Saturday, 28 June 2014

A Big Wage Or A Hunger To Win

The weather in England this weekend is hardly inspiring.  It's cold and wet — more like February or March than late June.  But it is the weekend of Glastonbury and it wouldn't be the same without the wind and rain and sea of mud.  It probably captures the nation's mood as well.  Andy Murray is doing OK at Wimbledon — so far he has not lost a set.  But the cricket team succumbed to Sri Lanka on Tuesday giving the visitors their first ever series win in England.  England fought hard for a draw and after a long time at the wicket, James Anderson, the No 11 batsman got out on the next to last ball of the day.  He was distraught but at least they tried.  Potential spectators thought nothing of England's chances on that final day as they started off at 57 for 5..  Nobody turned up to watch  The pictures on TV displayed acres and acres of empty seats.  We do like to watch winners and who can blame us for that.  On Thursday, the English Football team slipped back into England; ignored, unloved, almost unnoticed, with some players showing signs of distress but most appearing almost indifferent to what had happened in Brazil..  Many will never go to the World Cup ever again so now they can get back to basics, concentrate on playing in the Premier League, collecting their ridiculous salaries, buying their mansions and holiday homes and driving around in their Range Rovers and Ferraris — all courtesy of the punters who thought they were world class footballers..   

I was quite surprised when watching this World Cup just how many of the world's top class players ply their trade in the Premier League.  Is this beneficial to English players or does it limit opportunities for new young English players to climb into the top division?  I don't know — it can be argued both ways,  But if players like Christiano Ronaldo and Luis Suarez can work their ways up from modest jobs, poor backgrounds and less than glorious academic achievements to become two of the best players in the world, there should be no reasons why a lad from Essex or Lancashire should not be able to find their way to the top.  Perhaps the vast salaries, in many cases out of all proportion to the skills and abilities on offer, do create an attitude of complacency and relaxed contentment that takes away the hunger needed to perform at the highest levels.  Look at the European teams that have gone out at the group stage.  England, Spain, Italy, Portugal — all top football playing nations, knocked out in many cases by the superior skills and hunger of teams from mainly small Latin American countries — Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Uruguay — and a few other American countries with rather larger populations — Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and USA.  Apart from Germany — who must be one of the favourites to win the World Cup — the only survivors from Europe are France, Belgium, Greece, Switzerland and Holland.  I was glad to see the Jurgen Klinsmann managed USA team go through. Football is a minority sport in America but the team played good open football and even made Germany work hard for their win

But what can be done to make England into a world beating team?  On the face of it, very little.  The FA is drowning in a sea of complacency.  After such a disastrous performance, they should be telling the world that they are committed to a root and branch investigation into what went wrong and coming up with the right answers so that by 2018 they have a team capable of challenging for the win. We do not want the FA and pundits telling us of the positives.  There can be few positives when the team fails to win a single game and after 280 minutes of football has only succeeded in scoring one goal against teams like Costa Rica and Uruguay.  Like BIll Shankly said, "Winning is not most important thing, it's the only thing!"

Hear!   Hear!! to that.
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Tuesday, 24 June 2014

They Think It's All Over


In two hours, England will play their last match in this Brazil World Cup.  Whether they win or lose is of no consequence.  The abject display in their first two matches was enough to sink them.  But Costa Rica will want to win and win well to show that they are not just the also-rans that they were labelled before the tournament began.  And in addition there will be players wanting to display their abilities in order to angle for a job in England where they can earn fabulous wages.  Many of them can already speak English.

