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John Bruton Urges Brexit No Vote

/ 27th September 2015 /
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Residents of Northern Ireland will have a vote sometime next year on one of the most important issues to affect these islands, and indeed all the nations of Europe, namely whether the United Kingdom is to remain a member of the European Union, or leave.

As I speak tonight, the UK government has yet to put in writing what it wants changed in the EU. Yet, regardless of what it seeks or what it gets, the government party has surprisingly said it will remain neutral in the referendum anyway.

I expect the UK will make a presentation of its requests at the October EU Summit, and aim to wrap up an agreement at the December Summit. Only after December will any case for UK membership of the EU be set out to the public, in what, given the inevitable complexities, hypotheses, and uncertainties to be explored and explained, will be a very short referendum campaign.

And, even if the referendum decision is to remain in, will that satisfy today’s Euro sceptics? Will the UK always remain, psychologically, on the sidelines of the EU? The European Union has evolved and developed over the past 70 years. But its goal from the outset has been, and remains, to cultivate so much mutual dependence between European states, that they could never go to war with one another again, as they did with such disastrous consequence in 1914-18 and 1939-45.

More than any other part of this island, Ulster has suffered when European peace was shattered ....the losses on the Somme, and the repeated bombing of Belfast come to mind.

In Association with

A decision by the electors of the UK to withdraw from the EU would be a huge blow to the EU. That is where the debate should start...what sort of Europe to we want? What sort of Europe will be feel safe in?

Precedent

A precedent has already been set. Let us look down the road and see where it is leading, and if that is really somewhere we want to go.

The precedent that has been already set is of a major European country, an EU member of 40 years standing which already decided by referendum in 1975 to stay in the EU, deciding for a second time to seek special terms for itself, with a threat of withdrawal if not satisfied. That precedent is potentially damaging already.

But what of the further precedent that may yet be set. That precedent would be of a major country withdrawing altogether from the European Union, because its voters felt the special terms it got, were not good enough?

The consequences of that for the cohesion of the EU itself are unknowable, but probably would be quite dramatic. It would most certainly weaken the EU. Some may shrug their shoulders at that, but should they? The UK precedent could be immediately seized upon by Madame le Pen in France who would seek a renegotiation of the French terms of membership. Geert Wilders in the Netherlands would not be far behind in saying that anything the UK can do, the Netherlands can do too.

Weakened

The EU, as a force that can protect and unify European interests in trade, intellectual property, environmental standards, that has already been weakened, by the uncertainty around the UK renegotiation and a referendum, would be weakened further.

All over the world, those who do business with the EU would begin to wonder....is the EU going to break up? Are others going to follow the UK out the door? In a world in which Europe is becoming a smaller force, economically, politically and in population, a weakened EU would probably not be in the interests of Europeans, whether they live in Belfast or Bratislava, in Downpatrick or in Dubrovnik.

A disunited Europe, of 28 or more separate countries, pursuing their own agendas would become a playground for outsiders seeking advantage and playing one off against the other. Vladimir Putin would be happy. So would Europe’s small number of potentially monopolistic energy suppliers, who could then more easily play one European customer off against the other. Europe’s borders could again become barriers behind which criminals could hide.

So I would ask you, you who will be deciding this question...to consider not only how the decision will affect yourselves, or affect your local or national community, but also to consider how it will affect Europe as a whole, and its place in the world.

Exports

Northern Ireland voters also ought to take some account of the effect of a UK exit in your more immediate neighbourhood. A study by the Centre for European Reform said that UK EU membership boosted UK goods exports by 55% over what they would be if the UK was outside the EU. That is a boost of £130 billion, which is three times as much as total UK exports to China.

The UK’s National Institute for Economic Research estimated that leaving the EU would subtract 2.25% from the UK GDP. The losses would not be evenly spread. Regions in the UK which rely on services exports would lose least because the EU does not impose tariffs on services imports. But regions where manufacturing is important would be hit the hardest.

The Centre for European Reform in London has calculated that, if the UK leaves the EU and if existing EU tariffs were then to be imposed on UK exports, the North East of England, with its big manufacturing base, would lose the most, the equivalent of 0.4% of its private sector output.

Northern Ireland and the East Midlands would lose 0.35% of their private sector output, but London, with its big tariff free service sector, would lose only 0.1%. Northern Ireland would lose almost twice as much as Wales would.

