Roland Smith Profile picture
Aug 29, 2021 55 tweets 18 min read Read on X
The practical start of post-war euroscepticism/Brexitism. Image
From Grob-Fitzgibbon's Continental Drift.
Continued Image
This also catches the eye regarding the argument (in 1948) about a European Customs Union versus "the old days of free trade", the latter being "a relic of a world which has disappeared probably never to return". Image
Nothing ever changes Image
"In every respect we in Britain are closer to our kinsmen in Australia and New Zealand...than we are to Europe. We are closer in language and origins, in social habits and institutions, political outlook and in economic interest."

– Labour Party NEC statement, June 1950.
Or Dan Hannan, 2015-2021.
On Winston Churchill's cooling towards European Union shortly after becoming prime minister again in 1951. ImageImage
The moment in 1952 when Britain began to see the 'Schuman Six' as 'Little Europe' [a term modern eurosceptics would later deploy when accused of only wanting 'Little England']. The Churchill Govt's answer was to draw back from the enterprise. ImageImage
Note the 'Commonwealth Scandinavian Movement for European Unity', a spiritual forerunner to EFTA. Remember this is supposedly a very pro-European Conservative govt under Churchill. Image
None the less, the outlines of Britain's tragedy and "grim choice" (as Harold Macmillan would much later describe it) were already coming into view.

"Bit by bit we shall be driven back into our island where we shall starve." Image
In June 1956, Anthony Eden ordered an official review of Britain's place in the world, which made sobering reading. ImageImageImage
On the 'Plan G' that resulted (also in 1956).

Sounds kind of familiar. Image
Alec Douglas-Home, Eurosceptic and CANZUK advocate, 1956. ImageImage
Douglas-Home again - the original eurosceptic.... apart from Bevin, Churchill and Eden, to name but three. Image
Peter Thorneycroft, the anti-Cakeism pro-Europe man, up against Alec Douglas-Home, the CANZUK Atlantic Eurosceptic outrider/upstart.

"Only Lord Home remained unhappy"... Image
Except the reality was that they were all cakeists and eurosceptics, Plan G itself being a large slice of Cake waiting to be eaten.

Cakeism was just a matter of degree.
And so on we go to the govt's "greatest achievement of 1957"... getting widespread support for its European FTA idea, meaning Britain could stay outside the Treaty of Rome but enjoy/advance 'free trade' across Europe. Cakes all round.

An early "Love Europe, hate the EEC..." Image
Except that De Gaulle chap then turned up in 1958 and French opposition to such an FTA continued/deepened.

The then PM Macmillan lost patience and was prepared to dig in against "Little Europe". Image
The free trade plans of "Global Britain" fall apart and a trade war looms with the Treaty of Rome countries, causing Britain to believe 'Europe' will now collapse. All in 1958.

Plus ça change, right?

[This event was quickly followed by the talks that eventually created EFTA.] Image
Just keep reminding yourself that these 'eurosceptics' were arguably the most pro-European politicians in Britain. Churchill's heirs.
Meet Sir Frank Lee, a senior civil servant, who in 1960 was key to nudging the government towards applying for EEC membership.

Feel the trepidation, though.... "a near-identification with the Common Market". ImageImageImageImage
For what it's worth, this is where I suspect the author may go wrong – by, of all things, quoting the Daily Mail.

In my opinion, Britain rejected EEC m'ship because she rejected a higher supranational authority of this nature.

Reality dragged her kicking & screaming to apply. ImageImage
The history of this post-war period is littered with UK worries about Euro-supranationalism – about a federation in the making. Such worries were always at the core of British euroscepticism – 'sovereignty' vs geopolitical reality. Sound familiar?

Anyway, on we go...
Britains first application to join the EEC was riddled was grudging doubt. When Macmillan told De Gaulle of UK intentions, it was that Britain was "not opposed to joining in political consultations with the six."

"Not opposed". It doesn't set the pulse racing, does it? Image
But then Churchill's heirs had been dragged here by circumstance. Even the most pro of British pro-Europeans started having second thoughts about it all. Very Churchillian. Image
No wonder De Gaulle said 'Non' at the start of 1963. British hearts & minds were not really in it.
Anyway, a Conservative MP, Edward Boyle, described the two camps in the increasingly polarised 'Europe' debate of 1961.

Same old same old, one might say.

And yes the Daily Express was viscerally 'anti-European' in 1961. Image
And so we arrive at a key point in history and in this book: the rise of the anti-marketeers.

And what was at the very nucleus of their case against?

Sovereignty, of course.
As always. Image
While anti-marketeers mobilised, Macmillan set out his stall of a non-integrationist, anti-federalist, "global Europe". Nigel Farage would have nodded in approval. ImageImageImage
Sadly for Macmillan & the view that this was largely a trading arrangement, Jean Monnet also set out his stall. It wouldn't be the last time a continental EU enthusiast 'put his foot in it' and stoked British scepticism. It smelt to sceptics like a 'great deception' was afoot... ImageImage
Meanwhile, the Churchillian pro-Europeans continued to desert the European Movement. They had never wanted anything to do with a federal structure. Rhys-Williams turned full anti-marketeer. ImageImage
As for Labour, they were as eurosceptical as the rest, and generally considered to be more so. ImageImage
Hurting the Commonwealth was up there among Labour's concerns but so was "the end of Britain as an independent state...the end of a thousand years of history" (Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell).

So sovereignty again, and the worry about being absorbed into a country called Europe.
Labour formed a govt in 1964, more than a year after De Gaulle's famous 'Non', and very gradually Wilson's Govt moved from eurosceptic to being pro-EEC entry. Another 'Non' from De Gaulle in 1967, then an economic crisis, and soon 'Global Britain' was in radical retreat. Image
Britain was becoming desperate. Then De Gaulle, facing pressures of his own, softened towards Britain and suggested an entry deal where he would ally with the UK to turn the EEC into a loose, non-federal free trade area or 'European Economic Association'.

Or 'EEA' for short. Image
The details of that conversation later became contested and Britain & De Gaulle fell out yet again.

But very soon after that, De Gaulle lost a domestic French referendum and resigned.

The referendum result?

52% - 48%.
The other EEC five had always favoured Britain joining. De Gaulle alone blocked Britain for a decade. He had infuriated British PMs and boosted British sceptics. Post-2016, the Remain sphere now wonders if he was right.
During the 1960s, De Gaulle was the anti-marketeers' protection blanket so his resignation prompted a ramp-up of British anti-EEC campaigning. It was about the 'F' word and increasingly a referendum. Image
1969/1970 was when Enoch Powell established himself as a leading anti-marketeer but there are better narratives about Powell than Grob-Fitzgibbon's. E.g. "Enoch Powell: Politics and Ideas in Modern Britain 
by Paul Corthorn" and this must-read review...

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v41/…
Powell's brand of 'free trade' (and anti-immigration) Tory Brexitism has run through so much since. By way of an aside, here he is at the Newbury by-election in 1993, supporting UKIP's founder. A young swooning 20-something called Nigel Farage drove Powell to the venue. Image
Anyway back to 1971, and the UK gets its first overtly eurosceptic party – a party for UK Independence.

But they didn't call it the UK Independence Party because it already had a name....

The Labour Party. Image
But Britain finally did join. Not in triumph but, on some views, with "wary acceptance. It even appeared a kind of surrender..."

So not exactly whole-hearted then. Image
Eight months after joining the EEC in 1973, an opinion poll reported that a majority of the public thought the government had been wrong to take Britain in.

(Narrator: The 'majority' was 52%)
These passages hint at another angle: that the old imperialists were being drawn to the EEC. By contrast Powell, who famously spurned all imperial remnants as the empire folded, turned away from the EEC.

Benn: "The myth of Empire had been replaced by the myth of Europe". ImageImage
The Amery money quote was this...

To "make Europe the central theme of our policy, in much the same way as the Conservative Party made Commonwealth and Empire its central theme from Joe Chamberlain's time to the 1950s".

Is this why pro-Europeans obsessed about leading Europe? Image
In other words, was it the pro-Europeans who were "harking back to empire", not the Brexiters?

An intriguing thought but let's move on...
The 1975 referendum. And look: there's a female Tory leader who supported Remain but not with any passion at all and later became very eurosceptical.

The parallels with a certain Mrs May are obvious.

And possibly Jeremy Corbyn too. Image
On this account, not only was Mrs Thatcher apparently rather lukewarm about the EEC in 1975 (despite the famous flags jumper), so was the Labour prime minister who called it.

