The
“Disgrace” of the Majority
To the disbelief of left-wing media, most Britons want a referendum on EU membership.
By THEODORE
DALRYMPLE
An
editorial in the Guardian on October 25 exposed the nature of what often is
called “the European project”: a goal that those pursuing it never state out
loud. In brief, it is the construction of a huge power bloc under the
domination of a self-perpetuating political class and its auxiliary
nomenklatura, free of the most minimal democratic oversight or constitutional
restraint.
The
editorial was titled “Conservatives and Europe: learned nothing, forgotten
nothing,” a reference to Talleyrand’s famous dictum about the Bourbons.
Britain’s Conservative Party, the editorial argued, was unfit to govern because
of its continued internal division on the issue of the U.K.’s membership in the
European Union, the latest manifestation of which was a vote by 80 Conservative
members of Parliament in favor of holding a referendum on the issue. A Guardian
poll, published in the paper on the same day as the editorial, established that
70 percent of the population believed that such a referendum should be held; 49
percent wanted to leave the union and 40 percent wanted to remain in it (11
percent were undecided).
One
can make many criticisms of the Conservative Party, but surely one such
criticism is not that 80 of its members of parliament have voiced the disquiet
of at least half the nation’s population about the most important question that
it faces. The Guardian called the 80 members of parliament “a disgrace,” by
which it meant that the opinion of fully half of the population, and possibly
more, should not even be heard in the Mother of Parliaments. In other words,
the philosopher-kings of the European nomenklatura should be allowed to get on
with their work free of interference—because, after all (and as new evidence
further proves every day), they are doing such a fantastic job.
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