"Then in 1975, the newly elected Labour Government conducted a referendum and the question was about whether we should stay or leave, and stay won that day."
Yes, by about two to one. Here's the pamphlet sent to every household to "help them decide":
http://www.harvard-digital.co.uk/euro/pamphlet.htm
To my eternal shame I voted to remain but as I have said before I was young, foolish and naive then (and I had a lot more hair). Among the import items which demonstrated my gullibility was this on pages 11 and 12:
"Another anxiety expressed about Britain's membership of the Common Market is that Parliament could lose its supremacy, and we would have to obey laws passed by unelected 'faceless bureaucrats' sitting in their headquarters in Brussels."
The pamphlet went on to explain that this was not the case. "The Minister representing Britain can veto any proposal for a new law or a new tax if he considers it to be against British interests."
He may have been able to then, but since the Common Market's metamorphosis into a wannabe super-state there are certainly very few areas where a single British Minister would have any success in thwarting, by power of veto, the Euromaniacs' odious decisions now. Fortunately one paragraph in the pamphlet remains true:
"The British Parliament in Westminster retains the final right to repeal the Act which took us into the Market on January 1, 1973."
So let's get on and do just that before that right becomes subject to the "qualified majority" voting system and our right to leave is blocked by the likes of Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and a few others.