The EU want to PUNISH Britain, not negotiate - NEIL HAMILTON

Neil Hamilton • 16 December 2020

For the EU, this isn’t about getting a fair and equitable deal for both sides. It is about punishing Britain.

Another Brexit deadline missed! Every time this happens, I fear the worst – that the Government will sell us out to Brussels and torpedo a real Brexit. No deal is infinitely better than what the EU is demanding – that they continue to make our laws on environment, health and safety, employment, ‘social protection,’ competition, State aid, and more.

After 45 long years of subjugation to Brussels, the UK is edging closer and closer to being a self-governing nation once more – as we were before 1973. We will be able to make our own lucrative trade deals, revive our coastal communities, reinvest in the left-behind regions of the UK and, importantly, decide who we allow into Britain. 

These issues were central to the vote of 17.4 million proud Brits who decided to leave the EU in 2016. Yet, the Remain Establishment (especially the institutionally Europhilic Conservative Party) still did all they could to subvert the largest political mandate in British history. Their most successful dangerous ploy was shackling Britain to Theresa May’s Withdrawal Agreement corpse.

The modern day Conservative Party is devoid of the creativity, ambition, and patriotism that once made it great. Theresa May and her chums failed to see Brexit as the opportunity it so clearly is. For them, it was a problem that needed to be managed – a damage-limitation exercise. This put the EU in the driving seat in the withdrawal negotiations.

The Withdrawal Agreement was so awful that some Brexiteers believed, staying in the EU would be more advantageous. It effectively meant we remained subject to EU law without a voice, a vote or a veto on huge swathes of our laws – a vassal of Brussels.

Boris’s reheated Withdrawal Agreement forms the foundation of our current negotiations. Some constraints such as our membership of the Customs Union have been lifted. But at its core the Withdrawal Agreement is still the uninventive, barren document it always was. Boris must surely realise that the only way we can be truly free at this late stage is to do exactly what UKIP have been pushing for since the 2016 result – walk away with no deal and get on with rebuilding Britain. 

Some still naively believe that the EU has our best interests at heart. Let’s not beat around the bush. For the EU, this isn’t about getting a fair and equitable deal for both sides. It is about punishing Britain – as a warning to others not to try to escape Brussels’ palsied embrace and to protect their ultimate aim: extinguishing the nation-State in a United States of Europe. 

They fear a sovereign Britain able to stand on its own feet. With the English language, the City of London, our common-law flexibility and world-wide connections (especially the two-billion strong Commonwealth) the EU fears an unassailable economic competitor on its doorstep. They simply can’t have that.

It is refreshing to have a Prime Minister who, unlike the hapless May, does not want to bend the knee to the Brussels technocrats. From their rhetoric, Boris and the British negotiating team appear to have drawn a firm line in the sand. Giving way on the remaining sticking-points would provoke a crisis for Boris. He would go down in history as a failure like Theresa May, Neville Chamberlain or Anthony Eden.

I hope Boris does not budge and is firmly resolved, like Horatius defending the bridge over the Tiber, to save his country from foreign domination by destroying the negotiations. No deal will always be infinitely better than the EU’s bad deal for Britain.

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