16th
June 2008
Irish
voters
on June 12 said ‘No’
to the superpower ambitions of European political
elites, who want all 27 member-states of the European
Union to ratify the 269-page (about 3000 pages with
annexes)
Lisbon Treaty
that would turn the EU into a bureaucratic superstate.
Ireland was the only country to submit the “Reform
Treaty” to a popular vote; all other member states of
the EU intend to ratify the document through
parliamentary procedures. Although by EU law the Irish
vote (53.4 percent said ‘No’ and 46.6 percent said
‘Yes’) should kill the treaty (because it requires
unanimous approval to come into effect), European
politicians will almost certainly find a way to keep it
alive.
One of the
main objectives of the virtually unreadable treaty is to
turn the EU into a “global
geopolitical actor”
that can counterbalance the United States on the world
stage. To achieve this, European elites say the EU needs
to speak with “one voice” in international affairs. In
this context, the new treaty is designed to create the
job position of (an unelected) European president as
well as a powerful European foreign minister. It would
also establish a European diplomatic corps with European
embassies and a European army.
As many observers of European politics
know, democracy does not come easy on a continent where
European elites view themselves as an aristocracy
entitled to rule over the ignorant masses. Indeed, the
entire European social welfare state has been built upon
the unspoken quid pro quo of “bread and circuses” (ie,
the cradle-to-grave nanny state) for the general
populace, in exchange for their loyal submission to the
political and intellectual classes.
Thus it
should come as no big surprise that the word ‘No’ does
not exist in the European political lexicon. After
voters in
France
and
the Netherlands
rejected the European Constitution (of which the Lisbon
Treaty is an almost exact replica) in 2005, European
elites famously advised the miscreants to keep voting
until they come up with the
right answer.
So how about this time around? Will
European politicians, who say they want to bring
“Europe” closer to the people, accept the will of Irish
voters?
What follows is a brief summary of
comments made by select European leaders, both before
and after the Irish referendum. It not only provides an
explanation as to why Irish voters are turned off by the
Lisbon Treaty, but it also sheds some light on the state
of democracy in contemporary Europe.
Before the referendum:
· Irish
Prime Minister
Brian Cowen said
that it did not matter if people had not read the treaty
(he had not read it either, he admitted) and did not
understand it because they should trust their elected
leaders.
· French
Foreign Minister
Bernard Kouchner threatened
Irish voters if they failed to approve the treaty: “The
first victims would be the Irish. They have benefited
more than others,” he warned.
· French
President
Nicolas Sarkozy said:
“There will be no treaty at all if we had a referendum
in France.”
· Sarkozy
said:
“When the people say ‘No’, we cannot say the people are
wrong. We must ask why they said ‘No’.
·
German
Chancellor
Angela Merkel said:
“Naturally [the Lisbon Treaty] is still far from the
clarity of our constitution on how powers are really
delineated.”
· Former
French President
Valéry Giscard d’Estaing
said:
“The difference between the original Constitution and
the present Lisbon Treaty is one of approach, rather
than content ... the proposals in the original
constitutional treaty are practically unchanged. They
have simply been dispersed through old treaties in the
form of amendments. Why this subtle change? Above all,
to head off any threat of referenda by avoiding any form
of constitutional vocabulary ... But lift the lid and
look in the toolbox: all the same innovative and
effective tools are there, just as they were carefully
crafted by the European Convention.”
· D’Estaing
said:
“Public opinion will be led to adopt, without knowing
it, the proposals that we dare not present to them
directly ... All the earlier proposals will be in the
new text, but will be hidden and disguised in some way.”
· D’Estaing
said:
The approach “is to keep a part of the innovations of
the constitutional treaty and to split them into several
texts in order to make them less visible. The most
innovative dispositions would pass as simple amendments
of the Maastricht and Nice treaties. The technical
improvements would be gathered in an innocuous treaty.
The whole would be addressed to Parliaments, which would
decide with separate votes. The public opinion would
therefore unknowingly adopt the dispositions that it
would not accept if presented directly.”
