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Where
am I? home > stop the cheques mini-site
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INTRODUCTION In
December 2005, Tony Blair went to a European Union summit in Brussels
and agreed to a big increase in Britain's net payments to the EU budget
- from the current level of £3.5 billion a year, to over This is an astonishing £115 million every week, even taking into account the money we receive back from the EU in grants and subsidies. Blair agreed to this increase despite regular reports of EU fraud, despite failing to reform the EU's wasteful Common Agricultural Policy and despite the inability of auditors to approve the EU's accounts for 12 years running. Marta Andreasen, the EU's former chief accountant, was sacked by then EU Commissioner Neil Kinnock for revealing that:
Imagine what could be achieved for schools & hospitals, against crime, towards alleviating poverty or many other vital worthy purposes with £115 million extra to spend every week. So the Democracy Movement has launched a new campaign against this shocking waste of so much money. Stop the Cheques will put pressure on MPs to explain why they find it acceptable to hand astonishing amounts of public money to an organisation beset by fraud and whose accounts have not been approved for 12 years running. Or alternatively, to explain what urgent action they are taking to stop payments to the EU, at least until we can be sure that public money is protected from fraud.
Lobby
postcard contrasts spending on hospitals and EU To keep pressure on MPs over plans to hand an extra £2.5bn a year to the EU - particularly in relation to cuts to health services being caused by £1.3bn of NHS debts - the DM has published a new lobbying postcard (pictured). With the 2007-13 EU budget deal due to be signed off by the EU Council of Ministers on 23rd April, MPs will shortly afterwards get an opportunity to decide whether to approve Tony Blair's pledge to increase Britain's contributions to the EU budget by a massive 60% - despite the EU's on-going problems with fraud and audit failures. Yet dozens of MPs of all parties - many in marginal seats - are facing local NHS cuts and other shortages of funds for essential services. Come the next election, if they vote to approve the EU budget deal, how will they justify having awarded an audit-failing EU even more billions while local services face cuts? The card asks MPs "are you going to stand up for public services and against EU waste by voting against the EU budget deal? If not, please tell me where you suggest the £1.3 billion that hospitals need is going to come from." An initial salvo of cards has been distributed with the DM's latest campaign mailing and supplies are also being despatched to branches for local distribution. Send one to your MP today!
The DM has a letter in the Sunday Telegraph today criticising the comments of EU chief accountant Brian Gray in a letter the previous week. It reads:
Strangely, however, the letter was not attributed to the Democracy Movement in the newspaper - it was attributed as shown above, using our address but not name - despite no space constraints. And the letter also does not appear on the Sunday Telegraph website along with the others that were printed.
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