101 REASONS FOR LEAVING THE EU
We wish to express our indebtedness and gratitude to those
who in books and articles have sought to alert the Nation to its Danger, and
whose observations are reflected or summarised here: in particular,
Rodney Atkinson and Norris
McWhirter
for Treason at
Maastricht
Adrian Hilton for The
Principality and Power of Europe
Lindsay Jenkins for The
Last Days of Britain
And
For the late Lord Shore of Stepney’s
Separate Ways
Copies of this booklet can be obtained from the Publishers -Priced £1.20 incl p&p
St Mathew Publishing Ltd
24 Geldart St.
Cambridge
Tel: 01223 504871 Fax: 01223 512304
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1. hush up
Cabinet papers pre - 1970
show the Heath government to have had full knowledge of the EEC being a long
-term plan for the unitary European State with its own Currency;
but the facts were suppressed by this and succeeding governments with the Deliberate
intention of keeping the Nation in the dark
1.
‘surrenders
of sovereignty’’
On 14th December
1960 the Lord Chancellor, Lord
Kilmuir, Britain’s senior legal officer, warned Edward Heath of the
implications of signing the Treaty of Rome:
‘’ To satisfy the
requirements of the treaty, Parliament could enact legislation which would give
automatic force of Law to any existing or future regulations made by… the
Community…It is clear that the Council of Ministers could make regulations
which would be binding on us even against our wishes… It is the first step on
the road, which leads… to the federal state… I must emphasise that in my view
the surrenders of sovereignty involved are serious ones…these objections ought
to be brought out into the open.
2.
‘end of Britain’’
That the
consequences of membership had been realised by some at Westminster about this
time is apparent from a speech in 1962 by Hugh Gaitskell, leader of the Labour
party, who rightly identifying ‘’ the desire of those, who created the European
Community, for a political federation. That is what they mean, that is what
they offer’’, added that this would bring about the end of Britain as an
independent [Nation State]…the end of a thousand years of history.
3.
the big lie
Edward
Heath’s 1971 White Paper on joining the EEC deceived Parliament and the
People with its false statements that’’ there is no
question of any erosion of essential sovereignty’’, and that Britain’s
Sovereignty would somehow be ‘’enlarged’’ by ‘sharing’’
4.
ministry of propaganda
Between 1970 and 1972 the
Heath Government directed a secret propaganda offensive, known as the Connaught
Breakfasts, in which Cabinet Ministers, Foreign Heads of Department, civil
servants, media managers and journalists, in conjunction with the
European Movement, carried on TV, radio and newspaper campaign to swing round
strongly opposed public opinion to acceptance of the EEC, public money being
used in the process.
5.
unconstitutional…1
The 1972 Act which took
Britain into the EEC was in breach of the Constitution, in that the Government allowed
no prior consultation of the electorate by special General
Election or Referendum, as is required under the Constitution for
Parliamentary measures involving Constitutional Change, the
precedents being those of 1831/2 and 1910.
7. unconstitutional…2
By passing the 1972 European
Communities Act, Parliament unconstitutionally attempted to renounce its legal
Sovereignty, so as to make the British People subject to
enactments of outside agencies, and ending its own ability to put into effect
the expressed wishes of the Electorate.
8. unconstitutional…3
In doing so, it deliberately
and wrongfully denied the, ultimate Sovereignty of the People, of
which Parliament is Constitutionally both Servant and Defender and
which at the end of each Parliament’s term is returned to its Possessors.
9.
unconstitutional…4
It is the Corner Stone
of the Constitution that no Parliament is or can be bound by enactments of
its predecessors; but the Act of 1972 unconstitutionally purported (Section 2.4)
to be mandatory upon all succeeding Parliaments.
10.
unconstitutional…5
The Act of 1972 is unconstitutional in the wider respect that falsehood
and deception was employed to secure its enactment, contrary not only to the
spirit of the Constitution but of all procedure whatsoever.
11. test case
The Metric
Martyrs’ appeal against their conviction is
based on the fact that the 1985 Imperial Weights &Measures Act, which
permits trading in pounds and ounces, constitutionally takes precedence over
the earlier Act of 1972 which made us members of the EU; and it is thus a test
case not only between British and EU law, but of whether the 1972 Act can have
abrogated the Constitution.