We, Joe Public, for the most part only see our footballers on the field of play.  They have very little interaction with the fans either at home or on the international stage.  The newspapers have been trying to suggest why England do so badly and wondering how, in spite of the disaster in Brazil, they can carry on regardless.  In my last post, I mentioned the success in Munich in 2001 and many are now wondering whether Sven Goran Eriksson was not a considerably better manager than Roy Hodgson.  But the newspaper men have been with the England team in Brazil — and in the days and matches leading up to the finals — and they are revealing an organisation — the FA — completely out of touch with all reality.  The players have been escorted everywhere by minders and told what they can and cannot say and to whom.  They have been surrounded by marketing men, presentation gurus, kit and promotional marketing men and spin doctors galore.  A vast army was gathered together by the FA to ensure no player showed anything other than a zombi-like adherence to instructions.  They were told when and where to appear and in what dress.  They should say nothing that had not been previously authorized.  Even walking along the beach they appeared out of place.  The FA took along a huge entourage of suits and blazers to manage this World Cup; they chartered an aeroplane; they constructed an immense media centre — even bigger than that of the host nation; a training centre that was selected for being photogenic rather than the best place to train.  Players were almost an adjunct to the marekting of the FA.  What did all this fannying about do to help performance?   I don't know how good or bad these players are but, for sure they are not as bad as they have appeared.  I have been critical of Steven Gerrard but Martin Samuel in the Daily Mail has said of him that a footballing colossus has been regularly reduced to mediocrity when on international duty.  He has had countless great games playing for Liverpool for some eighteen years but great performances for England have been few and far between..  Why?  Is it that the oppressive effect of the FA apparatchiks has done for him.  Has he and the rest of the team been managed into oblivion?  This will be Gerrard's last World Cup and it was clear at the press conferences that he was distraught  at England's failure.  He is considering his future and deciding if he should carry on.  He will not be in the starting line-up for today's game   But Gerrard should not have an ending like this to his career.  He has been a loyal servant of Liverpool — and England — through thick and thin and it is surely wrong that he should be considering his future while Hodgson and the suits carry on as though nothing had happened.  It seems that Gerrard may be allowed to resign the captaincy and then — as sure as eggs are eggs — he can be made the scapegoat.

Martin Samuel contrasted the control freakery of the England squad with that of team from Chile.  They turned up in Rio, kept contact with their fans and the day before they hammered Spain they had a great party in the hotel for players, officials, friends, family, fans and anyone who wanted to join in.  There was food, music, chat, dancing and at the end a private team meeting.  They were completely relaxed and ready to enjoy themselves in this tournament and now they are qualified for the knock-out stages. But, said Samuel, whatever happened with the FA, England could never be this relaxed.  I like Chile and the Chileans and I wish them well in this tournament.

Also, I wish England well for their final game but when they get back to England there has to be a proper examination of why everything went so badly.

My tips for the final — Germany and the Netherlands — unless they play each other before then..
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Monday, 23 June 2014

Why Are England Football Teams So Bad?


Tomorrow, England play what will be their last game in this 2014 Football World Cup tournament when they meet Costa Rica, their last game in Group D.  Costa Rica have already qualified for the next stage by beating both Italy and Uruguay and based on that form they should beat England to give them a 100% record in Round 1.  However, England being England, I expect they will produce their best performance of the tournament;  I will not put money on them to win but it is just possible that they will.  Their efforts against Uruguay were so abysmal that they cannot but improve on that.  Continuing the Wagner metaphor from my last post, I ask, will they produce the marvellous moments along with the terrible half-hours.  Another Wagner quote I remember is that by the American critic who said that Wagner's music was better than it sounded.and Tchaikovski who sat through hours and hours of The Ring and as the last notes of the final opera died away, he felt he had been let out of prison.  So it is with the England.football team.  On paper they have a team that seems much better than it plays and as the final steps of another inept display fade away, we can get back to reality.  As a friend said to me at the end of last week, "Now that England are definitely knocked out, we can relax and enjoy the football."

I have just been re-reading an article from the Daily Mail in January 2011 when Joe Bernstein wondered if footballers in England were over-paid.  The question is still relevant today.  Too many footballers, said Joe Bernstein, were millionaires driving around in Ferraris when they deserved no better than Reliant Robins.  The Mail article was published to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the abolition of the footballer's maximum wage in 1961.  At that time no player could earn more than £20 per week, which was just above the average wage in the UK.  Now the average pay of a Premier League footballer is about £35,000 per week and the maximum [Wayne Rooney] is £300,000 per week.  The average wage for Joe Public is about £600 per week.  So an average footballer has gone from earning the average wage [about] to earning 54 times the average wage.  Are these players of such awesome brilliance that their pay is justified?  For many years now, the England football teams have failed to perform over and over again and nothing is done.  The players continue getting their fabulous wages and living a life of extreme luxury.  I do not watch Premier League football very much any more because I think that much of it is mediocre in spite of the vast sums handed to the players.  And the pundits in the TV studios seem oblivious to the problem.  Have they become so used to mediocrity that they do not recognize the inferior quality of the play.  

