Affected Our Political Sovereignty? Essay, Research Paper
?Inside Europe we are part of what will be a world power. The national sovereignty
we lose is more than made good by a share of the much larger sovereignty which
we get from participation in Europe.? (Michael Heseltine)
?The 1986 Single European Act and the Maastricht Treaty can be seen as further
reducing Britain?s sovereignty.? (Nugent)
Britain has been a full member of the EEC, and later the EU, since 1972. By
joining such an organisation it enjoys the benefits of a Common Market across
Europe, but surrenders some of its political sovereignty to the precedence of
European Law over Domestic Law. Indeed Britain?s political sovereignty has unquestionably
suffered a great deal due to its membership of Europe. In 1975 Tony Benn wrote
a letter to his constituents underlying the major worries of EEC membership.
Firstly he said that the Community subjects us to laws and taxes which British
government is powerless to amend or repeal, and they are passed by people not
elected by the British electorate. Furthermore he described how the EEC requires
British courts to enforce laws that have not necessarily been supported by the
British Parliament, and that Parliament does not have the power to change these
laws, even if they conflict with existing common or statute law. To add to this,
British membership imposes duties and constraints upon British governments.
This means that ministers have to discharge many of their duties, and those
that take them over are not accountable to British Parliament or public. Basically,
the EEC can use the British parliament as a layer of insulation separating them
from the British people. They therefore have no duty to remedy the grievances
of the British people, as they are not accountable to them.
Whilst Tony Benn presents an extreme example of Euro-scepticism, it is indisputable
that membership of Europe detracts from our parliamentary sovereignty. EU law
is binding on all member states and, therefore, takes precedence over British
domestic law. However, the British Parliament does have the power to at least
try to prevent the enforcement of EU law in the case of amendments to the Treaty
of Rome, but otherwise EU legislation automatically becomes law within the UK,
irrespective of the British Parliament?s opinion on it.
Unlike the other member states of the EU, the United Kingdom has a distinctive
constitution based not on a codified document but on the principle of parliamentary
sovereignty. The issue of national sovereignty is an intensively sensitive one
in British politics because of the country?s history, which has been very different
from that of continental states, and because of the different role which the
British Parliament plays from that of European Parliaments. Membership of the
European Union inevitably entails a loss ? or transfer ? of national sovereignty
in return for a share in a greater and more powerful European sovereignty. The
main institutions of the EU operate partly on a supranational level and partly
on an intergovernmental level, and it is this idea of supranational control
which seems to threaten the sovereignty of the British Parliament, and make
its policy less important and meaningful.
Sovereignty is an idea decked with tradition and prestige. Indeed, in 1885
A.V. Dicey defined parliamentary sovereignty as the right of Parliament ?to
make any law whatever; and, further, no person or body is recognised by the
law as having a right to override the legislation of Parliament.? The supremacy
of Parliament, established by the Glorious Revolution of 1688, effectively ended
when Parliament surrendered it in passing the European Communities Act in 1972.
When Britain became a member of the EEC in 1973 certain areas of policy making
were transferred to the EEC Commission and to the Council of Ministers. This
meant that if the Council approved the commission has the right to enforce its
recommendations irrespective of domestic legislation that might contradict it,
and the only way to reclaim this loss of sovereignty would be to repeal the
act of 1972 and withdraw from EC membership.
Entry into the EEC caused enormous controversy, leading to the first ever
national referendum in 1975 and the formation of the Social Democratic Party
by pro-European ex-Labour MPs in 1981. Under Maggie Thatcher, the EC was supported
as a free trade economic union but not as a ?federalist? concept moving towards
a United States of Europe. The difficulty of having greater economic integration
without greater political integration was highlighted by the Single European
Act of 1986. This act was the first comprehensive revision of the original Treaty
of Rome (1958) and while this speeded up economic integration it also strengthened
the supranational organisations such as the Council of Ministers so a
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