the Parliament.[56]: 110–2 : QA 14.1 

Support and opposition for withdrawal from the EU are not evenly distributed among the different age groups: opposition to EU membership is most prevalent among those 60 and older, with a poll from 22–23 March 2015 showing that 48% of this age group oppose EU membership. This decreases to 22% among those aged 18–24 (with 56% of 18- to 24-year-olds stating that they would vote for Britain to remain in the EU). Finally, the results of the poll showed some regional variation: support for withdrawal from the EU is lowest in Scotland and London (at 22% and 32% respectively) but reaches 42% in the Midlands and Wales (the only region polled with a plurality in favour of withdrawal).[57]

The February 2015 study also showed that trust of the UK's relationship with the EU is split along partisan lines. When asked which party they trusted the most to handle the UK's relationship with the EU, 35% trusted the Tories the most (Conservatives); 33% trusted Labour; 15% trusted UKIP; 7% trusted the Greens and 6% trusted the Liberal Democrats.[55]

Notable people associated with Euroscepticism edit

Eurosceptic parties edit

Defunct Eurosceptic parties edit

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Abbott, Lewis F. British Withdrawal from the European Union: A Guide to the Case For. ISR/Google Books, 2013. British Withdrawal from the European Union: A Guide to the Case For
  • Booker, C., and North, R., The Great Deception, Continuum Publishing London and New York, 2003. (EU Referendum Edition published by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, April 2016)
  • Grob-Fitzgibbon, Benjamin. Continental Drift: Britain and Europe from the End of Empire to the Rise of Euroscepticism (2016) excerpt
  • Sutcliffe, John B. "The roots and consequences of Euroskepticism: an evaluation of the United Kingdom Independence Party." Geopolitics, History, and International Relations 4.1 (2012): 107–127. online
  • Spiering, Menno. "British euroscepticism." in Robert Harmsen and Menno Spiering, eds. Euroscepticism. (Brill Rodopi, 2004) pp. 127–149.
  • Tiersky, Ronald ed. (2001). Euro-skepticism: A Reader. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 103–111. ISBN 9780742510548. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help), primary sources

External links edit

  • Adrian Williamson, The case for Brexit: lessons from the 1960s and 1970s, History and Policy (2015)

euroscepticism, united, kingdom, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, january, 2023, continuum, belief, ranging, from, opposition, certain, political, policies, european, un. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2023 Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom is a continuum of belief ranging from the opposition to certain political policies of the European Union to the complete opposition to the United Kingdom s membership of the European Union It has been a significant element in the politics of the United Kingdom UK A 2009 Eurobarometer survey of EU citizens showed support for membership of the EU was lowest in the United Kingdom alongside Latvia and Hungary 1 91 3 Levels of support for the EU have historically been lower in the UK than most other member states UK citizens are the least likely to feel a sense of European identity and national sovereignty is also seen as more important to British people than that of people from other EU nations Additionally the United Kingdom was the least integrated EU member state with four opt outs the most of any EU member state A referendum on the UK s membership of the European Community was held in 1975 with a majority voting in favour of continued membership of the EC which later evolved into the European Union A referendum on membership of the EU was held in 2016 with a majority of voters voting to leave the European Union The decision of the electorate to vote in favour of Brexit marks the first time in history that a member state has decided to leave the European Union The UK formally left the EU on 31 January 2020 Contents 1 History 1 1 After 1945 1 2 Impact of the Suez Crisis 1956 1 3 Admission and 1975 EC membership referendum 1 4 From 1975 to 1997 1 4 1 Role of the Post Maastricht Blues 1 5 Since 1997 2 Awkward partner status 3 Campaigns for withdrawal 4 2016 EU membership referendum 4 1 Opinion polling 4 2 Opinion poll results 5 Notable people associated with Euroscepticism 6 Eurosceptic parties 6 1 Defunct Eurosceptic parties 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editIn the United States an ideological divide between reverence for continental European refinery and classics and xenophobic sentiment has existed for centuries but Euroscepticism is different from the anti Europeanism more prevalent in American culture 2 In the late 19th century Britain s foreign policy stance of minimal involvement in European affairs was characterised as splendid isolation 3 The European Unity movement as a political project after 1945 was supported and inspired by British figures such as Winston Churchill who pledged in his 1946 Zurich speech for a kind of United States of Europe led by France and Germany but who did not see a need to involve Britain 4 The ambivalent position of Britain has been described as wishing to seem to be a major part of Europe without wanting actually to take part 5 The othering of European unity as a Continental issue and somebody else s problem has been a recurrent theme 6 Pro European British