Monday 23rd May 2011

(12 years, 11 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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As many noble Lords have said, this EU Bill is based on the wrong premise about our membership. Instead of erecting a kind of Maginot Line against all these marauding European enemies who apparently are always trying to do us down, we should recognise that the sharing of responsibilities with our partners has been good for Britain and good for Europe. By stimulating Ministers to set out the case for and the benefits of membership, this amendment can not only give the British people the real facts about our membership but begin a new and more positive phase of British membership of the European Union. I beg to move.
Lord Blackwell Portrait Lord Blackwell
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The noble Lord will not be surprised that I cannot agree with his amendment. Arguments are put forward for the merits of our membership of the European Union and arguments are put forward about some of the disadvantages and costs of our membership. Where Members of this House and people in this country will disagree is in the balance of those arguments. The noble Lord cannot really be serious in asking for Ministers of the Crown to be bound to put only one side of those arguments in any future debate. Surely, if there is an obligation on Members of the Government, it should be to put a balanced view on any issue to do with the European Union to the House and to the country.

Lord Clinton-Davis Portrait Lord Clinton-Davis
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Does the noble Lord really contend that Ministers have performed their duty already? I hear the voice of negativity rather than positivity.

Lord Blackwell Portrait Lord Blackwell
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I think that that just illustrates the point that different Members of this Committee will have different views on this matter. My view is that if there has been a bias in the past, it has been for Ministers, in their desire to get the agreement of the House and the country to treaty changes, to downplay some of the consequences of those treaty changes that they did not wish the country to realise until it was too late. That has been part of the reason for the successive loss of trust in the Government and the European Union—the balanced arguments have not been put forward.

I have no argument with the fact that we should require Ministers to set out the arguments on both sides but to try to bind Ministers always to put out an unfailingly positive view of the European Union would be no service to this House or to the country and would simply compound the mistrust that has already been created.

Lord Blackwell Portrait Lord Blackwell
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Perhaps I may give way to the noble Lord, Lord Hannay.

Lord Hannay of Chiswick Portrait Lord Hannay of Chiswick
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It seems to me that the noble Lord is propounding a pretty odd doctrine. Britain has been a member of the United Nations since 1945. I do not imagine that anyone believes that the UN is without fault but I have not yet seen a ministerial speech about the UN from any party which did other than support it. Britain has been a member of NATO for a very long time. It is an organisation which also has its faults. I have never seen a British Minister make a speech about NATO which did not support it. Why can they not do it about the European Union too?

--- Later in debate ---
Lord Blackwell Portrait Lord Blackwell
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I may be corrected, but I am not aware that there is any statutory requirement for Ministers to make positive speeches about either of those organisations. It is up to Ministers to take their view and to make those views known. That is all I am saying about the European Union; namely, that it is up to Ministers to take a view and make that view known but that they should be allowed and, indeed, have an obligation on them, to state both sides of the case and make sure that they are not putting a too Panglossian view of the European Union in the way that this amendment would suggest.

Lord Clinton-Davis Portrait Lord Clinton-Davis
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I have rarely heard such piffle from any Member of this House as we have just heard. To suggest that Government Ministers would play fair on this issue is addled. At the moment, all the evidence points the other way. They are happier to point in the way of negativity rather than deploy the arguments in favour of the community.