Close Menu
CCMECCME
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCMECCME
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Home
  • Who we are
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the Council
    • News of migration in the world
    • News of Moroccan migration
  • Resources
Partager une tribune شارك بمساهمة Share a contribution
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
    • Voix des amériques
    • Maroc-Belgique: Histoire, Migrations et commémorations
    • Migrations et sciences sociales : où en est la recherche sur les migrations marocaines ?
    • Écritures féminines au maroc et dans l’immigration
  • Rencontres
    • Rencontres et débats
    • Rencontres philosophiques
    • Cinéma une rétrospective des films pionniers du cinéma marocain sur l’émigration/immigration
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
CCMECCME
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
  • Rencontres
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
Home»Archives of the council»Media and migration

Beyond immigration, Europe is a complete non issue for this election

Media and migration 8 April 2015
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp Copy Link
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email WhatsApp Copy Link

Labour has found common cause with big business in opposing a referendum on membership of the European Union, but both exaggerate the economic risks of such a vote

Not since Michael Foot has a Labour leader so comprehensively managed to unite the business lobby against him. It’s not hard to see why. Ed Miliband pays lip service to the vital importance of wealth creation, but it is perfectly obvious that he doesn’t understand the first thing about it.

Labour last week published a “manifesto for business”, which in a vacuous sort of way was a reasonable enough nod towards the interests of enterprise and economic advancement; it pushes some of the right buttons – not least the commitment to cut and then freeze business rates for 1.5m small business properties.

Yet being pro-business is about a good deal more than a few minor gestures. It requires a mindset and belief system that seems almost wholly alien to the Labour leader.

When Mr Miliband meets business leaders, he listens, but he doesn’t hear. Not only does he believe in a strongly redistributional, anti-wealth policy agenda, but he leaves little doubt that he would actually implement it given half a chance. This is not just crowd-pleasing rhetoric; he means what he says. In an age of political spin and sophistry, there may be something to be said for the re-emergence of the conviction politician.

As an economic strategy for Britain, on the other hand, Mr Miliband’s approach would be a disastrously desctructive one. Tony Blair, the former prime minister, has warned of the dangers for Labour if it drifts back to its roots as a traditional left wing party. This should be the least of his worries; the threat posed to the economy by the proposed mix of “pre-distributional” market interventions, tax increases and general fiscal incontinence matters a whole lot more.

However, on one thing Mr Miliband does still intriguingly command the support of the bulk of British commerce. In seeking to make a virtue of Britain’s membership of the European Union, Mr Miliband perfectly aligns himself with mainstream business thinking. Indeed, had it been Ed’s Blairite brother, David, who was Labour leader, it would have split the business lobby down the middle, with Labour’s European credentials cancelling out any natural affinity with the otherwise pro-business Tories.

On cue, up pops Tony Blair with his first intervention in the election campaign. This is also very possibly the last he will be allowed given the perceived toxicity of the personal brand. A referendum on the European Union will be a huge distraction, he warns in positively apocalyptic terms, creating a greater degree of uncertainty for business than anything since the Second World War.

Labour’s policy stance on Europe is rich with irony, and not just because of its one-time position as the more Eurosceptic of the two main political parties. Its proposals for the public finances are also the very reverse of what is being ordered by diktat throughout the EU’s eurozone core. Against what Europe has been prescribing, even Tory strategies for reducing the deficit are very much “austerity-lite”, while Labour plans for the next parliament would be considered so fiscally reckless as to invite a string of automatic fines.

It’s odd, to put it mildly, that Mr Miliband could supposedly be so much in love with a project which has manifestly laid waste to the European economy and whose macro-economic policies seem so completely at odds with his own, overtly Keynsian, demand management “solutions”.

It is only when it comes to stifling regulation of business and finance that Labour finds common cause with the eurocrats. Even on immigration, Labour has been trying belatedly and opportunistically to repudiate Europe’s principled approach to free movement of workers. Labour is drawn far more to the EU’s protectionist instincts than its noble free market principles.

Mr Miliband would counter that this is not an argument about the madnesses of the eurozone. Rather it is about Britain’s place in Europe. Yet the two issues are frankly virtually indistinguishable these days. Ever since Maastricht, the UK has been a semi-detached member of the EU. Even if not yet part of the euro, all members other than Britain and Denmark are legally obliged eventually to become so. Policies which, perceived as necessities, have bound single currency members ever more tightly together were always inevitably going to push the UK further apart. The central questions are therefore not so much whether the UK is in or out of the EU, as what kind of relationship it enjoys with the eurozone, and what price it has to pay for a favourable one.

