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The First British MEPs: Styles and Strategies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2008

Extract

When the United Kingdom joined the European Community on 1 January 1973 it became entitled to send thirty-six representatives to the European Parliament. For the first six years of Britain's membership – from January 1973 to June 1979 – these members were nominated from the two Houses of Parliament and hence held a dual mandate. From January 1973 to June 1975 only twenty-one British members, Conservative, Liberal, Ulster Unionist and a cross-bench peer, attended the Parliament; Labour members attended from the first session after the referendum on British membership of the European Community in June 1975.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

1 The abbreviation ‘MEP’ for Member of the European Parliament only came into frequent use after the direct elections held in 1979. It is used for convenience in this article to describe the nominated members as well.

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51 Author's interview with Lady Kirk, Oct. 1992, Jackson Archive.

52 928 H. C. Deb. 5s, col. 1663.

53 T. J. Bainbridge, Memorandum on the Conservative Group leadership, 28 Jan. 1982, CGA. The Conservative leadership made two abortive attempts, on behalf of Eldon Griffiths MP and Paul Channon MP, to get its nominated leader into a safe seat in 1979. When these attempts failed, James Scott-Hopkins was then nominated as the prospective leader. Geoffrey Rippon showed no interest in standing in direct elections when it became clear that he would have to submit himself to the selection committee process in the new European constituencies.

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58 Conservative Research Department, Campaign Guide for Europe 1979 (London, 1979), 2, referring to an article by Crosland in Socialist Commentary.

59 E. P. Deb., 15 June 1977, OJ Annex 218, 127.

60 Ibid., 129.

61 Ibid., 6 July 1977, OJ, Annex 219, 174.

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