Tory MEP Ashley Fox’s bizarre views about the European Parliament (and transnational lists)

A piece in the European Parliament magazine entitled “Plans for big shake-up in European elections branded ‘absurd’” caught my eye. It concerns ideas that have been rumbling around in Brussels about how to improve European elections, and the idea to create a transnational top-up list system comprising 25 MEPs of the total 751 in the EP from 2014, meaning some countries would lose a few MEPs. There’s more about the plans here, and I’ve always been broadly in favour – anything that europeanises European Parliament elections (so often fought on national issues) is a good thing, although I do think that the main proponent of the plans, Andrew Duff, rather over-sells the case.

Anyway, the MEP branding the ideas ‘absurd’ in the article in Parliament Magazine is Tory MEP for the South West Ashley Fox. It’s worth looking at Fox’s critique:

“At a time of economic austerity the last thing the British taxpayer wants to pay for is an extra 25 MEPs elected across Europe plus the cost of a European electoral authority to oversee the process.”

Erm, no, Ashley. The Treaty of Lisbon – which one would hope that you would have read as a MEP – limits the numbers of MEPs to 751. So if this were to happen these MEPs would replace MEPs elected under the current system. Plus there is a system already in place for the Europe-wide declaration of the results – so just sum those up, work out the party scores, and hey presto, you see who is elected. There is a cost to democracy, but it’s also vital we get our institutions to work.

UPDATE – thanks to a comment left by Cédric below, I’ve looked into this further, the wording of the Parliament Magazine piece not having been clear. Duff is indeed proposing extra MEPs, something that needs a Treaty change to accomplish, and would also be subject to the UK’s referendum lock. Which means there is not a hope in hell this sees the light of day, especially as even the 736-754-751 change has taken months of wrangling. Which does – in fairness to Ashley Fox – make the proposals absurd…

But the rest of the statements from Fox are absurd, so I’ve kept those below:

“This shows how out of touch with the real world these proposals are. I cannot remember a single person on the doorstep who has told me they would ever support such a move.”

This too is utterly absurd, and could be applied as a critique to just about any policy. I’m sure most Tories cannot remember a single person who would ever support a policy called the Big Society on the doorstep, but that’s precisely what we’re getting. I know this concept might be alien to Mr Fox, but it’s actually about political leadership – proposing an idea and making the case for it.

“MEPs should be sent to Brussels to defend their national interest but clearly Duff thinks they should be there to defend the European interest. Maybe that’s why he wants a mechanism that would allow him to stop representing the UK and start representing Brussels.”

Once more Fox does not seem to understand how the EU works, so perhaps I might enlighten him by referring to Article 10, para 2 of the Treaty on European Union (PDF here):

2. Citizens are directly represented at Union level in the European Parliament.
Member States are represented in the European Council by their Heads of State or Government and in the Council by their governments, themselves democratically accountable either to their national Parliaments, or to their citizens.

It is not the job of a Member of the European Parliament to defend a country’s national interest – that’s the job of the European Council and the Council of the European Union. Fox’s job is to represent the citizens living in his part of the UK.

As if that were not enough, a quick glance at the excellent Votewatch website shows that Fox has a 93.69% loyalty to his transnational political group (ECR) in the European Parliament, against 97.85% loyalty to the Tory delegation in the EP. So Fox’s own behaviour in the EP shows he’s behaving in a way that runs contrary to his own statements anyway.

So – in short – if there’s anything absurd in the piece in the Parliament Magazine it seems to be Ashley Fox’s positions!

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The rocky road from Whistleblower to MEP

Marta Andreasen - CC / Flickr

Marta Andreasen - CC / Flickr

I knew Marta Andreasen was UKIP Treasurer, yet until yesterday I had been unaware she is number 2 on UKIP’s election list in the South East. I’m not normally in the business of scutinising election lists for a party that mainly consists of batty 60 year old men, but Andreasen is adequately different to merit a blog post.

Lest we forget Andreasen was an accountant hired by the European Commission who, when she discovered errors with the book-keeping systems, aired her complaints rather publicly, and ended up getting sacked by the Commission.

Putting Andreasen second on the UKIP list in the South East is a very interesting choice. First of all she is not British (she was born in Argentina and has Spanish citizenship) and as far as I am aware she does not even live in the UK. As you can tell from this interview in Newbury Today the standard UKIP nationalist rhetoric does not come especially easily to her.

Secondly, I wonder whether the choice of Andreasen marks an interesting departure for UKIP. She ranks alongside Paul van Buitenen, Hans Peter Martin and Hans-Martin Tillack as high profile whistleblowers who have discovered fraud within the EU and the institutions have effectively tried to silence them. These people are not – by definition – anti the EU as such, they are however anti the way that business is conducted.

More specifically, I wonder how Andreasen would vote on a matter such as airline black lists. UKIP MEPs voted against this legislation as far as I am aware – how would Andreasen vote? Essentially will Andreasen be constructive in her euroscepticism, or, standard UKIP style, just vote against everything – even things like airline black lists? It’s going to be interesting to see how this develops.

Of the other 3 whistleblowers I cite, only Tillack has not become a MEP. Martin was elected first in 1999 as a Social Democrat, but fell out with the party and the group, and indeed most of his whistleblowing has been subsequent to his election – he has made films such as this with RTL capturing MEPs profiting from their expenses system. Van Buitenen (unlike Martin) sits with a political group in the EP – the Greens-EFA. Problem is he only votes with them 6.23% of the time according to Votewatch, making him the most rebellious of all MEPs.

In some strange way for all four of these individuals exposing the fraud was actually the easy bit. Finding a way to put things right is much, much harder. Is it better to be on the outside being critical, or be inside the European Parliament trying to reform (or – for UKIP – destroy?) the institutions from within? If Andreasen gets elected she’s going to have a hard time on a number of fronts, not least being number 2 behind Nigel Farage on a UKIP list.

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