David Beckham was not the greatest footballer in the world but he always made an effort.   In taking free kicks and scoring he was supreme; he set the standard for others to copy.  And he could pass a ball inch perfect.  But he did this by practicing and practicing until he could do it again and again.  Even now Beckham still says how proud he was to play for England and how even more proud he was to be captain.  Apart from goal-keeper Peter Shilton, Beckham is the most capped player in English football history with 115 caps — although this total was equalled by Steven Gerrard in the match against Uruguay last week.

Now Harry Redknapp has thrown another cat among the pigeons by suggesting that during his time at Tottenham he knew of players who did not want to play for England and asked him as club manager to help them avoid this or that game.  This has incensed Gerrard who has demanded that Redknapp names names.  It is not a revelation that will surprise many of us.  Former England manager Graham Taylor has come out in support of Redknapp, saying that players not wanting to play for their country is "not particularly new."  Often Premier League managers help players suffer "injuries" in order to keep them out of international matches when the player was crucial for an upcoming Champions League or Premier League match — games that could make difference of millions of pounds to club income.  And these clubs pay the players's fabulous salaries.  How often it is the player who has wanted to escape international duty and how often it was the manager wanting to keep the player rested and uninjured, we do not know.  Yet more support came from John Harton, former coach of the Welsh team, who said that clubs play a part in footballers not wanting to play for their country.

Premier League football is all about money.  Many players have little or no contact with fans and as long as the money keeps rolling in, why should they bother.  Also, I think many players are enveloped in a cloud of their own delusions.  If there are clubs daft enough to pay them more than £100,000 per week, they must have huge talents and the fans ought to be grateful for being allowed the opportunities to see them play.  But to a lot of football supporters, the England team is the pinnacle.  We want to see them win and win well. 

How many can remember that day in the Olympic Stadium, Munich on 1st September 2001, when England beat Germany by 5 — 1, Michael Owen scored a hat-trick and Sven Goren Erickson was the manager?   The nation — with some justification — could not believe it.  The Germans couldn't believe it either.  It was said the BBC, "a stunning performance as England came from behind to thrash the Germans.  Previously,in their whole history, Germany had only lost one home game in qualifying for the World Cup.  They were torn apart by England playing slick football with a clinical edge up front."  That team included Beckham as captain and, in addition to Owen, they had Neville, Ferdinand, Campbell, Cole, Barmby, Scholes, Gerrard and Heskey with Seaman in goal.  That was the same Steven Gerrard who captained England in the debacle in Brazil.  Can he explain where the difference lies?  Is it just that the team of 2001 really was much better than the team of 2014?
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Saturday, 21 June 2014

An England Side With Potential


England's Rugby Union team have been beaten 3 - 0 in their test series in New Zealand.  After two apparently near misses in the first two tests, England were taken to the cleaners in the third test and lost 36 - 13.  They were hammered in the first half of this match but improved in the second half.  Nevertheless, it was not a great performance.  This was New Zealand's seventeenth successive international victory — a world record.  So, we were playing a goodish side lead by Richie McCaw, the 16st 10lb captain; one of the all time greats of rugby union with 126 caps to his name.  But, at least England looked like they were trying, seemed to understand the object of the game and they are getting better.  This is a young side, still rated 4th in the world behind — predictably — New Zealand, South Africa and Australia.  But they are not far behind Australia and on a good day they can beat either Australia or South Africa.  If they carry on making progress, they will get there in time for the World Cup in 2015.  They won in 2003 and they can do it again — and I believe that the players believe that they can do it.  

Unlike the football team, our rugby players will have to fight hard against the best teams in the world.  The footballers have to fight hard against week-end pub sides and would still be unable to guarantee a win.