12.indestructible
Any supposition that the Act in some sense annulled
the Constitution is untenable, since (apart from the 1972 Act itself
being unconstitutional both in its content and process of enactment) the unique unwritten British Constitution is not
law, but essentially an honoured undertaking and consensus in those who have
created and live under it as to the proper conduct of Parliamentary affairs, and
thus incapable of being set aside by legal means.
13.
… twilight hour?
By subjecting the British people to decrees other than the laws enacted
by their own legislature, the Act contravened the undertaking in the Coronation
Oath ‘’ to govern the peoples of the United Kingdom according to their laws and
customs’’; the provisions of the treason Act 1795, against engaging in actions
‘’tending to the overthrow of the laws, government and happy constitution’’ of
the United Kingdom, and those of the Treason Felony Act of 1848 condemning ant
who attempt to ‘’ deprive or depose our most gracious Lady the Queen from the
style, honour or royal name of the imperial crown of the United Kingdom’’; and
the Privy Counsellor’s Oath ‘’ To bear faith and allegiance to the Crown and
defend its jurisdiction and power against all foreign…persons…or states.’’
14. royal commoner
Allegiance to H.M. the
Queen is in effect allegiance to Brussels, since through the Queen’s EU
citizenship and accountability in her own
courts to superior EU law, Her Majesty has vassal status, and an Oath of Allegiance to her now stands’
subject to the Commission’s tolerance’’ so long as she and her Nation do
not show themselves disloyal to the sovereignty of the European Union.
15. unconstitutionality
The chief reason for the Labour government’s calling a Referendum in
1975 was the unconstitutionality of the European Communities
16. bizarre
A retrospective Referendum upon an Act of Parliament was without precedent in British history,
and partook of the nature of inertia salesmanship, especially since accompanied
by the dispatching of government literature to every household with the
disinformation that the Act had been purely a free trade agreement, and urging
a ‘Yes’ vote; a species of official activity also without precedent, and just
as questionable.
17. the great divide
Britain’s becoming and remaining a member of the EU, and the methods
employed to his end, resulted from the emergence of what Lord Goodhart
memorably described as ‘’ a political establishment’’ with purposes
disturbingly opposed to the wish of the electorate; his book ‘Full-Hearted
Consent (1976) ironically gaining its title from Mr Heath’s assurance
during the 1970 General Election campaign that, if there were a future
possibility of entering the EEC, no government would take their nation into
it’’ without the full-hearted consent of Parliament and the People.
18. vote as EU please
The political establishment’s continuing activities have brought about
a new situation, new to British politics, in which the widespread public
hostility to the EU’s increasing encroachments is denied party political
expression, the policies of the major parties all being favourable to
membership.
19. polling days
In a nationwide MORI
opinion poll carried out on behalf of the British Democracy Campaign 15-21
March, 2001, in which 1805 adult respondents were questioned face to face in
their homes, 52% of these offered an opinion declared themselves in favour of
leaving the EU now, 71% wanted a Referendum on continued membership, and 75%
considered that the British people had not received sufficient information on
the implications of the EU.
20. mobile goalposts
Through the deeper
irregularity of its plan to proceed by stealth through a series of treaties
until the European State was a fait accompli before its populations had come to
realise what was going on, the EU has developed into a concept and institution
far other than what was voted on in 1975 Referendum, and so without democratic
validation in this as in other countries.
21. undemocratic
The European Union is an
unrepresentative and authoritarian institution, by
virtue of the fact that the members of the legislative (Council of Ministers)
and its executive (Commission) are not directly elected by and
responsible to the voters of a EU constituency.
22. non-accountable
The EU
Council of Ministers is composed of the non-dismissible nominees of the governments of member states, who are thus
removed from democratic accountability.
23. horse-trading
Britain’s voice in the Council is one amongst many;
and policy decisions, as the outcome of
conflict of interests and pressures resolved by bargaining, by no means
necessarily correspond to Britain’s needs and the wishes of its electorate.
