Become a Member
Letters

The JC Letters Page, 28th September 2018

Dr Stanley Jacobs, Peter Davey, Joe Hayward, Aviva Cohen, Kay Bagon and Stewart Tray share their views with JC readers

September 27, 2018 10:45
Letters.PNG
4 min read

Referendum and where democracy really lies

One can sympathise with Izzy Lenga’s heartfelt wish for a second referendum and, perhaps a little contradictorily, “to cling to democratic ideals with vigour” (Why, as a Jew, I demand a People’s Vote, JC September 21). Rightly, she says that the EU’s origins were concerned with peace and beneficial trade agreements between its partners.

Unfortunately, its very success is beginning to prove its downfall. Undemocratically elected bureaucrats decided prematurely and relentlessly to embark on their seed programme of federalisation. This is resulting in a financially, economically and politically corrupting European behemoth, reflected in their largesse salaries, pensions and perks. Even within its first few years, the chief protagonists, Germany and France, breached their own fiscal regulations with impunity.

While some Jewish people, and Israel, have benefited modestly, the EU project has started to wreak havoc on Southern European countries, notably Greece and increasingly Spain and Italy. These self-same policies have triggered extremism, including antisemitism.  A babylon of hostile voices has arisen.

The general failure of governments to adequately regulate globalised companies and bring to account those responsible for the massive and persistent fallout from the financial crash of 2008 has markedly accentuated such trends. All this happened long before Brexit. Simply staying in the EU as currently constructed will cause increasingly serious distortions in our own economic, financial and political system. Soon a £50 billion Brexit fee will feel like small change.