Richie McCaw is one of the finest rugby players around today and he earns about £420, 000 per annum in a sport where you can expect to get knocked about a bit and will certainly take a hammering in a career as long as McCaw's.  Wayne Rooney does not need to expect to get knocked around but collects McCaw's annual salary twice in three weeks.  He is being paid at a rate over 35 times as high as McCaw.  You know it makes sense.

Do not despair England; you can still come good for the World Cup.
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Some Wonderful Moments, Some Terrible Half-Hours


Today is the longest day of the year and with it we expect to be somewhere near mid-summer.  The last few days we have enjoyed some reasonable weather; not very hot and not very sunny, but pleasant enough  For the last week or so the eyes of the male half of the world have been mainly concentrated on events in Brazil — if we ignore the lunatics in the Middle East — hosting the football World Cup for the first time. Brazil is a huge country stretching to 3,000 miles from north to south and a similar distance from east to west.  It covers an area of 3.3 million square miles and has a population of about 200 million.  Of course it is an emerging nation still escaping the legacy of military dictatorship, still with many severe problems and substantial differences in living standards.  Almost certainly they will find that they have spent too much money on putting on this World Cup — about £10 billion when the initial estimate was only £1 billion.  We have estimators like that in Britain.  But the Brazilians are trying to put on a grand carnival that everyone can enjoy.

There will be some exceptions to the universal enjoyment of the carnival  In football, the current world champions, Spain, have been knocked out in the preliminary rounds and will be leaving for home next week.  This was a great shock and surely completely unexpected.  The Spanish team may be in a period of decline — but not so soon and so rapidly.
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Less of a shock has been England's elimination.  This team left for Brazil with high hopes but low expectations.  England football teams in world tournaments is a perpetual case of hope triumphing over expectations.  But, perhaps we have now come to the state of expecting nothing and being satisfied.  As England failures go, their performance at this World Cup was up there with the worst of them.  Not since 1950 have we managed to lose both of our first two opening matches and not since 1958 have we been eliminated at the group stage..We were told by the pundits that this Group D was a modest collection of teams and that England would be sure to progress to the knock-out stages.  No.  They were beaten by a far from grand Italian team and then humiliated by Uruguay.  I say humiliated even though the studio pundits have striven to excuse this teams failings and point to the positives.  To talk of positives in this context is to hide from the truths.  The England football team is like a Wagner opera, which, said Rossini, has some wonderful moments but some terrible half-hours.  That sums up their efforts.

After losing to Italy, came the total humiliation of defeat by Uruguay.  This is a team made up of a very good player [Suarez] and many modest players existing on low wages and coming from a poorish country with a population of 3.4 million.  Our Premier League has the highest paid players in the world — Wayne Rooney is at the top of the list with his £300,000 PER WEEK salary.  I think Rooney is a good player but not a great one.  Of the top ten highest paid footballers in the world eight play in the Premier League and in a country [England] with a population of 53 million, we consistently cannot produce a top-class team of eleven players to provide serious competition at international level.

Against modest Uruguay, England were disorganised and made many amateurish errors.  Suarez, recovered from his knee injury was playing.  The England captain is also Liverpool captain and plays with Suarez week in and week out.  He knows what Suarez can do yet he was allowed to wander around the field often unwatched.  England should have had a defender welded to Suarez throughout the match.  They did not.  Their defending was abysmal — Gary Cahill had some moments but overall they were poor.  

After the loss to Uruguay it was still theoretically possible for England to qualify if Italy beat Costa Rica and England beat Costa Rica in their last game by a considerable margin.  Now even that lifeline has gone.  Costa Rica today defeated Italy 1 - 0 and go to the top of the group.  Now England cannot qualify even if they defeat Costa Rica by a huge margin — and that is surely unlikely against a team that has already defeated both teams that have defeated England.  Costa Rica is another poor country with a small population — 4.3 million — that is capable of making a decent football team — and against Italy they won in spite of being denied a certain penalty.

