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Review: Britain and Europe in 
a Troubled World

Bogdanor is at his most incisive when analysing the cultural shift that took anti-European sentiment from the fringes of UK politics into the mainstream

December 4, 2020 12:56
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2 min read

Britain and Europe in 
a Troubled World by Vernon Bogdanor (Yale University Press, £16.99)

During the summer of 1992, with the crisis over Britain’s membership of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism reaching a climax, John Major called the head of his policy unit, Sarah Hogg, for advice. Major had been hoping for intervention from the Bundesbank to help bolster Sterling. Hogg was on a walking holiday in Scotland and had to use a police phone in the days before mobile technology. “Prime Minister, I don’t think we can rely on the Germans,” she said. One of the policemen who overheard the conversation commented: “Dead right”. 

In this short exchange, the whole history of Britain’s post-war relationship with Europe is captured. On the one hand, a political class believing the country’s best interests lie in forging a close economic relationship with our neighbours; on the other, a section of the British public deeply sceptical about a project involving our historical enemies. Originally written as a series of lectures delivered at Yale University in 2019, Vernon Bogdanor’s book is full of such telling anecdotes. 

He tracks the history of Britain’s European negotiations from the 1950s, when our economic relationship with the Commonwealth remained of paramount concern and Labour’s NEC could state that “we in Britain are closer to our kinsmen in Australia and New Zealand on the far side of the world, than we are to Europe.” Bogdanor understands that Britain’s difficulties with Europe always stemmed from a misplaced view that we could somehow dictate terms to a club we joined only belatedly. Indeed, he suggests the word “negotiations” is really the wrong term to use in this context: “If one wants to join a tennis club, it is not sensible to quibble about the rules. If one intends to leave but still hopes to use the tennis courts… one has very little leverage”.