Politics [1]: Government is wrong to cancel the referendum they promised on the new European Treaty [2]
Posted by editor on Sep 24, 2009 - 09:15 AM
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By
Damian Collins, Conservative Parliamentary Candidate for Folkestone and
Hythe.
Next weekend, the 3rd
and 4th October, the Step Short project
will be organising a programme of talks,
walks, and events all marking the role
Folkestone played during the First World
War. |
These activities will
be based around the University Centre
and Quarterhouse in Folkestone and you
can find out more details on the Go
Folkestone website
www.gofolkestone.org.uk
As Chairman of the Step Short project I
believe it is important that we keep in
touch with our history and particularly
of such momentous events as that war.
Folkestone played a
pivotal role as the major port of
embarkation for troops to the Western
Front, and it is possible that most
people in Britain have an ancestor who
was here at some point at that time. My
hope is that through events like those
planned for this weekend we will raise
awareness of our history and also for
the objectives of the Step Short project
to create a new memorial along the Road
of Remembrance and information points
for visitors and residents by the time
of the centenary of the outbreak of the
war in 2014.
Twenty years ago, when I was studying
for my GCSE’s, I went on one of the
First World War battle field tours with
my school. These trips are increasingly
popular and mine certainly left a
lasting impression. But whilst I was
there in the autumn of 1989, interested
to learn more about a major event in
European history, another was building
up to its climax. Over the next few
weeks we will see the 20th anniversaries
of the revolutions in Eastern Europe
that brought the end of communist
government.
We now take for granted the fact that we
can travel freely across Europe, and
take the short walk through the
Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, which was
previously closed with the Wall, guards
and barbed wire. Those former communist
countries are now members of the
European Union, but I think it is
important that we remember at this time
that the EU is not an end in itself, but
just a tool that has been created by the
nations of Europe to promote peace and
improve their mutual prosperity.
As we have learned from history, all
organisations need to adapt if they are
to survive and the EU is the same. It
must become less bureaucratic, detail
obsessed and inward looking. It must
also become more open to the people and
the scrutiny that comes from honest
debate. That is why it was wrong for the
Government to cancel the referendum they
promised on the new European Treaty that
effectively creates a constitution for
the EU.
We should all say no
to no say. I would also say no to this
Treaty which centres too much power in
Brussels away from national governments
and the people they serve.
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© Hawkinge Gazette and Channel Coast News 2009
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