Bishop of Durham's support for the
North East in Europe
Dateline: 21st January 2002
Dear Bishop,
Thank you for your letter of 19th December 2001 is response to my
criticism of your Chairmanship of the North East Constitutional Convention
and your active involvement with North East in Europe. As it happens
I was on Radio Newcastle with one of your fellow activists on Sunday
but I decided not to publicly criticise the political involvement
of the Church at this stage, in the hope and expectation that you
(and the other 4 Bishops of the Church of England in other parts of
the country) will withdraw from that involvement. You can read about
the disgraceful, anti-democratic proceedings of the South West Constitutional
Convention, chaired by the Bishop of Exeter, in Appendix 3 of my book
Fascist Europe Rising.
Both the organisations you support are not just blatantly political
but extremely controversial. Your statement that you believe "the
welfare of the vast majority of the people in the North East will
be served better by political devolution" is a controversial
political statement in itself but you have chosen to support that
one form of devolution (i.e. regional government) which will:
1. be tailor-made for government by the European Union (as the presence
of European Commission officials at some of these conventions testifies)
and not by our sovereign Parliament in Westminster.
2. undermine and ultimately be incompatible with our traditional county
and district systems.
I note that in your letter to me you do not deny the "European"
dimension, you merely seek to underplay it. I note that no guarantees
on Point 2 are forthcoming. Indeed the Counties are already losing
many of their planning powers.
You say that the "devolution process" in Scotland, Wales
and Northern Ireland is making for "a stronger nation".
But there is no regional government within Wales and within Scotland
and the Northern Ireland devolution was part of the 1922 settlement
and has in fact been completely removed. It is the European Union's
map of Britain which has excluded England and found that Scotland
and Wales are "regions", knowing full well they are in fact
no such thing (each consisting of at least two or three logical regions).
If you would look at the history of imperial conquest in Europe you
will see that the "regional principle" has always been the
method used to undermine and destroy the (non-racial) nation states
like Switzerland, Yugoslavia and the United Kingdom. The European
Union's intentions are the same and you are aiding, probably unwittingly,
their plans.
You say that the North East has "benefited" from "massive
grants and incoming business from members of the European Union".
In fact Britain receives no net financial contribution from the European
Union and the vast majority of the inward investment in the Northeast
came before we were even members of the EEC. The funds used to subsidise
those foreign investments (in branch factories with relatively low
skills) come 95% from regional British taxpayers and the British companies
with whom these massively subsidised in-comers then unfairly compete.
You say you "object to the strong centralising tendencies of
the present government" but the massive and anti-democratic centralisation
over the last 30 years has been to the European Union, not Westminster
- the latter having lost 80% of its democratic accountability to bureaucratic
dictate from Brussels. The process at play in all the above and in
your own involvement with these unelected corporate bodies is in fact
corporatism. Instead of the democratic principles of individuals voting
for their representatives on the basis of publicly discussed policies,
who sit in assemblies to make our laws, we have returned to the system
prevalent in the corporatist/fascist 1930s and 1940s. That is, Government
seeks to involve "bodies" (which it chooses) to "represent"
people in general and claims democratic legitimacy for their conclusions.
No elections or democratic involvement are present in the process
(most people in the regions have never heard of the "Regional
Constitutional Conventions" and were not invited to them).
Needless to say most people are not even interested in never mind
represented by trade unions (a minority of workers) the churches (a
small minority of the population are active) "women's groups"
(no men allowed and few women interested) etc. etc. The only way in
which all the people are involved is as individual voters in district,
county and national elections. But so corporatist has our political
class become that only 59% of the British people now vote for the
"Mother of Parliaments".
In your case for instance I, as a practising Anglican, look to you
for the word of God, Christian values, the defence of the family,
urging help for the needy and above all for general moral guidance
based on the teachings of Christianity. Members of the Church of England
do not elect you and I do not object to that, so long as you do not
speak as a Bishop in my Church for Church members on political matters.
Recently on Radio 4 a leading Muslim Cleric condemned other Muslims
for using their positions within their faith to promote their political
opinions - how most Anglicans and I agreed with him!
If I disagree with a politician I can 1. deselect him or 2. vote against
him or 3. leave his party. I cannot do 1. or 2. with you and why should
devout Christians and Anglicans leave their Church and their fundamental
beliefs just because of your political activities?
Of course Anglicans like you and I cannot be expected to agree on
political matters and of course on any political utterance you will
find support from within the Church - as I would for my politics.
But I do not wish to politicise the Church and you should not alienate
so many Anglicans by turning your appointed role as Bishop of Christ
into the platform of an aspiring political spokesman. But that is
precisely what your letter to me does when you express controversial
support for:
- the European Union
- State subsidies for industry
- Regional government
In fact it is precisely such policies which have destroyed the North
east since 1934 when regional assistance was introduced as a "temporary
measure"! The wealth and population of the Northeast derived
from free enterprise, international trade and the opportunities industrial
employment gave to poor rural labour. That wealth arose without politician's
subsidies, without any European union and without regional government.
But now I am getting political and if you wish to be a politician
then I suggest you become one and stand for election, as I have done,
speaking only for myself and drawing voluntary support from thousands
of free individuals. In the meantime I will not distribute my leaflets
in Durham Cathedral if you will cease purporting to speak for Anglicans
in blatantly political forums like North East in Europe and the Regional
Constitutional Conventions. If you do not then I can only see thousands
of withdrawals from the Church.
Yours sincerely
Rodney E.B. Atkinson