Protecting the sovereignty of our budget
The EU has sought broad new powers to vet Britain's budget figures under the auspices of worrying that a Greek-style crisis could be on its way in the UK. They also want to step up surveillance of our economic calculations and statistics. Sorry gentlemen, but NON!
This was tried before five years ago and we were vigorous in rejecting it then, but sensing weakness in many EU capitals, and in the wake of the economic downturn, they are trying again.
In Europe, the Conservative Party has pledged to play a constructive role. We want to engage positively and frame European debate. We want to be a key player on the European stage after many years of relative anonymity under Labour.
For our part, we fully support global and European reforms that strengthen markets, promote confidence and transparency and produce better results for businesses and households here.
But some decisions are best taken at home, by us, for us. As our Chancellor George Osborne and the Prime Minister have shown this week, we certainly won't shy away from the difficult choices needed to reform banking and financial regulation. If we don't get act its is estimated that in five years time the interest we will pay on our debt could be around £70 billion - that’s more than we currently spend on schools in England, on climate change and on transport combined.
This is the awful Labour legacy left to Britain after their spending, borrowing and empire-building. All their quangos, all their bureaucracy and all their needless waste has cost Britain dearly.
The last Conservative government had to clean up Labour’s mess. We will have to do it again. It will not be a pleasant task but we need to cut spending and we need to get on with it urgently.
We will however do it in a way that protects the poorest and most vulnerable. We must safeguard our economy and get things back onto an even keel.
This does not mean though that we will allow the EU to have the say on Britain's tax and spending decisions. Letting them do so would have been a major victory in stripping away a key plank of our sovereignty: our right to determine what Britain needs to do to steer itself out of the treacherous economic waters that it currently finds itself in.
The coalition government has wisely agreed that Britain will not be part of the single European Currency for at least the lifetime of this Parliament. That means that we will retain and hold on to our fiscal independence. This is a power that our neighbours across the Eurozone are, for the most part, envying in the current economic climate.
Our national parliament in Westminster is also a sovereign parliament. Whilst we don't mind sharing some information along broad parameters with our colleagues in the EU to give them a sense of our plans and which direction our economy is heading as the Financial Secretary to the Treasury said this week, "There is no question of anyone other than MP's at Westminster seeing our budget first".
The EU can not be given a veto over Britain's budget.