With news
that Green Party peer Jenny Jones has joined the new cross party campaign,
to convince the public to vote to leave the European Union at the forthcoming UK
referendum on the matter, a division has opened up in the party. The campaign group is named, rather straightforwardly,
Vote Leave.
This shouldn’t come as a great surprise to Jenny Jones
watchers. As recently as this July she wrote a piece in The
Ecologist magazine entitled ‘Something Rotten in the State of Europe’, in
which she says:
Just as Syriza's negotiating position has
been fatally undermined by its refusal (in my view deeply mistaken) to
countenance leaving the Euro, so we - Green and progressive voters - will lack
any leverage so long as we tolerate a bad EU, for fear of something even worse.
And
make no mistake: a pro-TTIP European Union, eager to impose the imperatives of
capital against people, determined to evacuate democracy in Greece and other
member states of its meaning, is not an EU we should wish to be part of.
The formal position of the Green Party is to vote to
remain in the EU and to try and reform it into a better, people’s Europe, but
this seems to be a remote possibility at best. There are quite a few
Eurosceptic voices in the Green Party, but Jenny Jones is the most prominent so
far to come out for leaving the EU.
Jones comes from the ‘eco-liberal’ wing of the Green
Party and this philosophy has a streak of anarchism running through it, which I
think is where this anti EU sentiment emanates from. Anti-corporate, anti-big
state feelings, as against a small state, eco-friendly localism agenda drives
this desire to abandon the supra-national state.
In the other corner are the eco-social democrats, whose
most prominent member is the Green Party MP Caroline Lucas, who has many
cheerleaders in the party who will no doubt follow suit. An ex Member of the
European Parliament (MEP), Lucas
wants the UK to remain in the EU, and as aforementioned to change the
organisation into a better one (unspecified how exactly), at pretty much
whatever the cost. The cost could be high too, as the Prime Minister, David
Cameron, negotiates the good bits of the EU away. In
this piece for The Guardian newspaper she argues:
The
EU is far from perfect, but turning our backs on it is a risky strategy.
Profoundly re-imagining what a reformed EU might look like shouldn’t just be
left to David Cameron. We should be building a progressive case for Britain’s
membership of a radically reformed union that works better for all of us.
The
EU has enormous potential to spread peace, freedom and security in and around
Europe, as well as further afield. It’s with this vision in mind that I’ll be
campaigning to stay in Europe.
Unfortunately, it appears to be just that, ‘a vision’, at
this stage. If Cameron ditches the employment and environmental protections
afforded by the EU, we may have to take a couple of steps back, before we can
move forward to meet Lucas’ idealised EU.
So where does this leave an eco-socialist member of the
Green Party like me? Well, there are differences of opinion in Green Left also.
Personally, and in line with a recent TUC
general council statement on the issue, I’m awaiting the outcome of Cameron’s
negotiations before deciding which way to vote. We don’t know at this stage
even what we will be voting on.
The issue seems to
come down to how you view our chances of getting a better deal by staying in or leaving,
and I’m still considering this too. Would it be easier to just take on the right
in the UK, or take on the whole of the undemocratic EU? If we build alliances
across the EU with our fellow travellers, perhaps this is more desirable, but how
likely and achievable is this? For me it will probably come down to a lesser of
evils, because in or out of the EU the next few years look bleak for eco-socialism
either way.
I think you're drawing false lines between people on the democractic front. Jenny Jones is actually taking a democratic stance and supporting a fundamental pillar of Green political thought by joining the leave campaign - namely grassroots democracy. Policy statements from the party demonstrate the threat TTIP is to democracy and what happened to Greece was evidence of neoliberalism in action and should not happen to anyone. For Greens to support Scottish autonomy but not UK autonomy - its just not consistent. There needs to be a new internal referendum on members as to what they believe on the EU. Failing that, how about leaflets being produced with Green arguments for and Green arguments against and trust people to make an informed choice based upon facts.
ReplyDeleteScott Bartle.
I don't think I am Scott. I'm genuinely undecided, I welcome a proper debate in the Green party.
ReplyDeleteBe great if we could get one! Hope you create some movement where-ever it needs to be! Perhaps a motion for Spring Conference for consulting the membership before coming down either side of the fence?
Deletebw,
Scott.
I believe that the recent conference agreed to support staying in - but how many members ever go to conference? Those that do are not even delegated by local parties on how to vote.
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