24. cabal
The Council, more
strictly the legislative body, and the Commission, which with its executive
roll also issues legislative proposals, both meet in secret; and since the
fifty or so persons who compose the two have not been elected to European
government functions, and in carrying them out are accountable to
no-one, they constitutes, not a legislative, but a ruling oligarchy.
25. big brothers
Though the EU Commission
are unelected appointees without democratic mandate or accountability, they
have power to impose directives and regulations by by-passing the legislatures
of democratic states.
26. the parliament: authority
Whereas the
British Cabinet is constitutionally answerable to Parliament in Westminster,
where a government defeat on a motion of no confidence involves a Dissolution
and General Election, the European Union’s Parliament, so called, is
entirely without such control over the Commission, which is effectively the EU
Cabinet.
27. the parliament: finance
From its earlier
days to the present, what has been confirmed the Westminster Parliament’s power
has been its direction of finance; but the EU Parliament is without a corresponding
capacity?
28. the parliament: legislation
Unlike all the other parliaments in the Western
tradition, the EU Parliament is unable to legislate, its functions being merely
to review and agree measures drawn up by the Commission, and thereby to have
virtually no legislative role.
29 the parliament veto
Nor does the
Parliament have a final veto over Commission regulations and directives, since
through the procedure euphemistically named ‘’Conciliation’’, the Commission
can at its will override any negative vote.
30. façade
The word ‘’Parliament’’ is thus a misnomer for what is little more than a
rubber-stamp or puppet agency; but the democratic election of its members
creates the dangerous illusion of democracy being at work, in what is in
essence an authoritarian regime.
31. inferior
government
Through its
membership of the EU, Britain is being subjected to a species of non-representative,
non-democratic, authoritarian government far inferior to that which prevailed
at Westminster until 1973, and having features reminiscent of the
dictatorial systems which flourished on the continent of Europe in the not very
distant past.
32. 12-star
chamber?
The European Court
of Justice, whose members are appointed by the various governments, is the
supreme arbiter on EU law, with power to overrule the laws of member states;
but being charged under the Treaty of Rome with ensuring that provisions of all
the EU treaties, and the principle of ‘’ever closer union’’, are
observed, and in its own words devoted to ‘’overcoming the resistance of
national governments to European integration’’,
it is politically predisposed and active in a manner incompatible with judicial
impartiality.
33. moot
points
EU treaties and
regulations are generally cast in such obscure language that all wishing to be
sure where they stand will be forced to go to the European Court of Justice: so
that it will become an absolute source of political authority, and the European
State be unassailably dominant over the former nations now its provinces.
34. EU
rules OK
EU law, as
conveyed by the treaties, regulations and directives, and decrees and rulings
of the European Court, are accepted by British courts as taking precedence over
national law, the ECJ having declared that ‘’Every national court must
apply Community law in its entirety and must accordingly set aside any
provision of national law which may conflict with it, whether prior or
subsequent to this Community rule’’ (ECR 629
at 643,644).
35. ‘’tidal
wave’’
The result is that
the British Statute and Common law are being superseded, and law-making has
become primarily the prerogative of the European Union, which has been
described by a British judge as ‘’a bold new source of law’’, and whose
legislation, according to the late Lord Denning, a former Master of the
Rolls, is no longer’’ an incoming tide flowing up the estuaries of England’’,
but’’ now like a tidal wave bringing down sea walls and flowing inland over our
fields and houses, to the dismay of us all’’ (quoted in the Times, 1st
April 1996).
36.
corpus juris
In place of existing laws
in the member countries, there will have been instituted under the European State
the Corpus Juris, a
body of law largely in accordance with continental legal systems, deriving
from three main sources: the Corpus Juris Civilis of the Roman Emperor
Justinion, Inquisition
law, and the Code Napoleon
37. euro
state prosecutor
Corpus Juris is to be
administered by the European State Prosecutor, and operate through European
courts and trans-national police and the courts and police forces of member
states, so
combining police and prosecution into one entity
38. continental menu
Judicial
procedure is to be as already in practice on the Continent, the European State
Prosecutor having responsibility for investigation, arrest, committal to trial,
presentation of the prosecution case in court, judgment and imposition of
sentence, trial
taking place before an inquisitorial judge and two professional assessors: the
State, in effect, both judge and jury.
