Friday, July 2, 2010

A quick note about Hague's speech

Early yesterday afternoon I telephoned the Boss and read out to him the following paragraph with some words elided from the Daily Telegraph:
The Foreign Secretary said relations with the EU were crucial and had been neglected under the previous [government].

Th[is government] has worked constructively with its European partners, surprising those who had expected a strongly Eurosceptic stance, he added.
OK, I asked gleefully, who said that? The Boss thought for a moment and said tentatively: John Major. No, I said even more gleefully, it was William Hague this morning. The full quote was:
The Foreign Secretary said relations with the EU were crucial and had been neglected under the previous 13 years of Labour rule.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition has worked constructively with its European partners, surprising those who had expected a strongly Eurosceptic stance, he added.
He then told us how he was going to make Britain's role in the EU a success:
"It is mystifying to us that the previous government failed to give due weight to the exercise of British influence in the EU," Hague said in the speech.

"They neglected to ensure that sufficient numbers of bright British officials entered EU institutions, and so we now face a generation gap developing in the British presence in parts of the EU," he said.

The number of British officials at director level in the EU Commission had fallen by a third since 2007 and Britain was sharply under-represented at junior official level, he said. "We are determined to put this right," he said.
That is it, ladies and gentlemen. We shall have more British eurocrats and all our problems will just simply roll away.

Can anyone tell me why I might be wrong when I maintain that this man is going to be the most disastrous Foreign Secretary for a long time?

2 comments:

  1. Shouldn't you be thinking of your Boss's health?

    Any comment by Mr Hague is enough to make my (usually comfortably low) blood pressure shoot through the ceiling.

    /Mikgen

    PS: The fact that Mr Hague is a good friend of Mr Bildt (according to the latter, but still) bodes very ill, very ill.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I didn't know Mr Bildt and Mr Hague were friends. How very appropriate. I bet they both love Hillary Clinton as well. Well, we know Hague does and I assume Bildt is not indifferent.

    ReplyDelete