While, in recent years many of our sports men and women have been achieving great things.  Andy Murray at Wimbledon; bike men and women in track and on road with Chris Hoy, Mark Cavendish, Bradley Wiggins, Chris Froome, et al; athletes at the Olympics; the rugby team wins the Six Nations, etc.  There was the cricket disaster in Australia but with staggering consistency the football team fails again and again.  English football is awash with money but still there is no sign of a decent football team emerging.  Is the life of a footballer in England too easy?  Do they think of nothing more than WAGs and lifestyles?  Is their only worry the colour of the next Ferrari?  Wayne Rooney could buy a new Ferrari with four days pay.— something I could only achieve after a good number of years and assuming that I could cut all my other expenditures to zero. 

Mattews, Lofthouse and Finney will be rolling in their graves.
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Thursday, 5 June 2014

Debts and Deficits

In these trying times almost all of us in the UK are struggling to pay the bills, to save some money or just to get by.  But it is always as well to bear in mind those wise words of Mr Wilkins Micawber in David Copperfield, "Annual income £20, annual expenditure £19-19s-6d, result happiness.  Annual income £20, annual expenditure £20-0s-6d, result misery."  It is a simple homily but in this modern world it is widely disregarded.  Everyone seems to be in debt.  Billions are borrowed to buy houses which become more and more over-priced.  A house is no longer a place to live but is becoming more of an investment for making money and ought to be kept in a bank vault rather than lived in.  It used to be the case that no-one could borrow money to buy a house if the price was more than four times an annual income.  That went out of the window in the years before the financial crash when liar mortgages became almost normal; ie a borrower could tell the bank or building society that they earned fabulous salaries of £80,00 or £100,000 per year or..... anything;  Just take the price of the house that you wanted to buy, divide by four and that was your declared annual salary.  No-one checked to see if it was true and soon everything collapsed.  Things are not quite that bad now but still people are borrowing too much to buy over-priced houses and hoping that interest rates will remain low.

But it is not just private debt.  The government has huge debts — and still they increase.  By the time of the election in 2015, total government current debt will be about £1,400 billion.  How are they going to pay that off?  The annual interest alone will be £40 billion+.  This debt figure does not take into account the money that will be needed to finance future public sector pensions — another vast sum.  As the government declares what a wonderful job they are doing in reducing the extra amount they need to borrow every year because they spend more than they receive in tax and duties.  They never mention these days the country's current account deficit.  In the past, the monthly current account deficit was reported in news broadcasts and in newspapers.  It was considered important — and it is.  Now nobody bothers.   The trouble is that it is BAD!

Our current account deficit is running at -£10 billion per month.  This means that our imports exceed our exports by £120 billion per year.  It is atrocious; it is absolutely incredible.  The trouble really started in the 1980s when Thatcher told us that manufacturing was of no importance.  She was wrong about that just as she was wrong about many other things.  We need to make things which other countries want to buy and we need companies that are British owned.  British owned allows us to keep control and to work for the benefit of UK Ltd.  Sell off the companies and they can move manufacturing anywhere in the world that happens to be suitable.  But until we start making things to sell, we have to sell off whole companies in order to balance the books.  Any short falls in the old days were made up by financial services.  But not any more.  The government could, of course, jack up interest rates.  This would bring down house prices, lift the value of the £ and would make our imports more expensive while encouraging our cheaper exports.  But it probably will not happen before a general election.

The chart above shows how things have deteriorated in the last 20 years.  During the days of John Major, the deficit ran around £10 billion per annum, an amount easily made up by financial transactions.  But from the moment Blair took over the trading debt went up and up until now our trading deficit is 12 times worse than the rate under Major.

You know it makes sense.  What does the government think?  Nick Clegg thinks we should give everybody free school meals.

Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Changes in Europe?