39. … innocent? Prove it!
Also as on the Continent, the concept of presumed
innocence will disappear, and it will become the responsibility of the
accused to prove his innocence to the court, contrary to the position under English law, where the
burden of proof rests with the prosecution, and the accused is innocent unless
and until proved guilty.
40.
goodbye, Habeas Corpus
Corpus Juris will quash
the right of Habeas Corpus, instituted in 1215 by Magna Carta (article 39), by
which it is granted in perpetuity to all subjects of the monarch that no-one
should suffer the loss of liberty without evidence warranting his further
detention being established in a court hearing, normally within 48 hours of his
arrest.
41. farewell, trial by jury
Corpus Juris will similarly abolish the right
of trial by jury, whose beginnings date from as early as 1166 in the reign of
Henry 11, through which the question of a person’s innocence or guilt is
determined by twelve of his peers, not by the judiciary, a practice which,
because of a jury’s freedom to acquit a person technically guilty under an
unjust decree, ensures that laws made by the state are always acceptable to the
people, and that government pressure upon, or corruption of, the judiciary
shall never be able to affect the impartial administration of justice.
42.
‘ the test of civilisation’’
In a Minute to the Home Secretary of 21st
November, 1943, Winston Churchill observed: ‘’The great principles of
Habeas Corpus and trial by jury… are the supreme protection invented by the
British people for ordinary individuals against the State… The power of the
executive to cast a man in prison without formulating any charge known to law
for an indefinite period, is in the highest decree odious, and is the
foundation for all totalitarian governments… Nothing can be more abhorrent to
democracy. This is really the test of civilisation.’’
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43.
above the law
The European State’s judicial system involves
the introduction of forces of armed police, whether members of Europol
or of the paramilitary European border police in process of formation, enjoying
diplomatic immunity from arrest, and thus above the law; unlike British police,
who, while charged with enforcement of the, remain ordinary members of the
public, themselves subject to the laws they uphold
44. clear
enough
The reasons for the
European State police’s immunity from the law have never been explained, though
the parallel with the police forces of authoritarian regimes is manifest
45.
just the start
Eurojust, the provisional EU public
prosecution agency, which is closely linked to Europol, already has autonomous,
non-accountable power to initiate investigations in every state of the European
Union, Europol being able to order surveillance of any British person by
letters, E-mail or ‘phone tapping, and to acquire upon demand secret
intelligence from British security agencies M15 and M16.
46. affront
The concepts, provisions
and methods of the judicial system of the emerging European State are legally
and ethically inferior to the system of British justice admired throughout the
world for its humanity and impartiality: and if ever instituted in Britain,
would be a regressive and affronting imposition.
47. Euro
Army
The future of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation (NATO), founded upon the predominant military power of the United
States, which has for more than half a century secured and maintained Europe’s
peace, is now threatened by the European State’s establishing an Army of its
own, dubbed the Rapid Reaction Force, upon the pretext that it will facilitate
military operations in which NATO does not wish to take part.
48. pretext
Since arrangements already
exist within NATO for the EU to take military action without NATO’s
participation, but using its facilities, assets, transport and intelligence,
the reasons for setting up a European Army can only be to confirm the emerging
Statehood of the EU, and lessen the commitment of the United States to Europe’s security: so
jeopardising NATO’s continuing role, and thereby the peace of Europe.
49. escape
of cat
Helmut Kohl’s statement that ‘’ a united
Europe without a common defence is, in the long run, not feasible’’(Independence,
CIB, January 2000,p1) would seem to apply regarding the first; and that of
Jacques Chirac, ‘’The object of a European defence identity is to contain the
United States’’ (cited by Michael Fabricant, MP, House of Commons, 29th
March 2000), with respect to the second.
* *
DESPOTISM is:
[‘ Everything by the EU- but nothing by YOU ’]
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(More
Reasons to follow shortly.) Or you may order a booklet from:
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CB1 2lX
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