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EU today is in the line of what the EEC was at the time (less, actually, precisely due to a strong influence from newly-admited countries, and the UK especially, to stop the integration and just be content with a common market). Claiming it's not "what you voted for" only means you didn't even remotely pay attention to what it was about by then.
I was 16 on the UK's accession to the EEC and 19 years old at the 1975 referendum.
But more fool me, I listened to what all our majority party senior politicians said.
There was no Internet then so we could hardly all read the treaty clauses.
I know now in hindsight that Ted Heath (PM then) knew that we would not join if he
distributed them; so we were fed misinformation about how our exports would boom.
We were told that the EEC was a compromise between the federalists who wanted a
federal state and the nationalists who wanted to retain six separate nation states and
that the goal of a full union was just put in as a vague aspiration statement that would
never materialise, and that we would have another opportunity to vote before that.
Which latter vote is in fact just what we voted on yesterday. The vote in 1975 was
about our people ratifying the government's entry two years earlier. Few of us paid
much attention to Harold Wilson's claimed favourable negotiation. We took the view that
we should be patient allowing time for the benefits of the export market to materialise.
They never did, but that was probably primarily due to the lack of competitiveness of
much of UK manufacturing compared to German, French and Italian businesses.
I should have listened to what Enoch Powell and Tony Benn were saying, but they
were widely portrayed as maverick eccentrics (racist and communist) respectively.
If the political union had been a light weight matter limiting itself to a few topics for
which there was clear agreement they could better be resolved at the European level,
we would have likely remained. However it became clear over the years that EU rules
were becoming all persuasive; and that the concept that EU Law overruled UK Law and
that of the specifically inbuilt ECJ bias to deciding on the base of an ever closer union
meant that continued membership of the EU was obliterating our self determination.
I would have preferred it, if the UK had accepted a two tier membership, but Margaret
Thatcher opposed it. She wanted a veto on the inner workings but without joining in.
And yes, the French may say 'perfidious Albion' wanting to eat the cake and have it.