
For over twenty years Sir Stephen Wall was at the heart of Whitehall, working for a succession of British leaders as they shaped Britain's policy towards the European Union. He was there behind the scenes when Margaret Thatcher took on the rest of Europe to 'get her money back'. He was with John Major at Maastricht where the single European currency was born. He was with Tony Blair as a negotiator of the EU's Amsterdam, Nice and Constitutional Treaties. As a senior official in London, as Britain's ambassador to the European Union and as Tony Blair's senior official adviser on Europe he saw Prime Ministers and Foreign Secretaries define, defend and promote Britain's interests in Europe. Drawing on that experience, Stephen Wall traces a British journey from 1982 to the present as successive British governments have wrestled with their relationship with their fellow EU partners, with the European Commission and the European Parliament.A Stranger in Europe goes behind the scenes as Margaret Thatcher and her successors have sought to reconcile Britain's national and European interests. Drawing on the official documents of the period, he gives a unique insight into how Britain's leaders have balanced objective assessment of Britain's wishes; political, press and public pressures; their own political instincts and the aims, interests and personalities of their fellow European leaders. We see Britain's Prime Ministers in intimate discussion with other EU leaders. We experience how Britain's top politicians motivated the best civil servants of their day and how those civil servants, in turn, sought to turn political instructions into negotiating successes. Above all, we see people at the top of their game trying to promote the British national interest and be good Europeans at the same time.Stephen Wall analyses both Britain's successes and our failures and shows how, despite the differences of declared aim, and huge differences of personality, Britain's political leaders have in practice followed very similar paths. He concludes that Britain has been an awkward partner, often at odds with her partners: a stranger in Europe. But with dogged determination and seriousness of purpose Britain's leaders have nonetheless done much to shape and reform the modern Europe in which we live today.
This book investigates the complex, often contradictory relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union from the era of Margaret Thatcher through the premiership of Tony Blair. Sir Stephen Wall, a former senior diplomat and advisor to multiple British Prime Ministers, utilizes his unique vantage point within Whitehall to examine how national interests were negotiated against the backdrop of European integration. By analyzing official documents and personal observations, Wall argues that British leadership consistently struggled to reconcile domestic political pressures with the realities of membership in a continental bloc. The text provides a detailed account of the diplomatic machinery that defined Britain's role in Europe during these formative decades.
What You Will Find
Experts and political historians frequently cite this work as a foundational primary account for understanding the mechanics of British diplomacy within the European Union. Readers often note the high level of detail provided by the author, which offers a clear view into the bureaucratic and political challenges faced by British officials during this period.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2008-07-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199284555
ISBN-13:
9780199284559
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