Article
Details
Citation
Glencross A (2014) British Euroscepticism and British Exceptionalism: The Forty-Year "Neverendum" on the Relationship with Europe. Studia Diplomatica, LXVII (4). http://www.egmontinstitute.be/publication_article/sd-issue-4-2014/
Abstract
This article analyses why the demand for a membership referendum has arisen anew despite the precious EEC referendum in 1975. It does so by explaining British Euroscepticism towards European integration as a manifestation of British exceptionalism. The argument pursued in this article is that it is necessary to examine the demand for a referendum on EU membership as part of an, in EU terms, exceptional, four-decades-long debate or "neverendum". The success of Euroscepticism in contemporary Britain means the never-ending debate over the EU is fundamentally trapped in enduring calls for a membership referendum. However, the outcome will be much less certain than in 1975 because the pro-EU camp faces three significant obstacles that did not lie in the path of those who supported EEC membership at the time of the last referendum. These are: the likely absence of meaningful concessions during renegotiation, a querulous media environment, and the rise of an effective anti-establishment party (UKIP) that mobilizes both anti-EU and anti-elite sentiment. Hence the future EU referendum campaign will look very different from that of 1975.
Keywords
EU referendum; Euroscepticism; neverendum; UK and Europe; European integration
Journal
Studia Diplomatica: Volume LXVII, Issue 4
Status | Published |
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Funders | The Carnegie Trust |
Publication date | 31/12/2014 |
Publication date online | 26/01/2016 |
Date accepted by journal | 19/06/2015 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/22059 |
Publisher | Academia Press |
Publisher URL | http://www.egmontinstitute.be/…sd-issue-4-2014/ |
ISSN | 0770-2965 |