shyams, on 2016-June-20, 05:00, said:
It is more than what Arend has described.
--- I would say that Arend has described the European Economic Community (also called the 'common market'). This is merely a subset of the EU.
--- There is a VERY STRONG support in the UK for the common market. And if there is a cost of doing so (e.g. common standards, contribution to the EU budget), we mostly tend to accept it.
However, the EU is also a huge political construct. And it is not the EC bureaucracy I’m talking about – it is the political class. They drive the “big decisions” within the EU – e.g. how to deal with the refugee crisis (“let’s ask Merkel”), how to deal with Greece economic crisis (“let’s ask Merkel”), what about ‘ever closer union’ (“let’s ask Hollande and Merkel”). This often makes a parody of the entire democratic foundations that the EU prides itself on.
First of all, thank you for your thoughts.
To me, the discussion about the refugee crisis still looks very much like a bunch of individual actors (states) deciding getting together in order to try to solve a problem that affects all of them. That's exactly why it matters what Merkel thinks, and not what the EU commissioner thinks. To put it differently: if Brexit succeeds, and there is another refugee crisis in 2019, don't you think the UK would also be invited to the table to join the discussion?