politicians and citizens have faced various defeats and humiliations with regard to Britain s steps in the direction of increased European integration 7 Even parties like the Liberal Democrats with a clearly pro European platform have members that share the British lack of enthusiasms of all things European 8 After joining the EU confrontational attitudes of British politicians as in the UK rebate controversy gained further popularity among the British public and many Britons feel a much stronger affection for the Commonwealth of Nations than they ever have for the EU 5 failed verification After 1945 edit nbsp The United Kingdom dark green in the European Union light green Britain was urged to join and lead Western Europe in the immediate aftermath of World War II The American Committee for a United Europe and the European Conference on Federation led by Winston Churchill were among the early endeveaours for European unity with British participation Churchill also participated in the Hague Congress of 1948 which discussed the future structure and role of a proposed Council of Europe 9 British governments and political mainstream players while advocating stronger integration of the Continent did not intend to take part themselves Britain never had a strong pro European movement like the one founded in post war Germany During the postwar years up to 1954 the UK was occupied with the dissolution of its global empire It was not among the six founding member states of the European Communities in the early 1950s described as the Inner Six The six member states signed the Treaty of Paris creating the European Coal and Steel Community ECSC on 18 April 1951 but failed to create a European Defence Community Whilst after the war Churchill was an early supporter of pan Europeanism 9 and called for a United States of Europe and the creation of a Council of Europe 9 he did not have Britain join the ECSC in 1951 We have our own dream and our own task We are with Europe but not of it We are linked but not combined We are interested and associated but not absorbed 10 In the years before only the British extreme right in particular fascist politician Oswald Mosley were rather outspoken based on the Union Movement and the Europe a Nation slogan for a stronger integration of Britain with Europe 11 12 The British elites did not assume Britain should or could take part as a simple member in the European communities at that time 13 The reservation was based less on economic considerations since European integration would have offset the decreasing importance of trade within the Commonwealth of Nations trade 14 but rather on political philosophy 14 In Britain the concept of unlimited sovereignty based on the British legal system and parliamentary tradition was and is held in high esteem and presents a serious impediment to attempts at integration into a Continental legal framework 14 The Labour Party leader Hugh Gaitskell once declared that joining the European Economic Community EEC would mean the end of a thousand years of history 15 Some Gaitskellites including the later founders of the Social Democratic Party were favourable to British involvement Labour later moved from its opposition towards the European Community and began to support membership Important groups of Conservatives also opposed joining the Common Market One of the earliest groups formed against British involvement in Europe was the Conservative Party based Anti Common Market League whose president Victor Montagu declared that opponents of the Common Market did not want to subject themselves to a lot of frogs and huns 16 Conversely much of the opposition to Britain s EU membership came from Labour politicians and trade unionists who feared bloc membership would impede socialist policies although this was never the universal Labour Party opinion In 2002 a minority of Labour MPs and others such as Denis Healey formed the Labour Against the Euro group in 2002 opposing British membership of the single currency 17 The Trades Union Congress remains strongly pro EU 18 Impact of the Suez Crisis 1956 edit Even before the events of the Suez Crisis in 1956 the United Kingdom had faced strains in its relationship with the U S After the Suez conflict it had finally to accept that it could no longer assume that it was the preferred partner of the United States and underwent a massive loss of trust in the special relationship with the U S 19 Britain Denmark Ireland and Norway then started to prepare for a trading union the European Free Trade Association EFTA British politicians such as Labour s George Brown were in 1962 still of opinion that Britain should not only be allowed to join but be welcomed to lead the European Union and met then with ridicule 6 In the 1960s the membership attempts of Conservative UK governments faced strong resistance from the Continent especially from the French president Charles de Gaulle 13 Instead of being offered a leadership role Britain was put on a yearlong waiting list a major political humiliation for pro European Britons De Gaulle s veto in 1963 was a devastating blow for Harold Macmillan 7 who according to Hugo Young was not the last Tory politician to end his or her career as a result of European affairs The UK faced a major economic decline and a row of disturbing political scandals as well The combination did not help much with Europe s image in the UK and vice versa With Georges Pompidou replacing de Gaulle the veto was lifted and negotiations began in 