Sarkozy aims to revive EU pact this year

by Dave Keating | July 11, 2008 at 01:41 am

308 views | 5 Recommendations | 4 comments

In an important speech delivered yesterday in Strasbourg, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who assumed the French rotating EU presidency at the begining of the month, outlined the timeframe he envisions for trying to save the Lisbon Treaty.


Sarkozy said that by the time of the European parliament elections next June, the issue needs to be settled so voters know whether they are electing MEPs under the Nice Treaty framework which currently exists or the new Lisbon Treaty framework. The Lisbon Treaty would make the parliament more powerful and give voters a greater voice in EU affairs.

President Nicolas Sarkozy of France on Thursday set a deadline of the end of the year for efforts to rescue an accord that was designed to enhance the European Union's place in the world but was blocked by a no vote in a referendum in Ireland.

Speaking in Strasbourg, Sarkozy said further delays would not be acceptable to voters who would elect a new European Parliament in June of next year, and who needed to know the rules under which that election would take place.

His comments suggest there is a relatively brief opportunity to salvage the accord, the Lisbon Treaty. If it has not been ratified by all 27 EU nations early next year, the new European Parliament will be elected and the new European Commission selected under the old rules of the Nice Treaty. That would demonstrate that the EU could continue to operate under its existing rules, thereby reducing the political pressure to adopt Lisbon.

"We owe it to our fellow citizens to know on what basis the elections are being held," Sarkozy told European lawmakers. "It will be either Lisbon or Nice."

Under Lisbon, the European Parliament would have greater powers and its composition would be limited to 751 lawmakers rather than the current 785. European members of Parliament from more populous countries would represent more people than those from smaller countries, and no country could have fewer than 6 or more than 96 members.

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Paschen
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Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 01:49 on July 11th, 2008

Dave Keating, I like this story. It's good stuff.

I certainly hope that Lisbon goes through, even though I do not like Sarkozy to much!

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bhenak

This photo was taken shortly after the Lisbon Treaty was defeated in Ireland. It is an example of a billboard opposing the treaty that locals knew would make them increase the low taxes that gave them a competitive advantage and cede control to the EU.

bhenak has contributed a photo to this story.

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ninjadevotchka

Galway, Ireland: quite a lot of public - and publicly-posted - resistance to the EU treaty. Everything from reactionary rhetoric aimed at the (domestic) Irish government to anti-militarism, to anti-fox-hunting (and won't there always be an issue?) to simply objecting to the lack of public consultation or dissemination of the treaty itself.

With this many countries all needing to ratify the agreement, there will never be one.

ninjadevotchka has contributed a photo to this story.

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antal

Graffiti on the streets of Dublin, left after the referendum on the Lisbon Treaty.

antal has contributed a photo to this story.

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July 11, 2008 at 01:41 am by Dave Keating, 308 views, 4 comments

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