Pop the corks chaps – Dave has done it!

Pop the corks chaps – Dave has done it!

Written by  Ross Ashcroft Monday, 12 December 2011

With right wing jingoism, heroic acts and a whiff of British nostalgia who needs strategy? 

In combat the three things most likely to get you killed are bombs, bullets and egos. Today - as wars are economic - we continue to endure a barrage of financial missiles and generally hold our own. But in the middle of this conflict a certain heroic General has compromised the British by making an egotistical decision that will have brutal consequences for more than a generation.
 

David Cameron - Prime Minister of the City of London – is clearly concerned with his legacy and by using his veto he did what was expected of him: he defended City interests. Only he didn’t – he compromised them massively. 
 

Own Goal

Over the last 30 years the City of London has become unsustainably dominant.  Without understanding that Britain has had peak financial services Cameron resorted to the neo-conservative mantra: finance is good, big finance is better and unregulated finance is best. Why? Because his self-interested city chums told him so and the insular / polarising Tory party revel in big divisive decisions that please their sponsors. Cue the guffawing laughs and backslapping.
 

But here’s the thing: Cameron did not get the protocol needed to exempt the UK from European regulation of financial services – so why the celebration? When the hangover clears Tory Eurosceptics will begin to understand that their man has shot himself (and them) in the foot. In future trying to get powers back from Brussels or influencing regulation will be impossible.
 

Nostalgic Island Monkeys

Cameron’s attempt to be Thatcher in drag is embarrassing. The only thing his veto has achieved is to ensure that Britain is sitting safely in Westminster when key European decisions are made – decisions that will affect Britain whether you like it or not. British influence over negotiations that are vital to this country's future is now none existent. This is crazy given that our export market opportunities have now been drastically limited as has our global standing. Make no mistake China and the US want to do business with Europe not a bunch of nostalgic island monkeys who are suspicious of Johnny Foreigner.
 

The further irony is that if we want decent advice as to how to organise the national finances we should turn to Germany not the short sighted bonus seeking city spivs who still think land speculation is the way forward. The indoctrinated Tory party have not yet understood that the human mind is like a parachute – it works so much better when it’s open.
 

When you read the centre right newspaper comments you begin to understand that in the UK the  problem is endemic. The naive bourgeois bang on about Cameron's plucky magnificence. Little do they know that, for him, politics is not about strategy in the pursuit British liberty - it’s merely the same game of ever diminishing returns that his predecessors played. Nostalgia stops them seeing that he’s just set the course for a logical yet tragic British conclusion.
 

No way back…

This petulant isolation will be far from splendid. Europhobes hate the EU because it seeks to defend workers' rights and temper the worst excesses of the “free market”. At a time when neo-liberal lunatics are blindly welcoming economic policy dictated by despotic Goldman Sachs and defunct credit rating agencies Britain needs a voice at the European table. Or am I being too alarmist? Will ‘brave’ Dave also veto those dirty rotters?
 

What’s done is done - the most crucial foreign policy decision in decades that many will come to regret. This tribal stance has cast this little island adrift and will ultimately backfire. Repairing the rift with Europe may well prove impossible.
 

Without a well functioning economic base every democracy is temporary which makes ‘democratic’ politics a magnet for narcissists. Unfortunately narcissists desire for heroic acts means they often shy away from the patient decisions that are best for the national interest. By trying to build a legacy Mr Cameron has not bucked the trend. 

Ross Ashcroft

Ross Ashcroft

Filmmaker / Entrepreneur / Co-Founder of The Motherlode Studio / Renegade Economist

Website: www.motherlode.org.uk
More in this category: « Flanders Flounders

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19 comments

  • Comment Link Tom Monday, 12 December 2011 20:19 posted by Tom

    Europhobes hate the EU because it seeks to defend workers' rights and temper the worst excesses of the “free market”

    I take issue with this comment. It is completely untrue.

    I love Europe but hate the EU because it is:
    - undemocratic (HvR appointed through Bilderberg interview)
    - unaccountable (accounts not signed off in 14 years)
    - beholden to the Trilateral Commission (whose members include Draghi, Papademos)
    - has strong ties with Goldman Sachs http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/analysis-and-features/what-price-the-new-democracy-goldman-sachs-conquers-europe-6264091.html


    You will find a lot of educated an very good honest men who are anti-EU *and* understand the nature of money and economic morality. Steve Baker MP is one such man.

