Finest Hour

European Unity

Before the 2016 referendum, both “Leave” and “Remain” sought to win Winston Churchill to their cause. Leavers relied on the famous article from 1930: “We have our own dream and our own task. We are with Europe, but not of it. We are linked, but not comprised. We are interested and associated, but not absorbed.” Remainers reject this, arguing that Churchill’s views changed over the following fifteen years. They focus instead on the speeches from Zurich onwards during the late 1940s. Just before the 2016 referendum, the publisher of this book by Felix Klos released a shortened version dealing only with those “European Movement” days and badged it “the must read book of the referendum.” Published more than

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Finest Hour

Finest Hour4 min read
The Full African Journey
Canadian historian C. Brad Faught sets out “to show that [Winston] Churchill’s knowledge and understanding of Africa and Africans was more nuanced and of greater sophistication than is often believed.” By the end of the book, he largely succeeds in p
Finest Hour26 min read
MP for Epping, 1924–45
The statue of Sir Winston Churchill on Woodford Green commemorates that he was an Essex MP from 1924 through to his retirement from politics in 1964, a period that equates to more than half his public life. He originally came to the county to represe
Finest Hour2 min read
From the Editor
Winston Churchill would have been a Londoner born and bred if he had not been so impatient to enter onto the grand stage of life. Preparations were underway for the first child of Lord and Lady Randolph Churchill to be born at their house in London.

Related Books & Audiobooks