In a packed lecture hall a few hundred metres away from the Conservative Party Conference, climate science denier and hard-Brexiter MP Owen Paterson told the cheering crowd: โWe are the mainstream of the Conservativeย Party.โ
As the rift between different factions of the Conservative Party deepens over Brexit, Paterson, a political advisor to the group Leave Means Leave, was preaching to an audience already on his side of theย divide.
He was speaking at the Alternative Brexit Conference, a one-day event which ran parallel to the Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham on Monday and required no pass or accreditation toย attend.
It was organised by The Bruges Group, a Eurosceptic think tank created to uphold Margaret Thatcherโs ideas, which has repeatedly spread disinformation about climateย change.
Indeed, previous blog posts and lecture notes published on the groupโs website have criticised the EUโs โalarmistโ views on man-made climate change and accused it of using global warming as an excuse to impose regulations and ramp up energy prices.
Throughout the day, the conference heard from those on the right of the Conservative party pushing for a hard Brexit and making the case for deregulation and the importance of a free trade deal with the US.
It gave a platform to climate science deniers such as David Campbell Bannerman, a Conservative MEP for the East of England, who joined UKIP between 2004 and 2011, and previously accused the EU of being a โgreen Talibanโ.
The conference also heard from Whitham MP Priti Patel and one of the partyโs right-wing rising star Andrew Jenkyns, the MP for Morley and Outwood and an advocate for the group Leave Means Leave.
Alternative and fringe events in and outside the Conservative Party conference showed how the networks of hardline Brexiters and climate science deniers continue to overlap and at times work together to mount pressure from the right of theย party.
Hard-Brexit andย deregulation
Among the crowd at the alternative conference, enthusiastic supporters were proudly wearing union jack ties and โChuck Chequersโ badges, in defiance of Theresa Mayโs soft Brexitย plan.
Instead, the room unanimously backed leaving the EU, whether under a Canada-style free-trade deal or without a deal โ resulting to trade under World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules.ย ย
Cheers roared across the room at any mention of โtaking back controlโ and that โno deal means no cashโ for the EU. A Guardian reporter was booed when asking why the group did not push for a Conservative leadershipย contest.
Both Jenkyns and North Shropshire MP Paterson made passionate calls to โreject the over-regulatedโ EU standards and laws and embrace the opportunities of making trade deals with countries outside the EU.
Their comments came a week after the free-market think tank the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) published an alternative Brexit plan which called on the UK government to cut EU environmental regulations to secure free-trade deals with the US, China and India afterย Brexit.
The report singled out environmental protection rules as โfrequently disguised methods of protectionismโ and one of the areas where EU regulation is โmoving in an anti-competitive directionโ. The report, authored by controversial trade lobbyist Shanker Singham, was criticised for its methodology.
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The same arguments were yet carried forward by the conferenceโsย speakers.
Paterson told the audience about his visit to Washington DC last week, when he made the case for a special relationship between the US and UK during a speech at the free-market think tank the Heritage Foundation.
The think tank has repeatedly spread disinformation about climate change, previously describing global warming as โa contentious and unproven scientific theoryโ.
Recalling his conversation with US officials, he said: โThey have made it completely clear that they wonโt be a free-trade deal with the UK if the laws of this country are made elsewhere [in the EU] and involve regulations that they donโtย like.
โWe should be starting to actively negotiate with the US but until Mayโs Chequersโ plan is offย the table, they wonโt start talking toย us.โ
The regulations Paterson referred to include for instance allowing chlorine-washed chickens and hormone-fed beef and GM crops to be imported into the UK for the first time.
Although both environment secretary Michael Gove and international trade secretary Liam Fox have said they would not lower the UKโs food and environmental standards to strike a free-trade deal with the US, the speakers made it clear that deregulation remains a key issue for the right of the Conservativeย party.
Climate scienceย deniers
The Alternative Brexit Conference also gave a platform to MEP Campbell Bannerman, a climate science denier who also sits on the advisory board of Leave Means Leave, and is a former chairman of the Bow group โ a free-market think tank closely linked to the IEA.
In a 2014 opinion piece for the Huffington Post called โThe EUโs Green Taliban are another reason to quit the EUโ, Campbell Bannerman said he agreed with former Australian Prime Minister John Howard that climate change has become โa substitute forย religionโ.
