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Why I shifted sides in the UK’s civil war over Europe

Twenty years ago, I was an anti-European. Today, I am a pro-European. The strange thing is that my views have not changed. I have always thought that Britain should stay out of the euro but inside the EU. During the John Major and Tony Blair years, when the euro was the dominant issue, that position made me a eurosceptic. But now the argument has become about whether Britain should leave the EU altogether. The front-line in Britain’s civil war over Europe has moved and, because I have stayed in the same place, I find myself on a different side of the battle-lines.

When the single currency was first mooted, I opposed it because I thought it was a dangerous economic experiment designed to promote an undesirable political union. But I still thought it made sense for Britain to remain inside the EU to reap the benefits of the European single market and the diplomatic and cultural links that come with membership.

The people who want Britain to leave the EU argue that my position – inside the EU, but outside the euro – no longer makes sense. They make two main arguments. First, the euro crisis is now creating an inevitable drive towards political union that will eventually suck in all EU members, so Britain’s position is untenable. The second argument is that the British economy can do just as well, or better, outside the EU.

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吉迪恩•拉赫曼

吉迪恩•拉赫曼(Gideon Rachman)在英国《金融时报》主要负责撰写关于美国对外政策、欧盟事务、能源问题、manbetx20客户端下载 manbetx app苹果 化等方面的报道。他经常参与会议、学术和商业活动,并作为评论人活跃于电视及广播节目中。他曾担任《manbetx20客户端下载 学人》亚洲版主编。

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