If we leave, there is no going back!
With less
than 100 days until the UK goes to the polls in the biggest political event for
generations, and not a straight answer in sight from the right wing press I
asked MEP Richard Corbett for the ins and outs of the referendum hoping to bust
the myths being pedalled.
I started by
asking Richard about the often made claim by the out campaign that our
Parliament isn’t sovereign with some Euro-sceptics claiming that up to 75% of
our laws are passed in Brussels.
The Yorkshire and Humber MEP says “the
independent House of Commons library found that the real proportion is just
13.2% of laws; and these figures include laws that even mention the EU only in
passing.
So what
about the claim that the European Parliament is nothing more than a gentleman’s
club, costing UK tax payers a fortune?
He refuted
this claim, stating in fact that the confederation of British industry
estimates that EU membership is worth £3000 per month to every family in
Britain. A return of £10 for every £1 spent, and the budget is just 1% of GDP.
But will an
out vote mean two years of uncertainty, leading to a possible stock market
crash? I asked.
Richard told
me that while it is impossible to predict whether a Brexit would cause a stock
market crash, it will lead to uncertainty in the markets.
I asked
Richard, Deputy leader of the European parliamentary Labour party, if was ludicrous of Boris Johnson to say we should vote out to get a
better deal. The MEP says if we walk out on our neighbours it would be
difficult to see where the good will would come from to get a better deal,
indicating that Bo Jo’s out campaign was more linked to a future Tory
leadership bid.
I asked
Richard if he thought the desire from Tory MPs to leave the EU was based on a
desire to abolish worker’s right’s? He accepted that the Tories are split over the
issue but believes the right wing leavers in the party are very keen to
diminish worker’s rights in the UK and see Brexit as a way to achieve this.
We often
hear UKIP leader Nigel Farage refer to the European parliament as undemocratic,
but Mr Corbett states on website that the European commission only makes
suggestions which have to be passed (or rejected) by elected national
Governments and directly elected MEP’s. In any case, he says, Commissioners
themselves are accountable to the European Parliament, which elects a
President, approves its appointment and can dismiss it by a vote of no
confidence.
Is this, as
many have claimed, a once in lifetime vote, I asked. Yes, Richard says “Which
is why it’s so important to make the argument for staying in. if we leave,
there is no going back.”
In the event
of an out vote from the UK as a whole but Scotland voting to remain, I asked
whether the Scot’s should have another independence referendum. “The SNP
certainly wants to have another referendum and have recently gone back on their
once in a lifetime promise before the referendum last year".
Many people
claim they want to leave the EU because of immigration and believe Brexit to be
the solution, Corbett points out that there is almost an equal number of Brits
in other countries as Europeans in the UK, and those in Britain pay one third
more in tax than they take out in benefits and services. He says “freedom of
movement isn’t really a problem in terms of numbers or cost to the exchequer.
Where there are problems, they are things that our Government could and should
deal with, such as agencies only advertising jobs abroad and undercutting
wages.”
Of those who
come from outside the EU, Richard says “that’s under our own national rules,
which we determine, but are far better able to enforce those rules while we
remain in the EU because for one thing we maintain our borders in Calais,
rather than Dover, which means we can process applicants before they arrive
here. If they arrived here and then were found to be ineligible, we would have
the often difficult task of deporting them, a problem we currently avoid with
our partnership with France.” He also points out that we can use the Dublin
regulation, which means we can send some asylum seekers back to the EU country
in which they first arrived. A figure he puts at some 12,000 since 2003. He
also highlighted the system of cooperation among police and intelligence forces
meaning we get information on certain people when they arrive, such as
fingerprints and criminal records. It also helps he says “cooperating to fight
international gangs of people traffickers.”
For the
concerned football fans I asked Richard would Brexit mean the end of Champions
League football, meaning top players will snub the premier league. He referred me
to West Ham’s vice chair, Karen Brady’s comments when she claimed that exit
from the EU would make it harder for English clubs to attract international
players while fans would be stung by higher costs when travelling to games on
the continent. She said in a letter to football club chairmen that players from
the EU can sign for clubs here without the need for a visa or special work
permit, making it easier to sign top talent from across Europe to play in our
leagues. She said “losing this
unhindered access to European talent would British sides at a disadvantage
compared to continental teams.
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