By Jason Groves
|
The Church of England has mounted an extraordinary attack on David Cameron over Europe â" warning that his veto of an EU treaty last year has left Britain âwithout credibilityâ.
In a highly unusual move, the Church has told MPs to adopt a more âconstructive and positiveâ approach towards Europe or risk Britain âslowly drifting towards the exitâ.
The Prime Ministerâs historic veto of Europeâs fiscal compact in December was hailed by Tories as a major victory, although it angered his Liberal Democrat deputy Nick Clegg.

Dr Rowan Williams made the dramatic intervention in a paper to the Commons foreign affairs committee
Mr Cameron said he blocked the adoption of the measures as a full EU treaty because other countries refused to agree safeguards needed to protect Britainâs economy.
But the Church said he had left the impression that âBritain was being awkward for the sake of itâ. It said Britain risked being seen as an âunreliable partnerâ and now needed to âwork to rebuild trustâ.
The comments come from a paper submitted to the Commons foreign affairs committee. It was prepared by the Archbishopsâ Council, headed by the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams and the Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu. The paper added that Britain âhad found itself not only without allies, but without credibility as a negotiating partner as it opposed measures which were intended to achieve broad policy goals which are fully in line with UK national interestâ.

The Church said David Cameron's historic veto had left the impression that Britain was 'being awkward'
The treaty, which was signed by all EU leaders apart from the UK and Czech Republic, imposed a âbalanced budget ruleâ on eurozone states.
It aims to stop them running up huge debts such as those which triggered the Greek, Irish and Portuguese bailouts.
The Church called for Britain to sign up to the controversial treaty âas soon as possibleâ.
Despite its name and history, the Church insisted that it was a âEuropean Churchâ that had invested âtime, energy and resourcesâ in building partnerships across the continent.
The intervention sparked an angry reaction last night from Eurosceptic Tories, who are urging the Prime Minister to adopt a tougher stance on Europe. Tory MP Brian Binley said: âThe Church should get back to its prime business of praising the Almighty, saving souls and considering its own diminishing position in this society.
âThe Church of England is not a political organisation and many members despair at the way it seems to be projecting itself.
âThe Churchâs position in society has diminished during a time when it has as its head a gentleman who seems to think his role is much more that of a national statesman than a religious leader. Perhaps therein lies part of the problem.â
Fellow Tory Bill Cash, chairman of the Commons European scrutiny committee, said it was bizarre for a church that had its roots in a major schism with Europe to argue for closer union.

Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu also helped to prepare the controversial report
He added: âIt is a matter for Parliament, not a matter for the Church of England. They are completely wrong and Iâm not sure who they are representing. They should ask the people they would like to go to church what their views are. I suspect they will find at least 80 per cent want a referendum.â
In the strongly-worded report, the Church said the decision not to join the euro had left Britain âdetachedâ from discussions about the euro crisis.
It acknowledged that the public was becoming increasingly Eurosceptic, but said ministers should set out to make the positive case for the EU.
The report said: âBritish governments need to develop constructive and positive conceptions and commitments to the EU, sell these ideas to an increasingly sceptical domestic audience and find friends in Europe.
âUnless it does so the UK could find itself slowly drifting towards the exit.That would be a travesty given the positi ve contribution that Britain has made to the EU since it joined in 1973.â
Dr Williams announced in March that he plans to stand down as Archbishop of Canterbury at the end of the year to return to academic life as master at a Cambridge University college.
-
Man with 100-pound scrotum REJECTS offers to perform $1... -
The body that drove John Edwards mad: Rielle Hunter struts... -
Top doctor's chilling claim: The NHS kills off 130,000... -
Mystery of missing multi-millionaire after his private yacht... -
Wondering where to book your holidays? Ukrainian and Swedish... -
Father offers man who slept with his underage daughter jail... -
Obama's grandfather tortured by the British? A fantasy (like... -
Father 'frantic' as he discovers dead eight-month-old son in... -
One McBurger with lies, please: Fast-food firm's own video... -
Imprisoned polygamist pedophile Warren Jeffs 'ends cult's... -
The lavish $10 million cliffside mansion bought by... -
American woman who sent adopted son, 7, BACK to Russia alone...
Share this article:
Here's what other readers have said. Why not add your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards.
The comments below have not been moderated.
- Newest
- Oldest
- Best rated
- Worst rated
Its no wonder the churches are empty with numptys like this in charge ,stick to getting the word of your God over to the people and leave politics to the other idiots.
Report abuse
The sooner religion disappears off the face of this planet the better, another classic case of religious nuts screwing around within politics.
Report abuse
The church should concern it self with the spiritual welfare of its flock, and keep out of politics.
Report abuse
Dear Archbishop......please talk to your congregation and find out their true feelings towards joining the Euro, or even staying in the E.U. itself, before you foist your unelected opinions on it. You are so out of touch with the true people of this country, but I guess that is because most of the time you don't meet the ordinary people of the congregation, just royalty and the higher echelons of the British society.
Report abuse
I think Dr Williams should heed scriptural advice - passage
Report abuse
We shouldn't be "drifting" for the exit we should be sprinting
Report abuse
Seems the CoE stand up to Cameron but not to the same-sex lobby, or the feminists or anyone else who wants them to change what the Bible teaches the Church.
Report abuse
Dr Rowan Williams ; Forgive him Lord.as he knows not what he does. Perhaps Rowan should consider the starving people of Greece- who were doing just fine before they joined Rowans european union...
Report abuse
I think the church should stay out of politics. I can only wonder what the real agenda is. (What's in it for them)?
Report abuse
Cameron has managed to alienate the pro-Europe crowd, the anti-Europe crowd and virtually all European leaders. He is breathtakingly incompetent - it really is an achievement to alienate everyone on every side of an issue like thi.
Report abuse
The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar