New Internationalist

YOUR VIEWS ON: CAN THE EUROPEAN UNION BE REFORMED?

argaret Thatcher turned against that neoliberal trading project, now known as the EU, when she realized that it was,-reading Right with its ‘nanny state’ working-hours directives; stricter-than-US environmental standards and (partial) opposition to GM; and ‘political correctness gone mad’ rulings on LGBTQI and women’s equality and other human rights issues. Lately, the EU has angered tech libertarians too as it has, unlike most governments, got tough with all-powerful tech giants such as Google and Facebook and actually fined them for their crimes and misdemeanours. Can the EU be reformed? With progressive forces acting from within, it can be pulled into a more socially useful direction. It is a union, a sum of its parts – and if those parts are progressive, socialist, there is hope. The most ardent and effective anti-EU lobby, whatever some Lexiters might like to fantasize, is now thoroughly dominated by the nationalist Far Right and its elite puppeteers. The ‘sovereignty’ on offer is such a long way away from democracy it’s become a sick joke. This is the political reality we are living in. I don’t think your rather arcane debate really captured that.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist2 min readHistory & Theory
Mick Lynch
by Gregor Gall (Manchester University Press, ISBN 9781526173096) manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk ‘You’ve gone off into the world of the surreal,’ Mick Lynch told Kay Burley live on Sky News. ‘Your questions are verging into nonsense.’ Since the start
New Internationalist2 min read
If We Burn
by Vincent Bevins (Wildfire, ISBN 9781035412273) headline.co.uk Amid the protests of the last decade, much of the reporting was breathless and boosterish. Technology was presented as inherently liberating, and the possibilities for the new world were
New Internationalist3 min read
Pumped Up
Our air-source heat pump often seems like magic. Last winter, temperatures here in Oxford fell to -10 degrees Celsius. But this unremarkable looking device, whirring quietly away on our outside back wall, was somehow extracting enough heat from the f

Related Books & Audiobooks