Some might argue that this will not happen because they assume that, even if the UK left the EU, it would be able to keep full free access to the EU market. Maybe, maybe not.

Switzerland has indeed negotiated access to the EU market for its exports, but it has had to accept immigration from the EU, contribute to EU funds for poorer regions, and has had to accept EU standards, in which it has no say. Given that these are precisely the sorts of thing that the UK objects too now, as a member of the EU, it will be difficult for UK to agree to pay that price for access to the EU Single market as a non member.

Brinkmanship

Remember the negotiation of the UK’s exit terms, after a referendum decision, will be a time limited negotiation where others can play brinkmanship too. And bear in mind that an EU/UK trade negotiation will not be a negotiation of equals. The EU sends only 7% of its exports to the UK, whereas the UK sends 45% of its exports to the EU.

If the UK leaves the EU, the world will not stand still. At the moment UK exporters benefit from any present or future trade and investment deal made by the EU, for example the mega trade and investment deal in prospect with the US.

As a Union of 500 million relatively prosperous consumers, the EU has clout in such negotiations. Without the UK, the EU would have less clout. But the UK on its own will have even less clout than a diminished EU. Both of us would lose. And our competitors in Asia, the Americas, and elsewhere will gain.

On the positive side, UK membership is vital if the EU is to complete its Single Market, particularly in services, especially digital services. The organisation ‘British Influence’ has estimated that completing the EU Single Market could add 1.8% to the overall EU GDP, but it has gone on to estimate that completing the EU Single Market it could add 7% to the UK GDP (assuming the UK is still in the EU).

Without the UK, support for moving towards a full EU Single Market will be much less. Ironically one of the reported UK renegotiating goals, a veto on EU laws for a minority of national Parliaments, would most likely be used by others to block the completion of the Single Market, from which the UK has so much to gain. Referring to the North East of England, the CER noted that “ironically regions that have most to lose from leaving the EU tend to be the most Euro sceptic”.

Complex Risks

So it may be impossible, in a short referendum campaign, to convey all of these complex facts and risks to the electorate, given that there is so little knowledge of the value of the EU market, and the message will have to be conveyed through the medium of a press, much of which is viscerally anti Europe anyway.

Coming closer to home, what might be the impact on Northern Ireland itself of the UK leaving the EU, and presumably taking Northern Ireland with it? Unless the UK can negotiate a special trade deal, like Switzerland and Norway have, and I have already indicated the difficulties with that, customs posts would have to be erected along the border again.

That would disrupt lives, and it would disrupt business. Many firms process raw materials originating in the Republic here, and vice versa. All that would have to be subject to customs inspection, a costly and intrusive process.

If the UK wanted to restrict EU immigration from across the land border, it would have to institute passport controls within Ireland.....something that never happened in history before. Smuggling would undergo a revival, with endless profit making opportunities would be opened up for subversives and organised criminals.

I have attended a number of debates in London of the possibility of Brexit, and have been surprised by how little notice is taken of the implications for Northern Ireland. Similarly little notice seems to be given to the effect of the UK leaving the EU on Scotland, or to the consequent effect on the Union itself, a matter of concern to a significant section of the population in Northern Ireland.

Given the difficulties that exist, as things stand, in applying UK budget limits to Northern Ireland, one must also wonder where funds will be found to replace the EU Single Farm Payment for Northern Ireland farmers, the EU rural development funds coming here, as well as the EU Regional Fund monies.

Single Farm Payments

The report prepared for the Northern Ireland Assembly by the Open University Business School, which I commend, says that between 2007 and 2013, a total of £2.42billion in EU funds came to Northern Ireland, of which £1.2billion was Single Farm Payments. Will the UK be able or willing to replace that, especially if it still has to contribute to the EU budget as a non member, to get access to the EU Single Market?

I have focussed, so far, on the problems that might face the UK if it leaves. But my former constituents in Meath would not be unaffected. We would lose a friend in Europe if the UK leaves. We would lose the common EU framework for the whole island that has contributed so much to peace, and is specifically acknowledged in the Belfast Agreement. Our tourist industry would suffer if barriers have to be placed on the border again.

But, we, south of the border, will have little say in the decision. You will. As I said at the outset, I hope you will think of what will be best for yourselves, but also what will be good for Europe as a whole, for the rest of the UK, and, I hope, for the rest of this small island on which we all live.

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