Mosley first presented his idea of Europe forming a single state in his book
The Alternative in 1947. He argued that the traditional vision of nationalism that had inspired pre-war fascism had been too narrow and that the post-war era required a new paradigm in which Europe would come together as a single state. He rejected any notion of a
federal Europe, instead urging full political integration into a supranational European state. The policy was presented to the wider electorate in October 1948 when Mosley called for elections to a European Assembly as the first step towards his vision. The notion also had an important
geopolitical dimension as Mosley saw it as the only defence against Europe being torn apart by power struggles between the
United States and the
Soviet Union in the
Cold War. He contended that the racial kinship between the peoples of Northern Europe (Germans, British, Scandinavians, northern French, West Slavs, and East Slavs) would be the basis for national unity, whilst also declaring his admiration for the contributions of South Europeans. He was opposed to both the
United Nations and its predecessor the
League of Nations, dismissing both as part of a Jewish plot to undermine nationalism. Indeed, Europe a Nation was to include an
anti-Semitic policy, with the entire Jewish population to be expelled to their own nation in
Palestine. Africa, most of which was still in the hands of the European colonial empires, was to be retained by the united Europe as a giant colony, with
apartheid implemented throughout the continent, effectively excluding Blacks from Europe Mosley subsequently imagined the European state as regulating its prices and incomes by a "wage price mechanism" under "European Socialism", a
syndical basis for the continent's industry, a vision steeped in
corporatism and
elitism. As in Fascist Italy, elections were to be corporatist with an occupation-based franchise (a previous British Union of Fascists policy), whilst "European Socialism" was to allow a free hand for business leaders but to co-ordinate workers in "labour Charter" organizations. Europe a Nation drew heavily on the heritage of fascism: Graham Macklin has argued that it "merely adapted and enlarged the parameters of his fascist panacea to suit the times, and is thus easily recognisable as 'Fascist'". Mosley expanded upon his ideas for a single integrated European nation state and a European government in his book
Europe: Faith and Plan published in 1958. ==Impact==