Interview with Paddy Ashdown




       
       
       
 
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                                ON THE RECORD      
 
                           PADDY ASHDOWN INTERVIEW 
 
RECORDED FROM TRANSMISSION: BBC-1                              DATE: 01.11.92 
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JONATHAN DIMBLEBY:                     Paddy Ashdown, let's get it clear.  You 
intend to recommend to your Party that on Wednesday night it should vote to 
support the Government in this motion? 
 
PADDY ASHDOWN, MP:                     I intend to recommend to my colleagues 
and, so far as I can tell, all of them will agree with it - that we intend to 
vote in favour of Britain's future in Europe.  The Government's future is not 
at issue in this.  Britain's future in Europe is.  I do not intend to indulge 
in the kind of disreputable, tawdry decei                                     
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                            
in by asking people to vote for something last April, which I now vote against 
in October. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              And that means that the wording, as it 
stands, despite its anodyne quality, suits your purpose - it's enough for you? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Well, I think we can claim a victory in 
this.  We have forced Mr. Major to face up to the issue and the last sentence 
in the wording asks the House of Commons to do exactly what I asked Mr. Major 
to to (I've asked him for three or four months) - stop hiding behind the skirts 
of the Danes, stop dodging away from his Backbenchers, stop this uncertainty 
that is doing so much damage to Britain's prospects of recovery.  I suggested 
that wording to the Prime Minister;  he's put it in.  If he stands up to that 
I'll support him. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              You say if he stands up to that.  Can 
anything between now and the Division Lobbies on Wednesday evening change your 
mind and bring about a position where you would NOT support John Major? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Jonathan, you should never put, never 
under-estimate this Government's capacity to muck things up.  If there is a 
smell of confidence in the Government about this, if there is any chance 
whatsoever of bringing the Government down on Wednesday - because they make the 
vote by itself an issue of confidence - of course we shall vote this terrible 
Government down, because in doing so I know that we would bring about a General 
Election which would get a Government which was more constructive towards 
Europe than this one is. 
 
                                       But that is not going to happen - you 
know it's not going to happen and it is a deceipt of the Labour Party to 
pretend that it is.  Because what would happen under those circumstances is 
that the Government would put down a vote of no confidence, a vote of 
confidence on Thursday - they would win that, and the consequence would be that 
we would end up in the worst of all possible worlds.  Directly as a result of 
the Labour's unprincipled U-turn in this, we'd end up on Friday morning with no 
General Election and no future for Britain in Europe either.
 
DIMBLEBY:                              But if the Whips, as it is alleged they 
are and, as we heard a couple of the Tory Backbenchers there saying, turn this 
into a vote of confidence into the Government, according to John Major himself. 
Ian Taylor was talking about a vote of confidence.  If it is a vote of 
confidence in John Major, and is seen to be that by those waverers who would, 
with you, determine the outcome, what happens then? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Jonathan, let me see if I can step back. 
What is the role of an Opposition Party, any Party?  It is to put the interests 
of the nation before the Westminster game.  So let us judge that decision 
according to the interests of the nation. 
 
                                       Would the condition of Britain be 
improved if John Major was replaced by Kenneth Clarke or anybody else, and we 
had a Tory Government, the answer to that is "No".   Would the position of 
Britain be damaged if Britain didn't have a future IN Europe and was isolated 
outside it, the answer to that is "Yes". 
 
                                       So the question is whether or not we can 
get a General Election out of Wednesday's vote.  If we can, of course we will 
vote to bring the Government down.  But who is the Leader of a Conservative 
Government is to my mind utterly, utterly irrelevant, and I'm certainly not 
prepared to put that above Britain's long-term future in Europe. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              Are you saying that if what was alleged 
to have been said by people close to John Major on that aeroplane from Egypt, 
that there would be a General Election if the Prime Minister went down on this 
- if they were still sticking to that position, then you would be voting 
against. 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Unquestionably, and this is where the 
deceipt of the Labour Party lies.  I mean, let's leave aside for one moment 
that Jack Cunningham, the Labour Party's Foreign Affairs spokesman, a month ago 
was recommending to the French that they should vote in favour of Maastricht 
and will now go into the lobbies with his Party next Wednesday voting against 
it.  Let's leave aside the dishonesty involved in that. 
 
                                       Let us just concentrate on this single 
fact.  That they know and we know that turkeys do not vote for Christmas.  What 
will be killed on Wednesday is Britain's future in Europe.  The Government will 
then return with a vote of confidence on Thursday,  which they will win, and 
we'll be left with no General Election and no future in Europe. 
 
                                       Labour may be prepared to play fast and 
loose with the future of this Country - I will not. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              But you're presuming that turkeys don't 
vote for Christmas in politics.  There is a difference between turkeys and 
politicians.  Politicians do sometimes vote for Christmas on their principle. 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Ok.  Let's, don't accept my word about 
it.  Let's take Bill Cash's word.  He's the person most adamantly opposed to 
the Government.  He made it quite clear that if there's a vote of confidence,
which clearly there would be on Thursday, he'd vote for the Government, so what 
Labour is doing is involving itself in a dishonesty which I certainly will not 
support - it is playing the Westminster game - it is actually now about to say 
that the issue here is that the Maastricht Bill should be delayed for four 
weeks.  Now what happens in those four weeks? 
 
