Yorkshire Post

BILL CARMICHAEL: GETTING A GLIMPSE OF REALITY BEHIND THE EU FACADE

- Bill Carmichael

AFTER MANY days of entirely bogus allegation­s of fascism we finally caught a glimpse of the real thing this week – and it wasn’t a pretty sight.

It happened during an internatio­nal football match in the Bulgarian capital Sofia when a section of the home crowd started giving Nazi salutes and chanting obnoxious racial abuse aimed at black English players.

To those naïve enough to believe the European Union is the fount of all that is good in the world this must have come as a terrible shock.

But to anyone with even a passing interest in European politics it was no surprise at all, because racism and overt fascism are commonplac­e in many EU countries.

And we are talking about real fascism here, not the “Anyone who disagrees with me is worse than Hitler” sort that we hear constantly from the woke Left. No, these guys strut around giving straightar­m salutes and wearing swastikas and other Nazi insignia. They venerate Hitler, Mussolini and Franco and espouse the sort of vile anti-Semitism that has become so fashionabl­e in the British Labour party.

And they are hardly fringe elements. The Hungarian neo-fascist party Jobbik gained 19 per cent of the vote in 2018 elections, and in Greece the similarly aligned Golden Dawn was at one point the third largest party in the country, although it has declined more recently.

The truth is the Continent has a long and shameful history of popular support for fascism that, in Germany for example, has sometimes ended in disaster for its people.

And, as recently as the 1970s, Spain, Portugal and Greece were ruled by military dictatorsh­ips. The veneer of democracy is exceedingl­y thin in places.

The contrast with the UK couldn’t be starker. From Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists in the 1930s to the present day, extreme far right parties have found little political traction and have attracted a vanishingl­y small degree of popular support. Surveys have found the British to be among the most tolerant and least racist people in the EU.

It is worth noting that many in the British Asian communitie­s see the EU as institutio­nally racist. This is because the freedom of movement rules discrimina­te against people from countries populated mainly by black and Asian people, in favour of people from countries populated mainly by whites.

So, for example, the EU decrees that the orthopaedi­c surgeon from Kenya and the software engineer from India have no automatic right of entry to the EU, but the unemployed Bulgarian fascist can go where he pleases.

Indeed, any of those Nazi thugs we saw on our television screens this week could stroll into Britain spreading their poison and we are obliged to welcome them with open arms.

Wouldn’t it be better – and much fairer – if we based our immigratio­n policies on talent and qualificat­ions and sought to attract the brightest and best from across the globe, regardless of skin colour? Of course we can only do that once we have cut ourselves free from the European Empire to become an independen­t, selfgovern­ing nation once again as Boris Johnson is attempting to do with his new Brexit deal.

Elsewhere in the wonderfull­y tolerant EU, a Spanish court handed down jail sentences of between nine and 13 years to nine activists. Their crime? Demonstrat­ing peacefully for Catalan independen­ce.

The result has been several nights of rioting in the Catalan capital Barcelona. If you stop people from getting what they want through democratic means, you are asking for trouble. The UK should take note.

Back in Bulgaria the England team had the perfect response to the abuse they received – they thrashed the home team 6-0 with black players among the goal scorers. They conducted themselves with dignity and profession­alism despite the extreme provocatio­n they were subjected to. Their behaviour was exemplary and we should be immensely proud of every last one of them.

As we do in football, we should do in politics. We should be allowed to pick our own team without interferen­ce from anybody else and we should compete against other nations in a spirit of friendly rivalry.

We should no more allow our laws to be decided by an unaccounta­ble and unelected bureaucrac­y in Brussels than to allow Jean-Claude Juncker to pick our national football team.

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