Parliament Vice-President defies rules to frustrate legitimate democratic protest by UKIP MEPs over TTIP vote delay
Last evening in the European Parliament, Jonathan Arnott, UKIP MEP for
the North East and EU budget spokesman, led a protest against the suppression of
debate on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). Arnott
proposed a procedural motion to suspend the sitting “to allow Parliament the
opportunity to reflect on the undemocratic actions by President Martin Schulz
and other officials to suppress the vote and debate on this issue which is of
concern to millions of people across the EU.”
Arnott said: “I proposed suspending Parliamentary debate for the day to
highlight this point. The officials on the podium responded with what looked
like panic, ringing the division bell and breaking their own rules. The rules
demand an immediate vote, but they delayed for over forty minutes to allow their
supporters to flood the chamber.”
Roger Helmer, UKIP MEP for East Midlands and energy spokesman, was in the
chamber to support the protest. When it became clear the vice-president (Ildikó
Gall-Pelcz) was acting in breach of the rules, Helmer broke procedure and went
onto the podium to ask her if she realised she was in breach of the rules. “She
replied yes. I then asked her if she was happy she was breaking the rules, and
she said she was not. And yet she broke the rules
anyway.”