The EU ‘People’s Vote’ Has Already Taken Place — and the People Voted Leave
Morning Star, UK
Anti-Brexit campaigners take part in the People's Vote March for the Future in London, a march and rally in support of a second EU referendum yesterday
THERE is a particular poignancy in seeing politicians who ignored up to two million people marching against mass slaughter in Iraq now insisting that a smaller number on London’s streets demanding another EU referendum merits consideration.
“This isn’t the Brexit we voted for,” many declare. Of course it isn’t, because yesterday’s mobilisation was organised by those who opted for Remain. They didn’t want any form of Brexit.
Their patronising demand for a “People’s” Vote, with its implication that extraterrestrials or farm animals voted to leave first time round, oozes New Labour marketing style.
Whereas obstacles were placed in the way of the Stop the War Coalition in 2003, from media misrepresentation or censorship to Blair government attempts to prevent marchers gathering in Hyde Park for fear of “damaging the grass,” the neoliberal media, including the BBC, has been wholeheartedly behind the People’s Vote project.
Coaches to London were funded by Peter Mandelson, Michael Heseltine, Anna Soubry, David Miliband, Alastair Campbell and a miscellany of wealthy celebrities.
That’s on top of sizeable donations — up to £1 million, from Superdry co-founder Julian Dunkerton, currency speculator George Soros and others.
Many marching did so for utterly laudable sentiments, viewing the EU as a civilised, humanitarian alternative to the reality of a Tory government riddled with racism, xenophobia and contempt for the working class.
Unfortunately this is a false dichotomy — spot on about the Tories but irredeemably idealistic about the EU.
The Schengen agreement, allowing internal EU free movement, is mirrored by a Fortress Europe attitude to the rest of the world that bankrolls Turkey and Libya to act as EU border guards to prevent people from war zones and economic desperation from reaching the EU to seek asylum.
On economic policy, the EU Stability and Growth Pact lays down a capitalist austerity regime for the entire bloc, with severe restrictions on budget deficits and public borrowing that have ravaged many peripheral economies — Greece most severely.
When the Syriza government told the European Central Bank-European Commission-International Monetary Fund troika deputed to schedule loans to bail out foreign banks operating in Greece that the electorate had voted against austerity measures, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Greek democracy was irrelevant because “rules are rules.”
EU rules have seen wages and pensions slashed, unemployment, privatisation and poverty soar and the Greek public sector parcelled up as a ransom guarantee against future payment default.
Such contempt for national democracy is ingrained within EU structures, with no direct voter accountability for the key Council of Ministers or the European Commission, which is guided in its deliberations for proposed legislation by the European Roundtable of Industrialists and an army of transnational corporate lobbyists.
The so-called European Parliament has no right or function to propose legislation. It is little more than an expensive debating chamber and a pseudo-democratic fig leaf for corporate governance.
The Tory Party has always prioritised City of London interests, especially the finance sector, which is why David Cameron, George Osborne and Theresa May led the Remain charge in the 2016 referendum.
May’s government still has this priority, so we can anticipate Tory negotiations with the EU as most likely resulting in a Brexit in name only.
Over two-thirds of Labour MPs represent constituencies that voted to leave the EU, which should serve as a caution to EU cheerleaders in the party leadership not to leap on board the People’s Vote bandwagon.
As Jeremy Corbyn has said consistently, the people’s vote in 2016 was to leave and that must be respected.
Morning Star, UK
Anti-Brexit campaigners take part in the People's Vote March for the Future in London, a march and rally in support of a second EU referendum yesterday
THERE is a particular poignancy in seeing politicians who ignored up to two million people marching against mass slaughter in Iraq now insisting that a smaller number on London’s streets demanding another EU referendum merits consideration.
“This isn’t the Brexit we voted for,” many declare. Of course it isn’t, because yesterday’s mobilisation was organised by those who opted for Remain. They didn’t want any form of Brexit.
Their patronising demand for a “People’s” Vote, with its implication that extraterrestrials or farm animals voted to leave first time round, oozes New Labour marketing style.
Whereas obstacles were placed in the way of the Stop the War Coalition in 2003, from media misrepresentation or censorship to Blair government attempts to prevent marchers gathering in Hyde Park for fear of “damaging the grass,” the neoliberal media, including the BBC, has been wholeheartedly behind the People’s Vote project.
Coaches to London were funded by Peter Mandelson, Michael Heseltine, Anna Soubry, David Miliband, Alastair Campbell and a miscellany of wealthy celebrities.
That’s on top of sizeable donations — up to £1 million, from Superdry co-founder Julian Dunkerton, currency speculator George Soros and others.
Many marching did so for utterly laudable sentiments, viewing the EU as a civilised, humanitarian alternative to the reality of a Tory government riddled with racism, xenophobia and contempt for the working class.
Unfortunately this is a false dichotomy — spot on about the Tories but irredeemably idealistic about the EU.
The Schengen agreement, allowing internal EU free movement, is mirrored by a Fortress Europe attitude to the rest of the world that bankrolls Turkey and Libya to act as EU border guards to prevent people from war zones and economic desperation from reaching the EU to seek asylum.
On economic policy, the EU Stability and Growth Pact lays down a capitalist austerity regime for the entire bloc, with severe restrictions on budget deficits and public borrowing that have ravaged many peripheral economies — Greece most severely.
When the Syriza government told the European Central Bank-European Commission-International Monetary Fund troika deputed to schedule loans to bail out foreign banks operating in Greece that the electorate had voted against austerity measures, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Greek democracy was irrelevant because “rules are rules.”
EU rules have seen wages and pensions slashed, unemployment, privatisation and poverty soar and the Greek public sector parcelled up as a ransom guarantee against future payment default.
Such contempt for national democracy is ingrained within EU structures, with no direct voter accountability for the key Council of Ministers or the European Commission, which is guided in its deliberations for proposed legislation by the European Roundtable of Industrialists and an army of transnational corporate lobbyists.
The so-called European Parliament has no right or function to propose legislation. It is little more than an expensive debating chamber and a pseudo-democratic fig leaf for corporate governance.
The Tory Party has always prioritised City of London interests, especially the finance sector, which is why David Cameron, George Osborne and Theresa May led the Remain charge in the 2016 referendum.
May’s government still has this priority, so we can anticipate Tory negotiations with the EU as most likely resulting in a Brexit in name only.
Over two-thirds of Labour MPs represent constituencies that voted to leave the EU, which should serve as a caution to EU cheerleaders in the party leadership not to leap on board the People’s Vote bandwagon.
As Jeremy Corbyn has said consistently, the people’s vote in 2016 was to leave and that must be respected.
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