I am writing this in the week following the declaration of the results in the election of members of the European Parliament. For the pro-european establishment, it was a disaster. In the UK, as was, perhaps, widely expected, the United Kingdom Independence Party [UKIP] came top of the polls almost everywhere. Labour and the Tories each collected about 24% of the vote while UKIP amassed over 29%. Their result in Scotland was more limited but, nevertheless, UKIP gained their first MEP in Scotland — a fact which has much annoyed Alex Salmond who has been arguing that UKIP were an irrelevance in Scotland; now they cannot be ignored. The achievement of UKIP has been astonishing. It is the first time in well over 100years that one of the major political parties has not topped an election poll. I would include the Liberal Democrats in “major parties”; they did well until after the First World War. But the Lib-Dems have been virtually annihilated in these European elections. A few days earlier, on 22nd May, they did badly in the local elections, losing nearly half of all of their council seats up for election.  But in the European Parliament, they have lost all but one single MEP in the whole of England and Wales.  All the major parties have areas where they are strong and others where they are weak. Labour are strong in the north of England — and, of course, in Scotland. But, apart from in London, they still have very few seats in the UK parliament anywhere south of the famous line from Bristol to the Humber. The Tories are solid in the prosperous south east but have only one seat in Scotland. The Liberal Democrats have, traditionally been strong in the Celtic fringes of Devon, Cornwall, Wales and Northern Scotland. But in these elections they have been hammered in the south west. I wonder if this absolutely, obsessively pro-Europe party will read into this anything other than the standard excuse of every party that does badly; a failure to get their message across. The reality is that people in the south west — not the richest part of England — have been profoundly Euro-sceptic for years as they have seen their industries strangled and squashed by EU legislation.

All across Europe, in many countries, Euro-sceptic parties have been elected. In the old well-established member states there has been a considerable vote against the EU and the political establishment — except perhaps in Germany, the country that gets most benefit from the union and the euro. The new EU members have, on the whole, followed instructions and voted for centrist parties that will keep the present system ticking over. This is quite understandable because many of them see the EU as a guarantee of some sort of democracy but, more important, as a bulwark against Russia. But, in contrast, the countries that have been members for many years are concerned about the undemocratic nature of EU institutions, inefficiency, waste, incompetence, corruption, immigration and the mess that is the euro. Nowhere was the Euroscepticism more intense than in France — one of the founding six members of the Common Market. The establishment parties of the government and the centre all lost seats and there were gains for all the Eurosecptic parties of left and right but particularly the fairly extreme party the National Front, lead by Marine Le Pen. Some of the elected members represent groups that wish to withdraw completely from the EU but most of the increasingly Eurosceptic countries, even if they want to keep the EU, want more national control and an ability to manage their own affairs without constant interference from Brussels — and these sentiments will only increase in resilience unless Europe changes. There is precious little sign of that. The parties elected represent all shades of political opinion from fascist parties of the extreme right that are little more or less than Nazi parties, to groups on the extreme left that want something akin to communism. What they have in common is an opposition to the EU as it exists today. The monster of the European Union has stagnated for some years, partly because of the financial crisis but also because making any changes has become an increasingly monumental task, requiring the agreement of 28 nations and precipitating certain countries to hold referendums before their governments can approve the changes. The general feeling in the European corridors of power has been that in these uncertain times, referendums result in electorates likely to keep saying “No!” In the past, it has been traditional that if any country said “No!” they should be asked the same question again and again until they said “Yes!” I think there is a belief in the corridors of Brussels that asking the same question over and over again will no longer change the answer.

About half the European Parliament is now made up of MEPs who do not want to be there at all. They will contribute little to the running of the day-to-day activities of the parliament and will oppose almost all legislation. But as things stand, it doesn't matter. The EU Parliament serves almost no purpose whatsoever and the unelected Euro politicians and bureaucrats will carry on as though nothing had happened, generating utterly pointless legislation, spending our money and providing more jobs for the boys. And, God, how they spend money. This parliament is incapable of even achieving something on matters that it does control. After all these years, they still cannot agree to stop trecking from Brussels to Strasbourg for four days every month in order to meet on French soil. Every trip involves carting juggernaut loads of paper — printed in 22 languages — on a journey of 265 miles each way, plus all the Eurocrats and MEPs that want to make the journey, to put them up in quite expensive hotels and pay all their travelling expenses. The exercise is utterly pointless and costs at least £165 million every year — or about £14 million per trip. I assume that absolutely no-one is in favour of this nonsense except the French.

