The Borneo Post

UK Brexit debate has echoes of 1975

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LONDON: It’s a snapshot from another political era. Fortyone years ago, in Britain’s last referendum on Europe, Margaret Thatcher hit the campaign trail clad in a woolly jumper emblazoned with a Union flag.

But the 1975 poll, which saw Britain embrace membership of what was then the Common Market, has plenty in common with the current bitter and closelyfou­ght debate.

It also carries lessons for politician­s ahead of the June 23 vote on whether to stay in or leave the European Union ( EU) - not least that the referendum may not resolve the issue for long.

Labour prime minister Harold Wilson called the referendum on June 5, 1975, as a way of trying to appease the euroscepti­c wing of his fractured party, and urged Britons to stay in after securing concession­s from Brussels.

This time around, it is Conservati­ve premier David Cameron who is holding a vote to try to heal party splits, and who is campaignin­g to ‘Remain’ on the basis of a renegotiat­ed EU settlement.

For Tim Bale, politics professor at Queen Mary, University of London, the lesson of the past is that a referendum cannot guarantee to put a contentiou­s matter to rest.

“It will fail utterly to settle the Europe question ‘once and for all’,” Bale wrote in a blog post.

“As to whether, in a democracy, that kind of never- ending uncertaint­y is necessaril­y a bad thing, who knows?” he said.

Wilson secured 67 per cent support for staying in the European Economic Community ( EEC), which Britain had joined two years earlier - a result Cameron would be very happy with.

Opinion polls currently show the race is close, although the “Remain” camp has a slender lead.

Back then, the left wing of Wilson’s Labour party wanted to leave the Common Market, among them current leader Jeremy Corbyn – who now advocates staying in.

Meanwhile Thatcher, newly elected as leader of the opposition Conservati­ves, strongly defended British membership of the EEC, saying the country was “inextricab­ly” part of Europe.

She would later become a heroine to Conservati­ve euroscepti­cs due to her visceral declaratio­ns of opposition to Brussels when she became prime minister.

Many older Britons who want to leave the EU argue that today’s bloc is not the same entity as the EEC they supported joining in 1975. — AFP

 ??  ?? Thatcher defended membership of the then EEC when she was newly elected as leader of the Conservati­ves, but later as prime minister, became a heroine to Conservati­ve euroscepti­cs with her visceral declaratio­ns of opposition to Brussels. This time...
Thatcher defended membership of the then EEC when she was newly elected as leader of the Conservati­ves, but later as prime minister, became a heroine to Conservati­ve euroscepti­cs with her visceral declaratio­ns of opposition to Brussels. This time...

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