                                       The uncertainty about Britain's future 
in Europe continues; our capacity to recover is diminished;  more people lose 
their jobs - the very people that the Labour Party were campaigning in favour 
of in Hyde Park Rally three weeks' ago,  two weeks' ago, will be the ones who 
suffer if Britain's future is not, does not lie in Europe.  I think it is just 
about the most tawdry and discreditable act from an Opposition Party that I 
have seen in recent years, and I intend to be, and my Party intends to be, no 
part of it. 
 
                                       There are times when you stand by your 
principles, and this is one. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              What would the Foreign Secretary or the 
Prime Minister or any other Member of the Cabinet, have to say between now and 
that Wednesday night for you to change your mind? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               I think if the Government make it clear 
that if the Bill goes down on Wednesday night there will be a General Election 
and Mr. Major will go to the Queen, leaving aside the fact that I think it 
would put the Queen in a very difficult Constitutional position.  Leaving aside 
the Constitutional issues, if the Government make that clear of course we shall 
vote to remove this Government - I can't wait for it to go.   But I know that 
isn't the case;  you know that isn't the case; and what is much more 
important, the Labour Party, indulging in the deceipt that it is, also knows it 
isn't the case. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              So Charles Kennedy, when he says we'll 
wait and see what they make of it, was suggesting there were a range of subtle 
alternatives, is wrong on this?   This is no longer the position of the Party? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Charles was speaking before we had 
consulted amongst colleagues.  I now have consulted.  They took this view.  My 
Party is unanimous on it, my MPs are absolutely clear that the interests of the 
nation come first and that means making sure that Britain has a future in 
Europe.  We will vote for this.  
 
                                       I've been pressing the Prime Minister 
for months to face up to his Backbenchers.  I've been pressing him for months 
to stop hiding behind the skirts of the Danes.  I've been pressing him for 
months to clear up this uncertainty that is extending the recession.  If now,  
as a result of our pressure, he has finally found the stomach to do that, of 
course I'll back him. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              Does this mean, insofar as it's 
necessary - you suggest it won't be, it's a three-line Whip for all your MPs. 
 
ASHDOWN:                               We don't have three-line Whips in our 
Party in that sense, but all my MPs, all the MPs in the Party - I understand 
how some members of the Party are worried about this, I can understand that, I 
understand the pressure on them - but at the end of the day we must....... 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              What are they saying to you? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Well, they're saying that we ought to be 
voting - very few of them, I mean at the Scottish Conference thirty out of 
three hundred took the view - but of course I understand.  That's very tough.  
Nothing that is good in politics is ever easy,  but there are times when you 
put the national interest first.  There are times when you have - as this Party 
has, for forty years, sometimes alone on this issue - stood by its principles.
The Labour Party may have changed twice in every decade, their view on Europe, 
but I don't intend to join them, neither do my colleagues.
 
DIMBLEBY:                              Are you happy with what might be the 
headline if the Government wins - "Paddy Ashdown saves John Major's bacon"? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               No, I'm happy with the headline which 
says "Paddy Ashdown's saved Britain's future in Europe", and I'm delighted with 
the headline which says "The Labour Party has turned tail again on this issue". 
 
                                       I don't believe you can win the trust of 
the British people by asking them to vote for something in April which you vote 
against in November. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              So you tell your MPs in the depths of a 
recession, when the Government is promising painful spending cuts, don't worry 
(in seats where Labour's breathing down your neck), don't worry chaps - you 
may lose your seat but you'll have saved us for Europe. 
 
ASHDOWN:                               There are times when you have to do the 
things that are necessary to stand by your principle.  This is not the Labour 
Party, it never has been.  But your question of the economy is absolutely 
right.  Unless we now resolve the uncertainty over Britain's future in Europe, 
we will damage our capacity to get out of this recession and the direct 
consequence of Labour's move, if they should succeed and I desperately hope for 
the future of this country, they do not, will be that that recession will 
continue and more jobs will be lost. 
 
                                       I give you this prediction - if there is 
any possibility that Labour wins on Thursday, on Wednesday, I'll bet you the 
good Europeans in the Labour Party will turn out not to be there. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              Do you believe finally and briefly that 
it is too close to call at the moment? 
 
ASHDOWN:                               Yes, that's why I think the Labour 
Party's position is SO discreditable.  That's why I think that this deceipt 
that they're perpetrating, that the Government could fall that day, which they 
know isn't true, is so dishonest, and that's why I believe at the end of it 
good Europeans - like John Smith did in 1972, but is now ducking now - good 
Europeans in the Labour Party if there's any possibility of Maastricht falling, 
will simply not be there. 
 
DIMBLEBY:                              Paddy Ashdown, thank you very much.
 

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