
Cameron Breaks his EU Pledge
David Cameron, who solemnly
pledged that should the EU try and extend its power over the UK, then he
would be duty bound to hold a referendum, has now backtracked quicker than a weasel
down a foxhole.
Having failed in his attempt to stop the EU thieves from ripping us off even more than they do at present,
by increasing its budget, Cameron claimed he had stopped the EU Juggernaut by . . . er . . .accepting a 2.9% increase instead of the proposed 6%. At the same time he agreed to allow the EU new powers to
investigate British citizens for alleged criminal offences.
This is a clear case of EU expanding its power over the UK,
something David Cameron cannot allow without first asking our permission by means of a referendum. He has repeatedly told us so.
Either he was lying when he made the pledge or, as many are now suspecting, he has never really been the EU sceptic he claimed to be.
Was his EU scepticism, they ask, merely a sham, a tool to be used to gain office as leader of the Conservative Party, and so become Prime Minister?
One thing has become clear; David Cameron has discarded his pledges and promises more often than a snake sheds its skin. It would appear that his word is not his bond.
Trying to divert attention
from Cameron’s duplicity, Foreign Minister, William Hague, made vague threats
to the effect that if the EU failed to hold its 2014 – 2020 budget down to
inflation levels, Britain
would veto the budget.
But William Hague knows full well, and if he doesn’t he’s not up to the job of Foreign Secretary, that as from 1st November 2014 the right of veto has been removed from all
meaningful EU legislation.
That includes
the EU Budget and also our right of withdrawal from the EU.
And he too will become
redundant, as from 1st November 2014, when foreign affairs will be
controlled by the: Foreign Affairs High
Representative election (New) – Lisbon:
QMV
Below are just five of the
forty-three key legislative areas that we will not be able to veto as from 1st
November 2014.
EU budget The– Nice:
Unanimity Lisbon: QMV
Freedom of movement for
workers – Nice: Unanimity Lisbon: QMV
Immigration Unanimity – Nice: QMV Lisbon: QMV
Police cooperation – Nice:
Unanimity Lisbon: QMV
Withdrawal of a member state
(New) – Lisbon:
QMV
The current EU budget is also
exempted from veto by individual nations. It was passed by the new Qualified
Majority Voting system 562 votes for 92 votes against.
You can read the complete list of QMV relacing our veto in the article, The EU and a Conspiracy of Silence, below this article.
It must be remembered that
democracy and dissent were not allowed in the former USSR,
(Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics) or its satellite countries, and
neither are they allowed in Angela Merkel’s EU.
It would appear that those of
us who believed that urgent action was needed to curb our national debt, and
believe that the Chancellor has made a good start to achieve this, are all
baffled by the stupidity of, fence ringing foreign aid, spending billions of
pounds on capturing harmless CO2 emissions and non-existent anthropogenic global warming, billions more on stupid
wind farms; the same policy that has crippled and almost bankrupted Spain. And to add insult to injury we are supposed to kowtow and bankroll an corrupt and unelected EU!
Now the EU says we must make
it easier for immigrants to obtain benefits to which they have not contributed.
We cannot continue to allow
an unelected EU to continually undermine our society.
We must end all payments to
the EU until we are given a vote on whether or not we remain members of the
sinking monolith of the EU.
Does not the Chancellor have
a solemn duty to protect our taxes from thieves? He must suspend all payments to the EU until
their accounts are passed by independent auditors and the full scale of
embezzlement is known.
David Cameron must now give us a referendum on remaining within the EU, full stop. Nothing else will do, we want out now, and no more stalling or excuses.
Angry Old Git