The Mail on Sunday

Forget the EU vote – all Britain really needs is patriotic leaders

- Peter Hitchens

THIS is what happens when you call in the cowboys to do an important job. It goes wrong and you can’t afford to fix it. You thought you could trust the Tory Party. You thought you could ignore our rather good constituti­on and bypass it with a referendum. I did warn you.

In May 2013, I pointed out the dangers of a referendum, asking: ‘Has Parliament been abolished? Has a constituti­on been quietly introduced, which demands that such issues are decided by plebiscite, and makes the result of such plebiscite­s binding on Parliament?

‘I’ve heard no such proposal, and can’t see how it could be so, given the cowardly, ignorant or plain stupid attitudes of most MPs to this question.

‘It’s certainly understood, by constituti­onal lawyers, that such an obligation is important for any serious plebiscite, and its presence or absence in any legislatio­n will be crucial. I suspect it will be absent.’ And so it was.

Now you find out you were wrong, who are you going to call? For years I explained that the only way out of the EU was to replace the Tories with a genuinely patriotic conservati­ve party that could win an Election. The referendum proves that the votes were there.

In October 2011, I said: ‘Even if they succeeded in getting their referendum, and even if they succeeded in winning it… it would not bind the British government. The only real solution is for a General Election to be won by a party committed to secession.’

We would then have had an actual government determined to do what the people wanted, without any need to hurry to prove itself, and with a good idea of how it would use our new-found independen­ce once we regained it. Instead we had a cynical campaign led by people who still cannot escape the suspicion that they never intended to win and were shocked and dismayed when they did.

And we have a pantomime horse – a policy being ineptly and half-heartedly implemente­d by people who don’t support it. And we have a constituti­onal crisis, as I said we would on June 12 when I also correctly predicted that ‘Leave’ would win.

So I can’t join in the bizarre and rather lawless squawking of rage at the High Court’s ruling that Parliament must vote on Article 50. It is a perfectly reasonable judgment, based on my favourite bit of the Constituti­on, the 1689 Bill of Rights which guarantees our freedom far more surely than any human rights rubbish.

Actually this doesn’t mean that Parliament will block our formal exit from the EU. Only a small coven of kamikaze MPs would dare to do that. The elite have other, cleverer plans.

BUT it does mean that Chairman May will now have the excuse she needs to fudge our exit. Parliament, and the Civil Service, will ‘take back control’ of the process. And what we will get will almost certainly be the Norway option – continued access to the Single Market and very little control over our borders.

We will move from being halfway into the EU to being halfway out of it. The referendum’s simple requiremen­t, that we leave the EU, will be fulfilled, beyond question.

But of course that wasn’t all that millions of people voted for. If we want the rest of it, especially border control, we simply cannot rely on the existing parties or the establishm­ent to get it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom