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Putin’s Tories: welcome to the Vlad and Dave Show

09 January 2008
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Denis MacShane says that the Conservatives’ refusal to align themselves with other centre-right parties on the Council of Europe has driven them into a shabby alliance with Russia

However, the Cameron–Hague rejection of co-operation with the European right can be seen in operation at the Council of Europe. Tory delegates refuse to sit down with other EU centre-right parties. Instead, they have formed their own little group with the Kremlin’s men from Putin’s United Russia party. There are 27 United Russia delegates and 11 Tories but the Russians have given the Conservatives the posts of honorary chair, first vice-chair and political officer or whip. In exchange, the Tories back the Kremlin line on Balkans’ policy and in other areas dear to Russia, which uses the Council of Europe to attack Georgia, the Baltic states, as well as Nato’s proposed missile-defence shield in Poland and the Czech Republic.

Since joining in 1996, the Russians have given repeated assurances that they would respect Council of Europe rulings on Chechnya, Moldova, and above all on allowing Russian citizens to take cases to the European Court of Human Rights. Moscow has reneged on all these pledges. In December, a Russian chairman of a key committee broke the rules of neutral chairmanship himself to vote in support of the pro-Kremlin and anti-EU line on Kosovo. He was backed by the Tory MPs present.

And now the Tories have agreed to support a top Kremlin aide to become the president of the Council of Europe. As at the UN or the European parliament, there is a kind of Buggins’s turn rule on who holds rotating posts like assembly presidencies. As a formal parliamentary group at the Council of Europe, the Conservatives and the Russians are entitled to nominate the next president, who holds office for three years. There has been a revolt, led by Nordic and Baltic conservatives against this Russian takeover. So far, Tory MPs have stayed true to their alliance with the Kremlin rather than join up with right-wingers from other countries who are clearer-sighted about what Russia is up to.

All this would be small-time politicking on a faraway European body that few know much about. But the current furore at the Council of Europe reflects how Russia is playing by its own, old rules in international organisations. And how the Cameron–Hague hostility to Europe has not only made the Conservative party an isolated force in Europe but has led Tory MPs to keep surely the oddest international company in their party’s history.

More articles from: Denis MacShane | this section

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EyeSee

January 10th, 2008 9:48pm Report this comment

Can't say I know much about the Council of Europe so I don't know the validity of much of this. However Denis McShane is a faultless barometer; whatever he says, the opposite will be true/common sense. Also, it can't be happening at all because we have had a Labour government , for over ten years, IN POWER. Our national parliament is supreme is it not Denis? Difficult to keep making your stories fit together, isn't it? Need any more evidence of the pointlessness of 'European politics'?

Mr Angry

January 11th, 2008 2:51am Report this comment

Better to be in bed with Russians whose motives are clear,apparent and nothing like as bad as the perpetually paranoid about Russia Scandic and Baltic countries want to believe, than with quisling euro federalists, all too willing to betray their own nations and national interests in hot pursuit of the "european project".

Dr. Ilya Perelmuter

January 24th, 2008 1:55pm Report this comment

To seek cooperation with modern Russia, a really police state headed by a dictator, and to close eyes on antidemocratic practices of Putin's government - that is the policy of the greatest European powers. Nothing new! They have been betraying democratic movement in Russia for years and years.

Herbert Thornton

April 6th, 2008 10:37pm Report this comment

Reading this is enough to make me wonder if - perhaps - the Tories may not be entirely bad.

What next? Will the Tories actually concede that problems similar to (and potentially worse than) Russia's in Chechnya also exist in Britain?

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