http://www.eubusiness.com/afp/040618192808.xxk7e3qj
>>give it 6 months till one of the big 3 doesn't follow something.
>>give it 6 months till one of the big 3 doesn't follow something.
historic constitution
Hamfam said:Don't worry, the UK won't pass this thing, and it'll be back to the drawing board.
A flawed document
The EU constitution is a recipe for confusion
Any institution born in acrimony and wrangling stands little chance of winning respect or general acclaim. The European Union constitution has suffered a confused genesis, a protracted negotiation and a bitter dénouement that has left it without authority, coherence or meaning. Although agreement amongst the leaders was struck last night, the thought that an ill-considered jumble of incoherent philosophical pretentiousness and mindless micro-managing should define British and European identities is absurd.
Few would dispute the need for new rules to accommodate the entry of ten extra nations into a union that was already finding difficulty in coping with 15 existing members. The constitution was mooted as a short declaration of principles and sold, especially in Britain, as a tidying up exercise. Whatever claims were made for it under that heading by Tony Blair in his attempt to ward off criticism, the constitution now has gone far beyond any such exercise. Under it, Britain will lose more national vetoes over more areas of policy than were removed by the Maastricht treaty.
Worse than that, the months of negotiation have so freighted the document with addenda, footnotes, interpolated paragraphs and additional clauses that it has become monstrously cumbersome: the very opposite of the short, clear statement of basic values and principles that lies at the heart of most democratic nations constitutions. Indeed, it is this lack of clarity that is its most vexing and unacceptable aspect. There is a dangerous ambiguity over the fundamental issue of where power lies and will lie. This ambiguity is not the result of oversight or drafting carelessness: it has been crafted in order to produce a false consensus among EU leaders who each believe that their mutually contradictory interpretation is correct. The result is predictable: at the first clash of meaning, the wording will be referred to the European Court of Justice, which will therefore become the de facto supreme court of Europe and routinely find in favour of Europe.
That would be unacceptable not only to Britain but to many other countries, especially those in Central and Eastern Europe which have only just begun enjoying sovereignty outside the Soviet orbit. Within Britain, ambiguity also arises over the status of the EU constitution. Does it take precedence over Britains own unwritten constitution? The Government asserts that it does not; senior lawyers insist that it does. From its proponents there has been no effort to explain the ambiguities; instead, they have merely lambasted as Europhobic those who have queried the impenetrable wording.
The fundamental objection to the document is that it is pointing in the wrong direction. The peoples of Europe want lighter regulation, especially from Brussels, and a less intrusive EU presence in their personal lives, in their businesses and in the practice of their democratic freedoms. That was the striking message from the cacophony of results in the recent European elections. The 2001 Laeken Declaration, which set in train the negotiations, envisaged a constitution that would bring the EU closer to its peoples and transfer some powers back to its members, which this constitution has utterly failed to do. The opposite has occurred. The confusion between defining values and laying down workplace regulations has left a document with a built-in bias towards a creeping federalism. This document offers not a roadmap to the future but gives an opportunity for discredited ideologies and government intervention to make a grand return. It is not designed to secure and enhance individuals rights, but to enshrine the right of a self-interested, self-serving bureaucracy to meddle at will.
Signing the constitution is Mr Blair's big blunder
(Filed: 19/06/2004)
At EU summits, there is always a row and always a deal and the European constitution negotiations did not disappoint. Tony Blair's spin doctors did not quite say, "Gentlemen in England now abed shall think themselves accursed they were not here," but he was, apparently, battling like Henry V against the French and also the Germans. But he signed the constitution anyway, even though last week's election results clearly show he had no mandate to do so.
There was something distinctly phoney about the row. It was all part of an elaborate political game, in which the players moved rhetorical armies across Europe, emitting smoke to deceive each other and us. The most obvious ruse was that Mr Blair was fighting to see off tax harmonisation. That was hardly mentioned in the draft and, to the extent that it was, the clauses related to various minor, irritating, matters. Their removal is only a symbolic victory. Like the other red lines, tax harmonisation is an Aunt Sally.
On the Today programme yesterday, Jack Straw got away with claiming that national parliaments will actually have their powers increased by the constitution. That is untrue. According to the draft, if a third of all parliaments oppose a law, it can be referred back to the Commission which can then press ahead anyway. The Government is also making much of the so-called "emergency brake". But that is also only a delaying device. And, as the president of the European Court of Justice made clear in an interview yesterday, it is untrue that the constitution will not give the Charter of Fundamental Rights legal force: it will.
Such trickery aside, we must take the constitution seriously. Mr Blair has made perhaps the most serious blunder of his premiership by signing it. He should have rejected this mind-numbing, 260-page document on principle. It is the capstone of a federal state, and gives the EU a foreign minister, a criminal code, a European prosecutor and a police force. We face a net loss of vetoes in about 40 areas and the constitution sets in stone an outdated, over-regulated economic model just at the moment that it is failing.
