Caroline Lucas’s error in voting to hold the EU referendum | Letters
Caroline Lucas MP rightly points to "a cocktail of threats" to the environment from leaving the EU (A 'green guarantee' could stop Brexit ruining our environment, theguardian.com, 13 February). She neglects to mention her own role in bringing on these threats: the vote she cast to hold the EU referendum in the first place. In her statement to the Commons on 9 June 2015, when the EU referendum bill was under review, she pointed to the EU's many environmental protections; called nonetheless for its "radical reform"; noted that achieving this "by walking away from the EU makes no sense at all"; and then, along with hundreds of other pro-remain MPs, invited the voters to walk away. It was a classic muddle of cross-purposes all too familiar from the left on Europe.
At the time, Lucas could have demanded, or at least suggested, that the likely environmental and other costs be specified and advertised to the public ahead of any Brexit vote. Instead she agreed to a simple in/out vote with no further conditions. So perhaps she means to say that the "real fight starts now"?
Jeff Smith
Brno, Czech Republic