Reality was still dragging everyone forward, except possibly Heath who was one of the few believers. Image
Switching briefly to book review mode, it feels like the author is running out of steam here. Maybe he felt he'd largely made his point? There was little on Heath's first year in the EEC (interesting) and little depth on the referendum itself. You'll need other books for these.
Thatcher landed in Number 10 in May 1979. She read and commented on her incoming briefing.

Like her political forebears, she wanted much less supranationalism, more loose coupling and more national 'accommodations' within the EEC.

No 'rah rah for Europe' here. Image
In fact, remember the intriguing hypothesis several tweets ago that the EEC could even be a replacement/proxy empire in a British pro-European 'harking back' mindset .... well, it was Thatcher who came closer than anyone to suggesting this in a speech in 1977... Image
In the late 1970s, all the signs were there of future fundamentalist clashes between Thatcher and the EEC's integrationists, federalists and harmonisers.

(The screen grab refers to a 1979 speech but it could have equally been delivered in Bruges in 1988...) Image
The book rattles through the Thatcher and Major years, then concludes.

I'd certainly recommend reading 'Continental Drift' – readers will find plentiful euroscepticism from the 1940s onwards. For those who think euroscepticism is recent & shallow, the book will seem revelatory
But I dont agree with the book's unconvincing conclusions, linking empire to euroscepticism...which was the main purpose of the book. It also skips past certain events/topics that other books explain better.

Still, get a copy. Xmas is coming....

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More from @rolandmcs

Apr 3, 2023
Further insights and conversation on the history behind Brexit... 🧵

Thanks @cslowe451. t.co/IujTkhm7Aj
This point certainly resonates – that imperial thinking drove *pro-EU* politicians, not eurosceptic ones as is often claimed by modern Remainers – and is something that Grob-Fitzgibbon also touched on.
Brexit did not just happen because Britain has some noisy eurosceptics; it happened because the entire British body politic viewed 'Europe' through the lens of Britain's past.

Colonial/imperial history and 'free trade' in particular.
Read 5 tweets
Apr 2, 2023
Great thread from @EmporersNewC tackling the Brexiter argument at the nucleus of Brexitism: that the European project is heading towards becoming a superstate "and we want no part of it".

Some threaded comments in return....
Steve's thread shows there was undoubtedly a thread running through the European project's history that showed a 'superstate' ('a country called Europe') was not sought.
My first point in response is that the EU's back-history is characterised by its uncertainty about a precise destination.

It's therefore almost inherent in a review of EU history that "one can see what one wants to see" - a point/issue I've noted before.

Read 21 tweets
Jan 2, 2023
Suggested (controversial) new year's resolution for Remainers:

Give up on trying to Rejoin the EU.
Make a Norway-esque 'single market relationship' your new stretch goal. Do not waiver in pushing for it. Labour will grow into the idea and will join you. And who knows... more than a few wobbly Leavers may join you too. Healing may begin.
One side seeking total victory over the other – again – is not a recipe for healing. Recall that this issue has dogged this country since c.1945 (and arguably longer). It didn't magically appear in 2016 – see pinned tweet thread.
Read 7 tweets
Dec 31, 2022
Once again demonstrating a correlation between those who believe in Hard Brexit and those who believe in any number of nutty conspiracies.
It's not a cast iron link but it indicates an intellectual predisposition for needing hidden (and often simple if fantastical) explanations to explain a complex world. This explained it well.
Something as complex as the EU and something like how modern trade works had no chance against such a mindset. The EU & its agents were always out to get us; there was always going to be a great deception involved; and trade was always going to be about tariffs alone.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 26, 2022
I may have missed this thread first time round but it is spot on.

A return to empire is not what drives Brexiters. It is more about being the embattled plucky underdog; and that belief & determination will carry us to success, no matter what.
In this narrative, it is *Remainers* who want to amplify Britain through forms of empire (including 'Europe'), as per below....

Brexiters merely want to stand pluckily alone with their grit & belief while nerdy Remainer experts nit-pick.

Read 4 tweets
Sep 19, 2022
I love how The Left Behind ™ applaud at being left behind.
Have the press found the last two yet and raked over their entire life history?
Read 4 tweets

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