1970 under the pro European Conservative government of Edward Heath The question of sovereignty had been discussed at the time in an official document FCO 30 1048 that became open to the public many years later in January 2002 under the rules for availability after thirty years It listed among Areas of policy in which parliamentary freedom to legislate will be affected by entry into the European Communities Customs duties Agriculture Free movement of labour services and capital Transport and Social Security for migrant workers The document concluded paragraph 26 that it was advisable to put the considerations of influence and power before those of formal sovereignty 20 Among disagreements that Heath had to deal were those relating to the Common Agricultural Policy and the remaining relationship with the Commonwealth of Nations In 1972 the accession treaties were signed with all but Norway 21 Admission and 1975 EC membership referendum edit Main article 1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum nbsp 1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum National resultChoice Votes Yes 17 378 581 67 23 No 8 470 073 32 70 Registered voters and turnout 40 086 677 64 67 Despite the decision to join the European Community internal Labour divisions over EEC membership prompted the Labour Party to propose a referendum be held on the permanence of the UK in the Communities Proposed in 1972 by Tony Benn 22 Labour s referendum proposal led the anti EEC Conservative politician Enoch Powell to advocate a Labour vote initially only inferred in the February 1974 election 23 which was thought to have influenced the result a return to government of the Labour Party The eventual referendum in 1975 asked the voters Do you think the United Kingdom should stay in the European Community the Common Market British membership of the EEC was endorsed by 67 of those voting with a turnout of 64 5 and was a major defeat for the anti marketers at the time with only two of the 68 counting areas returning No majority votes From 1975 to 1997 edit nbsp Margaret Thatcher Prime Minister from 1979 to 1990 was considered as a symbol of Euroscepticism She was an opponent of the Maastricht Treaty which was ratified by the UK in 1993 The debate between Eurosceptics known as anti marketeers until the late 1980s and EU supporters known as pro marketeers until the late 1980s is ongoing within rather than between British political parties whose membership is of varied standpoints The two main political parties in Britain the Conservative Party and the Labour Party each have within them a broad spectrum of views concerning the European Union In the 1970s and early 1980s the Labour Party was the more Eurosceptic of the two parties with more anti European Communities MPs than the Conservatives In 1975 Labour held a special conference on British membership and the party voted 2 to 1 for Britain to leave the European Communities with more MPs supporting withdrawal than opposing it and only seven out of 46 affiliated trade unions supporting staying in the Common Market 24 25 The views of many leaders and activists within the party were reflected by Tony Benn who claimed during the 1975 EEC referendum that unless Britain voted to leave half a million jobs lost in Britain and a huge increase in food prices would be a direct result of our entry into the Common Market 25 In 1979 the Labour manifesto 26 declared that a Labour government would oppose any move towards turning the Community into a federation and in 1983 27 it still favoured British withdrawal from the EEC Under the leadership of Neil Kinnock after 1983 the then opposition party dropped its former resistance to the European Communities and instead favoured greater British integration into European Economic and Monetary Union British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher gained much popularity with the so called UK rebate in 1984 Britain then managed to reduce its contributions to the Union to a certain extent as it was then the EU s second poorest member and without much agriculture benefited little from farm subsidies 28 A speech by Jacques Delors President of the European Commission at the TUC conference in 1988 helped to weaken the eurosceptic inclination in the Labour Party 29 In the speech he argued for financial transfers to deindustrialising regions and for all workers to be covered by collective agreements In response the formerly eurosceptic union leader Ron Todd declared that in the short term we have not a cat in hell s chance in Westminster The only card game in town at the moment is in a town called Brussels As President of the Commission Delors pushed for stronger pan European regulations in areas including industrial relations health and safety the environment and consumer protection In addition he played a key role in the incorporation of the Community Charter of the Fundamental Social Rights of Workers into the Treaty of Maastricht enshrining a series of workers rights into European law 25 In the context of Thatcher s Conservative premiership when policies to reduce the power of the trade unions were pursued Delors advocacy of a social Europe became attractive to many 30 In 1989 the Labour Party officially dropped support for a withdrawal from the EEC by 1998 only three per cent of the party s MPs supported leaving the EU 25 The UK rebate was also held up by Thatcher s successors as prime minister 28 Thatcher had worked with Delors in building a single market and supported the Single European Act of 1986 but by 1988 believed that the single market would cause greater political integration which she opposed That year she warned in the Bruges speech of a European super state exercising a new dominance from Brussels 31 In late October 1990 just before her premiership ended Thatcher reacted strongly against Delors plans for a single currency in the House of Commons 32 Her stance contributed to her downfall a few weeks later 33 but Thatcher influenced others such as Daniel Hannan whose Oxford Campaign for an Independent Britain 1990 may be the start of the Brexit campaign 31 Role of the Post Maastricht Blues edit The overall acceptance of the European Union in all member states saw a strong increase of support till the 1990s and a major decline afterwards support sinking to 1980s levels then 34 Due to the timely connection with the Maastricht Treaty 1992 it has been called the post Maastricht Blues 34 35 The European integration process faced a major defeat with the failed Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe and eurosceptical opinions gained more impact overall The role of public opinion had been lower before but gained importance with state referendums as in the rejection of the constitution by French and Dutch voters in 2005 34 Since 1997 edit The financier Sir James Goldsmith formed the Referendum Party as a single issue party to fight the 1997 General Election calling for a referendum on aspects of the UK s relationship with the European Union It planned to contest every constituency where there was no leading candidate in favour of such a referendum and briefly held a seat in the House of Commons after George Gardiner the Conservative MP for Reigate changed parties in March 1997 following a battle against deselection by his local party The party polled 800 000 votes and finished fourth but did not win a seat in the House of Commons The United Kingdom Independence Party UKIP advocating the UK s complete withdrawal from the European Union had been founded in 1993 by Alan Sked but initially had only very limited success Due to a change in the election principle the 1999 European Parliament election allowed for the first UKIP parliamentary representation citation needed Many commentators who 36 believe over interest in the issue to be an important reason why the Conservative Party lost the General Election of 2001 They argue that the British electorate was more influenced by domestic issues than by European affairs citation needed After the electoral defeat of the UK Conservatives in 2001 the issue of Eurosceptism was important in the contest to elect a new party leader The winner Iain Duncan Smith was seen as more Eurosceptic than his predecessor William Hague As opposition leader Iain Duncan Smith attempted to disaffiliate the British Conservative Members of the European Parliament MEPs from the federalist European People s Party group As MEPs must participate in a transnational alliance to retain parliamentary privileges Duncan Smith sought the merger of Conservative MEPs into the Eurosceptic Union for a Europe of Nations UEN group Conservative MEPs vetoed this move because of the presence within the UEN of representatives of neo fascist parties who do not share similar domestic politics In 2004 Duncan Smith s successor Michael Howard emphasised that Conservative MEPs would remain in the EPP Group so as to maintain influence in the European Parliament Michael Howard s successor David Cameron pledged to remove Conservative MEPs from the EPP Group and this has now been implemented citation needed UKIP received 16 of the vote and gained 12 MEPs in the 2004 European Election The party s results improved in the 2009 UK European Election coming in second above the incumbent Labour Party 37 In the 2014 European Parliament elections UKIP support reached a new high water mark coming first ahead of the Labour party and gaining 26 6 of the vote citation needed Awkward partner status editProfessor Stephen George states in his 1990 book An Awkward Partner Britain in the European Community that the UK is an awkward partner within the European Union emphasising that although the UK is not the only EU member state to oppose further EU integration it is less enthusiastic than most other members 38 Factors contributing to awkward partner status include the distinctiveness of the identity and culture of the UK in contrast to that of continental Europe According to a 2003 profile in The Guardian historian Robert Conquest favoured a British withdrawal from the EU in favour of creating a much looser association of English speaking nations known as the Anglosphere 39 Examples of closer ties include the special relationship with the US Additionally the UK has not experienced the major political upheavals of continental Europe 40 British government officials have often been hostile towards further European integration supporting intergovernmental cooperation as opposed to supranational authority and a single market rather than the EMU Great importance has also been attached to the defence of national sovereignty i e where ultimate decision making authority is located in the United Kingdom as a nation state 40 The UK has also experienced limited influence in EU negotiations on key EU policies e g the EMU British governments have not set the agenda but reacted to proposals from others by attempting to slow the pace of integration or limit its impact Although influential in some areas e g the single