I have long argued that the whole of the EU is an organisation that if it did not exist we would not need to invent it. The last time we were allowed a meaningful vote on Europe was in 1975 when I, and most other people in the UK, believed that we were voting in favour of membership of a common market, a large trading group that would operate with no obstructions to trade and would allow easy movement between countries. Our ideas were based on EFTA — the European Free Trade Association — which had worked very well for a good number of years without need for any great bureaucracy or Europe-wide useless parliament. At that time there were only nine members of the Common Market. Since then the number of member states has increased to twenty eight and steps have been taken to form an economic and political union with the parliaments of member states having less and less power. In addition there has been the formation of a currency union with Britain not a member — at least we can thank Gordon Brown for that. This euro area was always an absurd idea. It was OK for strong economies [ie Germany] but not much good for anyone else and inevitably it is now in serious trouble. Problems were triggered by Greece, approaching bankruptcy. Greece only succeeded in joining the EU when her finances proved she was ready. In reality she was not ready and the books were the result of some creative accounting by Goldmann Sachs — who were paid, I understand, a sum adjacent to $300 million for their expertise in cooking the books. But in order for Europe to get out of trouble, the ministers and eurocrats want more of the same — further integration and abrogation of powers to Brussels — and few of the voters in any country want that.

Following these EU elections, the heads of governments of all 28 members — plus their entourages of bureaucrats and hangers-on, all gathered in Brussels to discuss what they should do about the voters unhelpful attitude to their project. After a very short meeting — by EU standards — it was agreed that they needed to look again at their structures. The fact that they came out with this statement in a matter of hours indicates that the statement will be virtually meaningless and capable of taking on any interpretation that any eurocrat wants to put on it. This is simple euro-code for doing nothing at all or more of the same and, in the process, making the EU less susceptible to upset by electorates. Although it is difficult to see what they could do to achieve this other than removing the veneer of democracy by scrapping the European Parliament all together. In order to advance down the road examining their structures, they need, by-the-way, an extra £3.5 billion per annum. Fine! How can we fail to believe in the sincerity of their intentions.

In the last week senior members of all three major parties have come out with suggestions of how they can improve their communications with the electorate, how they can get their message across, refusing to accept that either the EU or immigration is a problem. Nigel Farage and UKIP understand now that if they are to become a serious part with a substantial number of seats in the Westminster parliament and the potential power to ease us out of the EU, they need to come out with a proper manifesto and policies on the major issues that trouble people in this country. On Thursday, 5th June, UKIP will attempt to wrest Newark from the Tories in a parliamentary by-election. I think the Tories will win because they have an existing 16,000 majority and that will need some overturning. Dave Cameron has visited the constituency four times and sent many cabinet ministers up there to help. But Nigel Farage needs to do well if UKIP are to look like a serious contender to build up a potential for next year's general election.

Europe has serious problems but it is so atrociously undemocratic yet politicians will do everything possible to keep it as it is in order to keep open an unending supply of highly paid non-jobs for them when their political careers come to an end. Look at Neil Kinnock and his wife, who between them as a commissioner [Neil] and an MEP [Glynis] collected about £400,000 per annum for many years. I have nothing against either of them but if they had disappeared in a puff of smoke on their way to or from Brussels it would have mattered, in political terms, not one jot.

As if things in Europe were not bad enough, we have had the spectre of Tony Blair telling us that the EU has to proceed and it is unacceptable to think of Britain leaving. Blair was an appalling prime minister, whose sanctimonious whining and arrogance we thought we had lost but now it is suggested that he wants the job of President of the European Council — a post currently filled by Mr Herman van Rumpuy. Could there be anything more likely to persuade that Britain would be better outs die the EU, than Tony Blair appointed to a high office — I will not say an important office.

David Cameron is talking of re-negotiating the terms of Britain's membership of the EU and then putting his proposals to the electorate via a simple In/Out referendum. I don't think he will get very far in changing the terms of our membership unless another large country like France or Italy starts pressing for serious changes on the same basis. It may have some effect if Cameron makes it clear that without changes he will recommend withdrawing. This will be welcomed by large sections of the Tory Party and UKIP.


I don't know what will come of these election results but I suspect that I and many others will remain supremely pessimistic that anything will change. Europeis short of great leaders in every country; everywhere we have political apparatchiks who are staggeringly unimpressive. Where is there a Churchill or an Attlee to take us into a prosperous and independent future?
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