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VoteNo.ie Emergency Appeal For Funds. Help us to win Please Donate here
- You are the author of the booklet 'Reasons to VOTE NO to the
Lisbon Treaty' and one of the editors of VoteNo.ie. What made
you decide to take a stand against this treaty?
I have attended many mobilisations of the
European anti-globalisation movement and have become familiar with its demand
for a 'social Europe'. Europe has shifted from being a zone of stability within
the global order to one where millions of workers are fighting to defend gains
they won in the past. They are concerned about how Europe is being re-shaped by
a small elite of corporate executives and puppet politicians. The call for a
'social Europe' arises from these mobilisations and is helping transform
politics on the continent. The call for a 'social Europe' contains some
ambiguities because it is not clear whether the aspiration of workers can be met
by a return to the Keynesian economic policies of the past or whether it
requires a fundamental change that ushers in a European socialist society.
Nevertheless I identify with the aspiration and see the Lisbon Treaty as an
embodiment of all that poses a danger to it.
- With a referendum expected in the coming
months on the Treaty, what would a Yes vote mean for Ireland?
It would a mean a strengthening of the Right
and their politics of fear. Notice the absurd way they have been conducting the
debate so far. Bertie Ahern - the former accountant who pretends to be the plain
man of Drumcondra - leads the charge by framing his opponents as 'lunatics' and
'extremists'. Fianna Fail and Fine Gael hacks develop the theme by claiming that
a NO vote will frighten foreign investment into fleeing the country. (They
somehow forget that foreign investment actually increased in France after they
voted No to the EU constitution!) The rights always tries to reduce politics to
a form of managerialism - who is better able to manage the economy- and to
close down real discussions about the direction that either Ireland or Europe
should take by stoking up irrational fears. They have been ably assisted by a
pathetic Labour Party ( and an even more worse Green Party) who dare not
challenge these absurdities but instead pretend that the Charter on Fundamental
Rights will give Europe a 'soul' . They cannot, however, name one extra,
specific legal right that the people of Ireland will get, which they do not
currently enjoy.
So a Yes vote will give a new confidence to
neo-liberals who want to privatise everything and to the couch-potato soldiers
who want the EU to engage in more colonial adventure like that in Chad.
- Like yourself I imagine, I've been very
disappointed with the campaign of those seeking a Yes vote as it seems to me
they are engaging in pure scaremongering tactics in order to achieve the
result they require, warning about how a 'No' vote would damage our
standing in the EU and so on. This is pure nonsense, isn't it?
Of course it is. Do you really think that if
you go on holidays to Paris, people will point at your Irish passport and fall
apart in laughter because we voted No. Yet this is what EU Commissioner, Charle
McCreevy, implied when he claimed that a No vote would make us the 'laughing
stock' of Europe.
Or that the morning after a NO vote, the
executives of Intel or IBM will hold emergency meetings to organise the
withdrawal of investment.
One of the legacies of colonialism is that
local elites insist that their population must show 'gratitude' to their betters
at regular intervals. It is really sickening to hear Yes politicians start their
speeches with the same lines - the EU has brought peace to the continent after
WW2; it has given us billions in grants; and so we should not grateful and
voting Yes. Don't worry what is actually written in the Treaty, just sign a
blank cheque out of gratitude.
They are doing everything to avoid a
discussion about what kind of Europe its peoples want - a neo-liberal Europe
where more is spent on colonial adventures or a Europe that grants more social
rights to its citizens.
- What are the chances of such
scaremongering tactics working in your view? Is a Yes vote a foregone
conclusion?
There is a chance that scaremongering can
work. After all, the corporate media is run by a handful of very rich people who
are intimately connected to the political elite and so the same line is
repeatedly trotted out. People used to complain that the USSR was a one party
state but we live in a regime where there are different glove puppets but the
one dominant message. You can choose among many brands of washing powder but you
still end up with the same old stuff. You can choose between Fianna Fail or Fine
Gael -or Labour or the Greens- but you will still get the same old EU consensus
which presides over the current economic order.
However, the politics of fear can also
re-bound on our rulers. There is a lot of discontent in Ireland and I expect
that the trade union march to demand a decent health service on March
29th will give some indication of its depth. If the NO campaign can
relate its arguments to real concerns about privatisation and the EU's role in
the run down of public services, I think we can win.
- I was disgusted that our government
ignored the wishes of the people by refusing to accept the original No vote to
the Nice Treaty. If the people vote 'No' to the Lisbon Treaty, do you think we
will be given another referendum in order for the EU to get their
way?
You have to be careful about this
argument. I have heard many NO people say 'what is the point of voting when they
will only ask you again to re-ballot in order to get the right
answer'.
But there is always a point to
resistance. The more our rulers take off their masks and are forced to engage in
undemocratic tactics, the more their legitimacy is corroded in the eyes of the
population.
It will also be far harder this time for
them to make us re-ballot. There is a huge, latent anger throughout Europe about
the fact that the other 450 million people have been denied a right to vote. If
the EU leaders refuse to recognise the vote of the only country where there was
a ballot, there will be a continent wide outcry. The EU elite will, I think,
calculate that the danger of pushing the Irish to vote again will outweigh the
advantages they might gain from the Treaty.
- You've been speaking out against this
treaty along with several other campaigners. What has the
general response been like from the public?
Good. A debate I did in Castlebar against
Jim Higgins, MEP went really well because most people left the meeting
supporting the NO position. At one point, Jim Higgins even called on people to
vote yes 'for God and for their country.' I attended another meeting in Liberty
Hall where the Fine Gael MEP Gay Mitchell was debating Sinn Fein's Mary
Lou McDonald. The feeling for the No side was so strong, that Mitchell claimed
that the meeting was 'packed'. In fact, there were only two members of the
Socialist Workers Party present and a handful of Sinn Fein people in the 150
strong crowd. It revealed the depth of his paranoia - and but more importantly
showed that the No side wins when people get a chance to hear a real discussion
about what the treaty contains.
- Would it be fair to say that this
treaty, if passed, makes a mockery of Irish history since we spent so
long trying to get out of a Union that wouldn't listen to us, only to
now have Irish parties trying to sweep us into another Union which
again won't listen to us?
Not sure about that. I am a strong
anti-imperialist and have no time for revisionist historians who attack
Ireland's history of resistance to empire. But I do not see this primarily as a
nationalist issue. I am an internationalist, a citizen of Europe and the world
and want a political debate that transcends national borders. So I think the
focus must be on what kind of Europe do we want.
I don't think that Pearse or Connolly
focussed their argument on what kind of Britain empire they wanted. And quite
right too.
There used to be discussion on the Left
many years ago that Ireland had moved from being a colony of Britain to a
neo-colony of either the US or Europe. I never believed it. Ireland has
produced it own little capitalist class who proudly taken their place in the
global networks of that class. We equally have to move beyond a nationalist
horizon and join with others in movements across Europe that are resisting the
same capitalist elite.
- What would you say to anyone reading
this right now who is unsure of where they stand on the Lisbon Treaty?
Don't be browbeaten. Get hold of the
Lisbon Treaty. Ring up the EU Office in Dublin and demand that they send you out
a copy. You will be given a series of amendments which will make little sense
unless you see the original treaties. So also ask for them for these as well and
demand that they are made freely available to you because you need to see what
you are voting on. If they do not facilitate you, then vote No. You would not
buy a house or a car without seeing the contract - so why would you decide on
the future of a continent without knowing what this constitution
contains.
If you do succeed in getting the
documentation, sit down and study it. Consult our website Voteno.ie and check out the Yes side
as well. If there are any points you want cleared up, do not hesitate to contact
us. Better still, you might consider getting a few friends of colleagues
together for a discussion. Voteno.ie will be delighted to provide you with a
speaker.
In other words, act as a good citizen and
remember you are voting for the whole people of Europe. The neo-liberals who
think 'there is no such thing as society' will be very upset - but who
cares.
- Anything you'd like to add in
closing?
The key is to organise. We are up against
a massive, well funded propaganda machine. We can only win if we get NO
campaigns organised in every town in Ireland and there is no mystery about how
that can be done. You need to, firstly, hold briefing meetings for activists or
would-be-activists. You can do this by booking a room in a pub or a
community hall and advertising it in local media or with notices in local
shops
Voteno.ie will send you a speaker who will take you through a
hour and a half long power point presentation. Just e mail us on info@voteno.ie. Once you feel equipped to make an argument to
your fellow citizens, you need to get leaflets and posters for
distribution.
Energy and enthusiasm can beat the money
merchants. But it needs a little organisation to get focus. So to paraphrase:
educate and organise so that you might be free.
Thank you for your time Mr. Allen and I
wish your campaign all the very best.
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