· Irish
Foreign Minister
Dermot Ahern said:
“The substance of what was agreed in 2004 has been
retained. Really, what is gone is the term
‘constitution’.”
· Luxembourg
Prime Minister
Jean-Claude Juncker said:
“Of course there will be transfers of sovereignty. But
would I be intelligent to draw the attention of public
opinion to this fact?”
· Juncker
said:
Fears connected with the treaty “most often stem from
the fact that we use a language incomprehensible for
ordinary people.”
· Belgian
Foreign Minister
Karel de Gucht said:
“The aim of the Constitutional Treaty was to be more
readable; the aim of this [Lisbon] treaty is to be
unreadable… The Constitution aimed to be clear, whereas
this treaty had to be unclear. It is a success.”
· European
Commission President
José Manuel Barroso said:
“Sometimes I like to compare the EU as a creation to the
organization of empires. We have the dimension of Empire
but there is a great difference. Empires were usually
made with force with a center imposing diktat, a will on
the others. Now what we have is the first non-imperial
empire.”
· Barroso
said:
“If a referendum had to be held on the creation of the
European Community or the introduction of the euro, do
you think these would have passed?”
· Barroso
said:
“Referendums make the process of approval of European
treaties much more complicated and less
predictable…every member state [considering a referendum
should] think twice”
· Spanish
Prime Minister
José Luis Rodríguez
Zapatero said:
“We have not let a single substantial point of the
Constitutional Treaty go...”
· Italian
President
Giorgio Napolitano said:
“Those who are anti-EU are terrorists. It is
psychological terrorism to suggest the specter of a
European superstate.”
· A
leaked February memo
from the British Embassy in Dublin, which summarized a
briefing about Irish government thinking over the
referendum, reported that Irish diplomats described
Sarkozy as “completely unpredictable”. The memo
emphasized that the campaign would not focus on the
detail of the treaty because it was “largely
incomprehensible to the lay reader.” The Irish
government wanted to hold the referendum in October
2008, but decided on an earlier date because of “the
risk of unhelpful developments during the [six-month
rotating]
French Presidency
[of the EU, which begins on July 1] —
particularly related to EU
defense
— were just too great” and might alienate Irish voters.
· Irish
officials said
they wanted “a helpful, low-profile” role from European
officials in Brussels before the referendum on anything
which might damage support for a ‘Yes’ vote. European
Commission Vice President Margot Wallstrom allegedly
told Ahern that she was “willing to tone down or delay
messages that might be unhelpful.”
After the referendum:
· Barroso
said
he had spoken to Cowen and agreed with him that the ‘No’
vote was not a vote against the EU. “Ireland remains
committed to a strong Europe,” he said. “The treaty is
alive. Ratifications [in other EU member states] should
continue to take their course.”
· Slovenian
Prime Minister
Janez Janša,
whose country currently holds the EU’s rotating
presidency, said: “I will invite the Irish prime
minister to explain the reasons for the rejection of the
treaty by the Irish people.”
· Polish
Prime Minister
Donald Tusk said:
“We shall effectively look for ways to ensure it comes
into force. Irrespective of the results of the
referendum in Ireland … Europe will find a way of
implementing this treaty.”
· Juncker
said:
“This vote doesn’t resolve any of the European problems;
it almost makes every European problem bigger. It was a
bad choice for Europe.”
· Sarkozy
and Merkel issued
a joint statement
saying they “hope that the other member states will
continue the process of ratification.”
· German
Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier
said: “The ratification process must continue. I am
still convinced that we need this treaty.”
· French
European Affairs Minister
Jean-Pierre Jouyet
talked of finding a “legal arrangement” that would allow
Ireland to ratify the treaty anyway.
· British
Foreign Secretary
David Miliband said
the United Kingdom would press on with ratification,
saying: “It’s right that we continue with our own
process.”
· At
a
June 13 press conference in
Brussels,
supposedly impartial (but frustrated and angry)
reporters and other members of the European press corps
accused European Commission Spokesman Johannes
Laitenberger of not doing enough to refute the “myths
and false rumors” that doomed the treaty in Ireland.