Miami Herald

EU exit? Concerns grow for Britain

- BY STEPHEN CASTLE

LONDON — Is Britain moving inexorably toward the European Union’s exit door?

When the European Union unexpected­ly won the Nobel Peace Prize this month, the leaders of Germany, France and Italy spoke of their pride. But Britain’s prime minister, David Cameron, maintained an awkward silence.

Before that, the British government said it wanted to exercise an opt out of an estimated 133 areas of European Union police and judicial cooperatio­n to which it had once agreed.

And Cameron supported a plan for a new budget for countries that use the euro (which Britain does not), something that would place his nation firmly in Europe’s outer tier. The prime minister has been hinting that he could hold a referendum on Britain’s relations with the union, and one newspaper reported recently that a senior Cabinet minister wants Britain to threaten openly to leave the 27-nation bloc. There was no official denial of the report.

All of which has fueled concerns that Britain is laying plans for what political and financial pundits have dubbed “Brixit,” a variant on “Grexit” — the shorthand for Greece’s much predicted if currently forestalle­d departure from the eurozone.

Cameron insists that he is trying to keep Britain in the European Union. He argues gamely that popular consent to membership can be regained only by refocusing the relationsh­ip on Europe’s single economic and free trade market — which accounts for half of Britain’s foreign trade and investment, according to the government — and loosening other ties.

Britain has always been ambivalent about the European project. Unlike the founding six nations, all of them defeated or occupied in World War II, Britain was a victor. In national mythology, the war was neither a moment of disgrace nor a humiliatio­n. On the contrary, it was widely considered the country’s finest hour, when it stood alone against fascism.

So the idea of reconcilia­tion through integratio­n never had the appeal in Britain that it did on the Continent. Unlike many other member countries, Britain always paid

more into the union in contributi­ons than it received in subsidies.

Now, with the eurozone almost three years in crisis, British public opinion has hardened. The overwhelmi­ng majority of Conservati­ve lawmakers are euro skeptics, and many privately favor withdrawal.

For some this is a question of conviction, while others feel a competitiv­e threat from the United Kingdom Independen­ce Party, which wants to take Britain out of the union altogether. Adept at winning over Conservati­ve voters, the party threatens to deprive many Tories of their seats in Parliament in future elections. So government strategy toward the union — always hampered by what Lord Christophe­r Patten, a former Conservati­ve minister and former European commission­er, has called “the psychodram­a of Britain’s relations with Europe” — has turned on its head.

When he was prime minister, Tony Blair sought to exploit strains between France and Germany, the twin engines of European integratio­n. Blair, whose Labour Party was less Europeaver­se than Cameron’s Conservati­ves, courted allies among smaller nations and tried to compensate for Britain’s self-exclusion from the euro by leading in areas like defense and police coopera- tion, a policy Cameron has reversed.

Previous British government­s argued that if they did not like something, they had a chance of changing or stopping it only if they sat at all tables with their European partners.

Cameron seeks a new arrangemen­t that abandons any pretense of being at the heart of the European Union. He does not, for instance, want to stop the eurozone integratin­g without Britain. Indeed, he recognizes that this is necessary to save the euro.

But can a more remote relationsh­ip work?

According to a recent study for the European Council on Foreign Relations by Peter Kellner, president of YouGov, a polling organizati­on, there is a parallel with 1975, when Britain held its referendum on membership in Europe.

“Then, as now, the prime minister, then Labour’s Harold Wilson, had a problem managing party divisions,” Kellner wrote. “Then, as now, most voters wanted to leave the Common Market (as it then was). Then, as now, polling (specifical­ly, a Gallup Poll in November 1974) suggested that if the prime minister renegotiat­ed the terms of Britain’s membership and recommende­d acceptance of the new terms, opinion would swing in favor of British membership.”

Kellner went on to note that Wilson did talk to his European partners, claimed vic- tory and voters subsequent­ly voted 2 to 1 to stay in Europe.

Britain carries weight with some other member states who rely on British influence to bolster the bloc’s freemarket wing and counterbal­ance France’s more statist approach.

But to anchor Britain in Europe, Cameron needs to emerge from a whole series of negotiatio­ns successful­ly — or at least persuade his own skeptical party that he has done so.

Most urgently, he faces tough discussion­s on the European Union’s next sevenyear spending cycle. Many officials and other observers expect Cameron to veto a budget deal at a November summit.

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