Campbell Bannerman accused โthe majority of British civil servantsโ of being โenvironmental fundamentalistsโ and ignored the overwhelming scientific consensus on the issue to describe โthe mass scientific uncertainties over man-made climateย changeโ.
Campbell Bannerman argued that the EUโs target to reduce carbon emissions by at least 40 percent by 2030 โwould simply destroy the European economy while at the same time the rest of the world carries onย regardlessโ.
Speaking at the conference, he slammed the Labour Partyโs Brexit policies describing Jeremy Corbyn as a โNaziโ and calling Labourโs shadow chancellor John McDonnell โa nasty piece ofย workโ.
Steven Woolfe, the MEP for the North West of England, was next to address the conference about โmaking the Conservative Party conservativeย againโ.
Woolfe has recently been outspoken about the development of wind and solar energy. In a tweet, he described the backers of wind and solar energy as โthe next crony capitalistsโ benefiting from subsidies and tax breaks, adding that this had left โcosts soar for the poorestย consumersโ.
As I have always said for some backers of wind and solar becoming the next crony capitalist is the goal. Itโs all about the money, subsidies and tax breaks. Meanwhile costs soar for the poorest consumers and never come down https://t.co/K6i3Z8IVeZ
โ Steven Woolfe MEP (@Steven_Woolfe) June 2, 2018
Woolfe was once considered a favourite to replace Nigel Farage as leader of the UKIP, might be best remembered for his altercation with a fellow UKIP MEP at the European Parliament which left him inย hospital.
Woolfe, who resigned from UKIP in October 2016, was later found to have started the incident after wanting to settle his differences with UKIP MEP Mike Hookem โman toย manโ.
Woolfeโs renewable energy claims come in stark contrast with current research which show the rapidly declining costs of renewable energy โ a trend which is accentuated when taking into account the carbon price of fossil fuels. Earlier this year, a report by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IREA) found that renewable energy is set to be cheaper than fossil fuels byย 2020.
But one fossil fuel company is keen to retain its close ties with the Conservativeย Party.
Inside the exhibition area of the conference centre, oil company BP was given a prime advertising stand opposite the governmentโs โGreat Britainโ campaign, which aims to boost investment and trade links with the UK around theย world.
The fringe that has becomeย mainstream
Even more prominent inside the conference centre were the IEA and TaxPayersโ Alliance, whose event space the โThinkTentโ was located right beside the entrance to the conference centre and alongside event spaces run by Policy Exchange andย ConservativeHome.
Both the IEA, which is registered as an educational charity, and the TaxPayersโ Alliance are part of a number of organisations working out of an office at 55 Tufton Street, near Westminster, alongside the climate science denial group the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF).
While these groups have long pushed to influence policy on the fringes of the Conservative Party, their ideas and arguments are increasingly becoming central in swinging the ideological debate to theย right.
All three groups were accused by grassroot campaign BeLeave whistleblower Shahmir Sanni of mounting a coordinated campaign to push for a hard-Brexit in the media.
The IEA is currently under a regulatory compliance investigation by the Charity Commission after an undercover investigation by Greenpeaceโs investigative unit Unearthed and the Guardian suggested the IEA offered potential US donors access to UK government ministers to promote free-tradeย deals.
The IEA has denied any allegations of โcash forย accessโ.
The IEAโs event panellists included its director general Mark Littlewood, its trade deal lobbyist Shanker Singham as well as MP Steve Baker, DUP leader Arlene Foster and climate denier MEP Campbellย Bannerman.
From the media, Liam Halligan, a Telegraph columnist and member of the โno-dealโ advocate group Economists for Free Trade, and associate editor Camilla Tominey both took part in panelย discussions.
On Sunday evening, Daniel Hannan MEP, from the Initiative for Free Trade, together with IEAโs Singham and representatives from the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation presented their visions for an โideal US–UK free tradeโ. At the crux of that debate is environmentalย regulation.
As the UK is about to leave the EU, these campaign groups and think tanks which were used to pushing for a deregulated free-market on the partyโs fringes have now taken a front seat in driving the Conservative Partyโs ideologicalย debate.
Image Credit: Inside the Alternative Brexit Conference organised by the Bruges Group/@ChloeFarandย ย ย A quote by Paterson wasย corrected.
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