All these budget spending pledges add up to 71 weeks worth of payments
to the EU. So if we had stopped the cheques to the EU around
18 months ago - when the EU failed its audit for the 10th year running
- Gordon Brown could today have doubled his investments in the areas
listed above.
Or alternatively,
if schools are his priority, he could have doubled the entire total
investment in schools for the coming year of £6 billion.
Or the £3.4
billion funding for the 2012 Olympics could have been accrued within
42 weeks, with no extra burden on the government, London taxpayers
or the national lottery.
Today's EU is
draining Europe's resources and depriving funds from improving education,
security and the environment, for international development and
reducing poverty and for strengthening the economy.
Facilitating
trade & co-operation in Europe simply does not need the EU's
massive central budget.
Stop the
Cheques to the EU today, and just imagine the funds that
could be available for the budget next year.