market and defence the UK is often in a minority of states opposed to change and has not developed durable alliances to counter the Franco German partnership 40 The UK does not have the consensus among the elite of the country on the benefits of EU membership as opposed to other EU member states As Andrew Williamson notes the issue has caused divisions within Labour in the past and the Conservatives today and is most prominent in the Conservatives and the UK Independence Party UKIP 40 41 Levels of support are lower in the UK than most other member states as well as having less knowledge about the institution UK citizens are the least likely to feel a sense of European identity and national sovereignty is also seen as more important to British people than that of people from other EU nations with many major newspapers taking Eurosceptic positions 40 Cambridge historian David Abulafia states The concept of European identity among British people arouses puzzlement 42 Among the many differences is the very different legal tradition European nations have from that of the UK A product of English history common law is uncommon among the other members of the EU 42 Campaigns for withdrawal edit nbsp Vote Leave signs in 2016The two main anti EU campaigns during the UK referendum on EU membership were Vote Leave and Leave EU both of which received limited support from Nigel Farage leader of the UK s largest Eurosceptic political party 43 Vote Leave was a cross party group working with the campaigns Labour Leave Conservatives for Britain and Business for Britain 44 Its donors include former Conservative treasurer and banker Peter Cruddas Labour donor John Mills and spread betting tycoon Stuart Wheeler who was a major donor to the Conservatives before becoming UKIP treasurer 45 It was also the preferred campaign of UKIP s then only Member of Parliament Douglas Carswell 45 The Grassroots Out campaign launched as of 23 January 2016 in Kettering as a national cross party with the aim of bringing together all leave groups founded by Conservative MPs Peter Bone and Tom Pursglove and Labour MP Kate Hoey following in fighting between Vote Leave and Leave EU 46 The Left Leave Campaign or Lexit brought together Eurosceptic voices on the British left sponsored by the Rail Maritime and Transport trade union 47 the Socialist Workers Party and the Communist Party of Britain The Campaign launched to unite anti austerity voices and those critical of the European Union s response to the 2015 European Migrant Crisis 48 The Better Off Out campaign a non partisan organisation campaigning for EU withdrawal lists its reasons for EU withdrawal as freedom to make trading deals with other nations control over national borders control over UK government spending the restoration of the British legal system deregulation of EU laws and control of the NHS among others 49 Similarly the Democracy Movement the UK s largest non party anti EU campaign in the years prior to the 2016 EU referendum highlighted the EU s economic decline the broad reach of EU regulation the UK s lack of influence over new EU laws and the EU s plans for further integration 50 Get Britain Out and the Campaign for an Independent Britain are similar non partisan campaigns The perceived democratic deficit in the European Union including legitimacy problems of the European Commission and the European Parliament and the supremacy of EU law over national legislation are some of the major objections of British Eurosceptics The EU is also argued to have a negative financial impact due to rising costs of membership 51 and an alleged negative impact of EU regulatory burdens on UK business citation needed Opponents of the EU have accused its politicians and civil servants of corruption A media scoop of this sort was 2005 Nigel Farage MEP request of the European Commission to disclose the individual Commissioner holiday travel after President of the European Commission Jose Barroso had spent a week on the yacht of the Greek shipping billionaire Spiro Latsis 52 The European Court of Auditors reports about the financial planning are among the topics which are often scandalised in the British press 53 2016 EU membership referendum edit nbsp Comparison of results in 1975 and 2016 referendums nbsp 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum National resultChoice Votes Leave the European Union 17 410 742 51 89 Remain a member of the European Union 16 141 241 48 11 Registered voters and turnout 46 500 001 72 21 Source Electoral Commission Archived 29 January 2017 at the Wayback MachineOn 23 June 2016 the United Kingdom EU membership referendum was held giving support for Britain leaving the European Union by a margin of 51 9 to 48 1 with slightly over 72 turnout Subsequently after Theresa May was appointed Prime Minister she named three Cabinet ministers with new roles all Eurosceptics to negotiate the UK out of the EU David Davis was appointed Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union Liam Fox was appointed Secretary of State for International Trade and Boris Johnson was appointed Foreign Secretary 54 Opinion polling edit Main articles Opinion polling for the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum and Opinion polling on the United Kingdom rejoining the European Union 2020 present The assessment of attitudes to the European Union and European Parliamentary Election voting intentions is undertaken on a regular basis by a variety of opinion polling organisations including