Numerous polls and the European and local elections suggest Mr Blair has virtually no chance of winning a referendum - which he has promised - on the constitution. The Labour Party itself is split on the subject. Many business leaders are against it and some are already raising money for a No campaign, which we should hear more from in the next few days. Mr Blair might hope that he can scare people into believing the real issue is "Europe in or out", but most voters are not stupid and will answer the question on the ballot paper: "Do you agree with the EU Constitution, yes or no?"
Hence the unconvincing war dance with Jacques Chirac and Gerhard Schröder. Mr Blair made a historic mistake yesterday. His only hope of avoiding defeat in a referendum is that the constitution must still be ratified by every one of the EU's 25 national parliaments; and it could therefore fail elsewhere before it reaches Westminster. And if another country rejects the constitution in a referendum, there may never be a vote here at all. But as it stands, Mr Blair has given his enemies many of whom are in his own party and even in the Cabinet casus belli.
Europe needs a strong leader, as this shambolic summit proves
19 June 2004
Henry Kissinger's old complaint about the European Union was that you never knew who to call. He was speaking from the transatlantic perspective. But from inside Europe, it is still almost as difficult to tell who is in charge.
The Guardian has three pieces yet nothing in their comment or leaders . Instead their leaders are about the Tory health policy, the green party and the zillionth piece pointed at the ineptitude of the British. Sorry, but I think that's contemptible. I do lean to the right but try and give the Guardian a chance and read. Its just so hard to stomach the same anti-English, pro-political establishment claptrap from them all the time!Why? Because one paper's said nothing (yet*)
Yep, The "Independent", pfft! Nope, its because the article is talking about the presidency rather than the constitution. Unless the heading and opening paragraph is totally unrepresentative of the entire 521 words. This seems remarkably like the previous days skew on events. The president is a token position unless the constitution is passed. I'd liken it to concentrating on idle tittle tattle on who is to succeed QEII over talk of a new government that had been voted in the previous day. The lack of editorial on the constitution from the two leading leftist papers is bordering on the dishonest.and the other you're giving up on after 3 (short!) sentences
cja said:Unless the heading and opening paragraph is totally unrepresentative of the entire 521 words.
cja said:The lack of editorial on the constitution from the two leading leftist papers is bordering on the dishonest.
Hamfam said:The Guardian is anti-English? ;o Remind me who their main readership is again? -_^
iapetus said:The vast majority of people don't have a clue about the effects of being in or out of the EU.
Hamfam said:The Guardian is anti-English? ;o Remind me who their main readership is again? -_^
It's good to know you can read the vast majority of peoples minds iap. Their lack of knowledge must be a baneiapetus said:The vast majority of people don't have a clue about the effects of being in or out of the EU.
Have you read anything from columnists such as Matthew Parry or Peter Riddell on the matter? I suggest not since they're very much pro-EU. Of course the paper is overall anti Euro federalism but then Murdoch does own the paper.iapetus said:For the record the Times is a rabidly anti-European newspaper
It isn't the reporting but op-ed pieces I was concerned about. Fair and balanced is impossible, period. It is fair and balanced only when a person agrees with the assessment, that person is a political animal and so is never going to be "fair and balanced" according to someone of a different outlook. Much to the chagrin of most posters here I'd say Fox News' pronouncement of "fair and balanced" is very apt for its viewership. Whether people who naturally disagree with Fox scoff at the proclaimation is of no concern, they aren't what Fox would consider "fair and balanced" people.iapetus said:- don't expect fair and balanced reporting from that source (not that you should expect fair and balanced reporting from any newspaper unless you like disappointment...)
It is dishonest because the Guardian would rather shirk the responsibility of giving its view on an "historic agreement" to talk about the Greens. WTF? The Guardian is doing what I'd expect of a "political establishment" paper to do. The decision has been made by your betters over in Brussels, why should we comment on this since the proles are subjects of these champagne socialists and it is better to say nothing at all than upset the applecart. Yah, that is what I think goes on in the head of Guardian editorial staff, WTF?SFA_AOK said:Dishonest? WTF?
cja said:It's good to know you can read the vast majority of peoples minds iap. Their lack of knowledge must be a bane![]()
cja said:Have you read anything from columnists such as Matthew Parry or Peter Riddell on the matter?
cja said:It isn't the reporting but op-ed pieces I was concerned about. Fair and balanced is impossible, period. It is fair and balanced only when a person agrees with the assessment, that person is a political animal and so is never going to be "fair and balanced" according to someone of a different outlook.
cja said:It is dishonest because the Guardian would rather shirk the responsibility of giving its view on an "historic agreement" to talk about the Greens. WTF? The Guardian is doing what I'd expect of a "political establishment" paper to do. The decision has been made by your betters over in Brussels, why should we comment on this since the proles are subjects of these champagne socialists and it is better to say nothing at all than upset the applecart. Yah, that is what I think goes on in the head of Guardian editorial staff, WTF?![]()