Fear is absolutley
Posted: 24 Jan 2015, 12:19
the key.
If we needed proof that the Tories are more scared of the UKIIP than they are of offending all the other governments in the EU, then here it is.
Quite simply Osborne told the EU members: "Reform or we're gone". Not only in the EU treaties but also in their own economies and the economy of the Eurozone as a whole. Telling the rest of the EU that they are not fit to be in an EU which the UK is in; is the equivalent of throwing down a cast iron challenge gauntlet. It has crashed to the floor with a god awful noise and now it is lying there. Stony faced EU leaders are standing there looking at it and wondering how to make it go away.
If there was any one thing which tells me the internal Tory polling results, this is it. Simply put the UK does not go to a world wide forum like Davos and tell the rest of the 28 that they're a bunch of school room dunces and if they don't pull their socks up they'll be on their own. Also he told them something I've being going on about for a long time now but our politicians have been very coy about saying. Namely that the UK is the second largest economy in the EU and it's about time they started treating us as such. In fact he went further and trotted out the latest economy figures which are persona non grata in Brussels. Namely that with the UK growth average and the German growth average continuing as they are, the UK will be the largest economy in the EU by 2030. Which seriously did not go down well with the Germans who can't conceive of such a thing.
The only thing he didn't say was that more and more of UK business continues to go out of the EU because the EU is not a place where the UK can do business and make money. But he should have. Because maybe then the Germans would believe that the UK could overtake them as they have so slanted the playing field inside the EU so that no other country can overtake their position as the #1 economy.
I shall have some fun on Monday asking the guys at work what their local press made of it. I'm sure they will all spin it incorrectly as the UK angling for something the rest don't want to give and that the UK, like Greece, can get stuffed and go do it's own thing. They will never understand that it is pure survival which is driving the UK politicians to say this. The EU is incredibly unpopular with the people of the UK and as they take their own arrogant stance they become ever more unpopular.
The only thing I can say for the Tories is that they are going to wind up having to take us out when the rest of the EU refuses to back down and the people of the UK also refuse to back down. Something will have to give and I'm betting that it is our EU membership.
Just like the US with Lehmans and the Ooops factor when they threw the financial system to the dogs, the politicians of the EU have convinced themselves that the Greek debt and the UK income are of no consequence and that it won't really hurt them if they don't do what needs to be done to resolve both crises. We have France and Germany saying that if Greece wants debt forgiveness then they can leave and "take the pain" of the Drachma. At the same time senior German financial analysts are saying that the EU and Germany simply can't afford Greece to default. You can times that by 50 for the impact of the UK leaving when Germany winds up trying to fill the gap. Germany currently has debt to 80% of GDP, yet EU rules state that they must reduce it to 60%. How are they going to find circa 77bn for a Greek default and then the ongoing billions from the loss of the UK to the EU purse? France? They're in even more debt, so are Italy and Spain. Beyond them the economies are so small they simply can't even think of looking at either the Greek debt or covering the UK subscriptions.
In the last year I heard the climate changes in the Arctic described as being like a slow moving train wreck. Right now the ego's and tantrums of the EU politicians are driving them to the edge of a very large chasm. If they don't understand the problems in Greece or how they are perceived in the UK, is it our fault for tipping them into the chasm?
I must admit that it is refreshing to finally have some of our politicians standing up and saying "We are a world power _without_ the EU, shut up and listen!". I also don't believe that the room full of people really understood what they were voting for when their show of hands said the UK should stay in the EU. Most of them think of it always being as it is, with the UK being "in but out" and able to act as an independent entity whilst still within the mechanisms of the EU. Able to exert influence beyond our 1:28th of a vote. I'm sure that they don't realise that the UK would be consumed and marginalised in a fully federal EU. Something very few of them (outside the EU), would want. If they thought about it for a while they would probably want the UK in the EEA, inside enough to be able to talk to them but outside enough to still be a world power the rest of the EU would have to listen to.
It's going to be an interesting time unless Labour win the next election. Then all bets are off, we could even find ourselves in the Euro.....
If we needed proof that the Tories are more scared of the UKIIP than they are of offending all the other governments in the EU, then here it is.
Quite simply Osborne told the EU members: "Reform or we're gone". Not only in the EU treaties but also in their own economies and the economy of the Eurozone as a whole. Telling the rest of the EU that they are not fit to be in an EU which the UK is in; is the equivalent of throwing down a cast iron challenge gauntlet. It has crashed to the floor with a god awful noise and now it is lying there. Stony faced EU leaders are standing there looking at it and wondering how to make it go away.
If there was any one thing which tells me the internal Tory polling results, this is it. Simply put the UK does not go to a world wide forum like Davos and tell the rest of the 28 that they're a bunch of school room dunces and if they don't pull their socks up they'll be on their own. Also he told them something I've being going on about for a long time now but our politicians have been very coy about saying. Namely that the UK is the second largest economy in the EU and it's about time they started treating us as such. In fact he went further and trotted out the latest economy figures which are persona non grata in Brussels. Namely that with the UK growth average and the German growth average continuing as they are, the UK will be the largest economy in the EU by 2030. Which seriously did not go down well with the Germans who can't conceive of such a thing.
The only thing he didn't say was that more and more of UK business continues to go out of the EU because the EU is not a place where the UK can do business and make money. But he should have. Because maybe then the Germans would believe that the UK could overtake them as they have so slanted the playing field inside the EU so that no other country can overtake their position as the #1 economy.
I shall have some fun on Monday asking the guys at work what their local press made of it. I'm sure they will all spin it incorrectly as the UK angling for something the rest don't want to give and that the UK, like Greece, can get stuffed and go do it's own thing. They will never understand that it is pure survival which is driving the UK politicians to say this. The EU is incredibly unpopular with the people of the UK and as they take their own arrogant stance they become ever more unpopular.
The only thing I can say for the Tories is that they are going to wind up having to take us out when the rest of the EU refuses to back down and the people of the UK also refuse to back down. Something will have to give and I'm betting that it is our EU membership.
Just like the US with Lehmans and the Ooops factor when they threw the financial system to the dogs, the politicians of the EU have convinced themselves that the Greek debt and the UK income are of no consequence and that it won't really hurt them if they don't do what needs to be done to resolve both crises. We have France and Germany saying that if Greece wants debt forgiveness then they can leave and "take the pain" of the Drachma. At the same time senior German financial analysts are saying that the EU and Germany simply can't afford Greece to default. You can times that by 50 for the impact of the UK leaving when Germany winds up trying to fill the gap. Germany currently has debt to 80% of GDP, yet EU rules state that they must reduce it to 60%. How are they going to find circa 77bn for a Greek default and then the ongoing billions from the loss of the UK to the EU purse? France? They're in even more debt, so are Italy and Spain. Beyond them the economies are so small they simply can't even think of looking at either the Greek debt or covering the UK subscriptions.
In the last year I heard the climate changes in the Arctic described as being like a slow moving train wreck. Right now the ego's and tantrums of the EU politicians are driving them to the edge of a very large chasm. If they don't understand the problems in Greece or how they are perceived in the UK, is it our fault for tipping them into the chasm?
I must admit that it is refreshing to finally have some of our politicians standing up and saying "We are a world power _without_ the EU, shut up and listen!". I also don't believe that the room full of people really understood what they were voting for when their show of hands said the UK should stay in the EU. Most of them think of it always being as it is, with the UK being "in but out" and able to act as an independent entity whilst still within the mechanisms of the EU. Able to exert influence beyond our 1:28th of a vote. I'm sure that they don't realise that the UK would be consumed and marginalised in a fully federal EU. Something very few of them (outside the EU), would want. If they thought about it for a while they would probably want the UK in the EEA, inside enough to be able to talk to them but outside enough to still be a world power the rest of the EU would have to listen to.
It's going to be an interesting time unless Labour win the next election. Then all bets are off, we could even find ourselves in the Euro.....