And like it or not, we do have to have some kind of a relationship with this behemoth on our own doorstep. A visitor from another world would find it faintly odd that while we attempt to cosy up to China, and less notably these days, our old allies in the US, jurisdictions over which we have no influence whatsoever, we seem only to want to push Europe further away.

Nonetheless, to deny voters their say, which is essentially Labour’s approach, is to fall into the same “we know better” trap as much of the eurozone hierarchy.

I’m sorry, but I simply do not believe Tony Blair, or the main business lobbies, when they say that even to have the argument is to poleaxe business confidence. Much the same thing was said about the Scottish referendum. In the event, there was virtually no evidence of it being a significant drag on growth, either north or south of the border.

As for direct inward investment into the UK, that’s been poor by historic standards for quite a while now, and has very little to do with either UK political uncertainty, or questions about Britain’s commitment to Europe. Today’s cross border investment strike is a global affair.

None of this is to lightly dismiss the risks of a messy, almost accidental exit. For sure, this would have very negative consequences, at least in the short run, for business sentiment and therefore UK living standards. Yet in the scale of things, a difficult exit is far less of a threat to the economy than another explosion at the heart of the eurozone itself, or even just a continuation of Europe’s present state of economic stagnation.

Despite the noise, Europe is most unlikely to be a deciding issue at this election, or indeed have any impact at all beyond its interface with immigration concerns. In or out, voters are wise enough to know that Britain has no option but to maintain cordial relations with its neighbours, and that’s all that business really needs.

Source: The Telegraph

Related Posts

Paris Attacks: the intellectuals’ forecasts that we did not heed

30 November 2015

United States: Moroccan Taxi driver shot in the back on Thanksgiving Day

30 November 2015

Refugees welcome? How UK and Germany compare on migration

3 September 2015

Migration crisis: pressure mounts on Cameron over refugees

3 September 2015

Hundreds of migrants protest at Budapest station, want to go to Germany

3 September 2015

EU refugee crisis: World mourns Syrian toddler as Andy Burnham calls for emergency Parliament debate

3 September 2015

Our latest news

L'Espagne et le Maroc prévoient une augmentation du nombre d'utilisateurs de l'opération « Traversée du détroit 2025 »

 Spain and Morocco hold  the 36th Spanish-Moroccan Joint Commission meeting 

8 May 2025
المهاجرون الجدد يعوضون تراجع السكان الإسبان

Spain’s population reaches a record due to foreign residents

8 May 2025
شروط جديدة للحصول على الجنسية الفرنسية

France: A circular to tighten citizenship rules

6 May 2025
Présentation de la version enrichie de l’Anthologie des écrivains marocains de l’émigration de Salim Jay

Sami Jay presents his “Anthology of Moroccan Emigrant Writers”

27 April 2025

النشرة الإخبارية

اشترك لتلقي آخر الأخبار

قم بتنزيل تطبيق المجلس

ولا تنس تفعيل الإشعارات للحصول على آخر الأخبار!

Download CCME books for Android
Download CCME books for IOS
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

المجلس

  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups

الأخبار

  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
موارد
اتصل بنا
  • محج الرياض. ش 10 ص.ب 21481 - حي الرياض - الرباط 10000 - المغرب
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71 اتصل بنا​

2025 - © المجلس

  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest news

Download the CCME app

And don’t forget to activate notifications to receive the latest news!

Download CCME books for IOS
Download CCME books for Android
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCME
  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups
News
  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
Resources
Contact
  • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Morocco
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71
© 2025 - CCME
  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Revue de presse

Abonnez-vous pour recevoir notre revue de presse

    Téléchargez l’application CCME

    Et n’oubliez pas d’activer les notifications pour recevoir les dernières actualités!

    Download CCME books for IOS
    Download CCME books for Android
    Logo CCME
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

    CCME

    • Who we are
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups

    Actualités

    • News
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world

    Ressources

    Contact

    • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Maroc
    • contact@ccme.org.ma
    • +212 5 37 56 71 71

    © 2025 - CCME

    • Right of access to information
    • Terms of use
    • Contact us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.