    If you're assuming that demagogues at the EU can solve all our problems, then what have you learnt during the making of your film "Four Horsemen"? It is such worship of the elites and their experts (at Central banks) that have caused us so many problems - how on earth can given them even more power help?
    That would be insane.

    Yes Cameron may find that putting the UK on a trajectory for leaving the EU will result in collapse - and we have 300 tons of gold (small beer compared to other European nations), but at least we can look towards more freedom away from an increasingly totalitarian EUSSR.

    Appointed technocrats running Greece and Italy - I mean, seriously, give me a break!

  • Comment Link chefdave Tuesday, 13 December 2011 00:05 posted by chefdave

    Tom, great post. Perhaps Ross forgets that Old Labour were in fact against EU membership because of the threat it posed to British workers, this threat was realised when in 2004 we opened our borders to millions of unskilled economic migrants: wages at the bottom end have slowly been eroding ever since. How is this good for the working man?

    The article also complemented the German economy but look at what the EU is currently doing to it, faceless bureaucrats are using it as a piggy bank to prop up the Euro and hold their failing project together: all without the German people's consent. It's like they're being plundered to save a distant empire. How is that a sensible model? It's going to lead Germany toward economic ruin. And don't even get me started on the EU's contemptible attitude towards national sovereignty, they've proven time and again that they'll happily brush democracy aside if it conflicts with their views on what is good for us. The sooner we get rid of them and get our country back the better.

  • Comment Link Mark Braund Tuesday, 13 December 2011 09:09 posted by Mark Braund

    C'mon guys, there are bigger principles here: International cooperation is essential if we are to have any chance of tackling the current crisis and eventually moving towards a more inclusive economic model. Cameron has just given away our seat at the negotiating table with no thought for the long-term consequences.

    Sure, there are problems with the EU. It's understanding of economics is disastrous, though Cameron's is worse; and yes, there are problems with democracy and accountablility. But there is a political reality here. We can remain on the inside and bring some influence to bear, as Thatcher did, or we can exclude ourselves and carry on in self-serving isolation.

    But isolation will not serve Britain's interests. We need Europe far more than Europe needs us. Our economy is in a far worse state than most of our competitors'. We can't afford to go it alone.

  • Comment Link Tom Tuesday, 13 December 2011 11:21 posted by Tom

    Mark,

    Create a crisis.
    Spark a reaction.
    Declare an authoritarian solution.

    Funny isn't it how people jump into ever increasing and remote tyranny out of fear. Brainwashed by groupthink and the cult of the expert.

    "Somebody do something ... anything..."

    This is how freedom of mankind is eroded. Can't you see this?

    Also some very bad assumptions in your comments "self-serving isolation"
    Who's talking about abandoning free trade, introducing capital controls, tariffs? You've made a giant mental leap off-piste here.

    "International cooperation is essential"
    International trade is essential, through democratically legitimate means and *voluntary* exchange. Yes. We should be setting an example here.
    The more remote international organisations become. the more influence large corporations have, the less influence individuals have. Further concentrating power towards an ever more remote and corrupt elite is insane!

  • Comment Link Mark Braund Tuesday, 13 December 2011 11:54 posted by Mark Braund

    Tom,

    If I thought Cameron was going to address any of the very valid points you raise, I would be inclined to agree with you. But he isn't. He's as authoritarian and anti-democratic as Merkel and Sarkozy, and he's revealed himself to be unhelpfully nationalistic to boot.

    I don't support fiscal union across Europe, especially while the structures and institutions of a neo-liberal economy that benefits only bankers and fraudsters endures. I think the EU should start again with a blank sheet of paper. You can't achieve cooperation in the political sphere while encouraging ever greater competition in the economic sphere.

    Cameron is little different from Merkozy in that none is prepared to admit that the causes of the current crisis are built into an economic system which nobody is prepared to question. And in terms of promoting genuine economic democracy, the UK is so far from setting an example to the rest of the world that it's laughable.

    The freedom of mankind will be secure when everyone has a worthwhile stake in the economy: neither left nor right, neither statist or libertarian seem to recognise this.

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