ComRes ICM Populus and Survation For detailed polls between 2013 and 2015 see here for polls conducted between 2016 and 2020 see here and for polls conducted between 2020 and today see here Opinion poll results edit Polling on this issue has typically produced narrow majorities in favour of remaining within the EU although some polls have found the reverse result According to an Opinium Observer poll taken on 20 February 2015 update 51 of the British electorate said they would most likely vote the United Kingdom to leave the European Union if they were offered a referendum whereas 49 would not the figures exclude 14 who said they were unsure These studies also showed that 41 of the electorate view the EU as a positive force overall whereas 34 saw it as negative 55 and a study in November 2012 update showed that while 48 of EU citizens trusted the European Parliament only 22 of the UK trusted the Parliament 56 110 2 QA 14 1 Support and opposition for withdrawal from the EU are not evenly distributed among the different age groups opposition to EU membership is most prevalent among those 60 and older with a poll from 22 23 March 2015 update showing that 48 of this age group oppose EU membership This decreases to 22 among those aged 18 24 with 56 of 18 to 24 year olds stating that they would vote for Britain to remain in the EU Finally the results of the poll showed some regional variation support for withdrawal from the EU is lowest in Scotland and London at 22 and 32 respectively but reaches 42 in the Midlands and Wales the only region polled with a plurality in favour of withdrawal 57 The February 2015 study also showed that trust of the UK s relationship with the EU is split along partisan lines When asked which party they trusted the most to handle the UK s relationship with the EU 35 trusted the Tories the most Conservatives 33 trusted Labour 15 trusted UKIP 7 trusted the Greens and 6 trusted the Liberal Democrats 55 Notable people associated with Euroscepticism edit nbsp Enoch Powell 58 nbsp Tony Benn 59 nbsp Margaret Thatcher 60 nbsp Nigel Lawson 61 nbsp Michael Portillo 62 nbsp Bill Cash 63 nbsp Daniel Hannan 64 nbsp Nigel Farage 65 nbsp Michael Gove 66 nbsp Boris Johnson 67 nbsp Priti Patel 68 nbsp Rishi Sunak 69 Eurosceptic parties editBritish Democratic Party BDP 70 Britain First 71 72 British National Party BNP 73 Communist Party of Britain Marxist Leninist CPB ML Communist Party of Britain CPB Conservative Party factions 74 English Democrats Liberal Party 75 New Communist Party of Britain 75 Reform UK formerly Brexit Party Social Democratic Party SDP 76 Socialist Labour Party SLP 77 Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition TUSC 78 79 UK Independence Party UKIP Workers Party of Britain WPB Defunct Eurosceptic parties edit Anti Common Market and Free Trade Party 1967 1988 Referendum Party 1994 1997 We Demand a Referendum 2012 2014 Veritas 2005 2015 New Deal 2013 2015 Respect Party 80 2004 2016 Independence from Europe 81 2012 2017 Liberty GB 82 2013 2017 See also edit2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum Brexit British nationalism Bruges Group Commission Regulation EC No 2257 94 straight banana Euroscepticism in Ireland Factortame litigation Metric Martyrs Opinion polling on the United Kingdom s membership of the European Union 2016 2020 Opinion polling on the United Kingdom rejoining the European Union 2020 present References edit Standard Eurobarometer 71 fieldwork June July 2009 PDF European Commission September 2009 Retrieved 26 November 2009 Anti Europeanism and Euroscepticism in the United States Patrick Chamorel No 25 EUI RSCAS Working Papers from European University Institute EUI Robert Schuman Centre of Advanced Studies RSCAS 2004 Margaret Macmillan The War That Ended Peace The Road to 1914 2013 ch 2 Winston Churchill speaking in Zurich I9 September 1946 a b Watts Duncan 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campaign to leave the EU The Respect Party Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 AN INDEPENDENCE FROM EUROPE YOUTUBE 19 April 2014 via YouTube dead YouTube link The EU Debate Is Lost No Matter Who Wins Liberty GB 21 February 2016 Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2016 Further reading editAbbott Lewis F British Withdrawal from the European Union A Guide to the Case For ISR Google Books 2013 British Withdrawal from the European Union A Guide to the Case For Booker C and North R The Great Deception Continuum Publishing London and New York 2003 EU Referendum Edition published by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC April 2016 Grob Fitzgibbon Benjamin Continental Drift Britain and Europe from the End of Empire to the Rise of Euroscepticism 2016 excerpt Sutcliffe John B The roots and consequences of Euroskepticism an evaluation of the United Kingdom Independence Party Geopolitics History and International Relations 4 1 2012 107 127 online Spiering Menno British euroscepticism in Robert Harmsen and Menno Spiering eds Euroscepticism Brill Rodopi 2004 pp 127 149 Tiersky Ronald ed 2001 Euro skepticism A Reader Rowman amp Littlefield pp 103 111 ISBN 9780742510548 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help primary sourcesExternal links editAdrian Williamson The case for Brexit lessons from the 1960s and 1970s History and Policy 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1174865607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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