I would like to gain a greater understanding of the Constitution of the EU that was rejected by France and the Netherlands.
Why is it good? Why is it bad? I read up on it at Wiki, but that just won't do. I need the voice of the people here.
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I would like to gain a greater understanding of the Constitution of the EU that was rejected by France and the Netherlands.
Why is it good? Why is it bad? I read up on it at Wiki, but that just won't do. I need the voice of the people here.
![]()
It won't happen. At least not anytime soon. As I see it, the EU constitution was/is a mishmash of ideas that attempted to combine all the national interests of the member states and so therefore appealed to none of them.
For instance; The French voted it down because they couldn't swallow the Anglo-Saxon model of a free market, whilst the British (If Tony had had the cajones to allow a vote for us) would have voted it down as we equally couldn't stomach the 'social' model that the French so adore.
The only states that voted for the constitution were/are the net recipients of cash from Bruxelles, and then, IIRC, they didn't put to a plebiscite, (Spain excepted) they just steamrollered it through the various national Parliaments.
Now that the French and the Dutch (and more than likely the British) have torpedoed the project it is unlikely that it will be implemented in it's present form.
It is also unlikely that the EU will make the mistake asking the electorate to approve any future constitution, as the voters keep coming up with the wrong answers.
For instance, when the vote for the common currency (the Euro) came up, although various electorates rejected the idea, the EU repeatedly pushed for referenda after referenda until the people came up with the right answer. Those were the lucky ones. Countries, such as Greece, never bothered to ask the people if they wanted the Drachma abolished. (As a piece of trivia the Drachma was the worlds oldest continuous currency.)
Plans are now afoot to implement to EU constitution by the back door, circumventing the will of the people, therefore not having to bother with the messiness of a democratic mandate.
Until the EU becomes more accountable and transparent, (it's own auditors have refused to sign off the accounts for nearly a decade) this British subject for one will not be a happy camper.![]()
There are times I wish they’d just ban everything- baccy and beer, burgers and bangers, and all the rest- once and for all. Instead, they creep forward one apparently tiny step at a time. It’s like being executed with a bacon slicer.
“Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy.”
To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticise.
"The purpose of a university education for Left / Liberals is to attain all the politically correct attitudes towards minorties, and the financial means to live as far away from them as possible."
It is too long and too complicated. The point of a Constitution is that it is short and to the point, outlining the basics.
The proposed European Constitution is a mammoth in size. The only other country that had a Constitution that long was the France, and that Republic lasted for a very short time before collapsing.
A Constituion that is too long needs to be changed often, therefore denying the prupose of a Constiution, to be a lasting document outlining the basic ideals of a state.
Also, it's rejection, aside from the above outlined reason is for the simple fact that the EU is currently moving a bit too fast. It is still young, and the current attempts to push it toward a state are going too fast, and many populations of the numerous countries of Europe are not quite ready or willing to lose (as they percieve it) their national identity to some formless beraucracy in Brusells.
I am not going to vote for something that doesn't even know what it's supposed to be. EU is intrusive, corrupt and undemocratic, and on top of that pretty much useless. A great example is the cartoon affair, when ambassy's were being attacked they were probably discussing the prefered intensity of the color red of tomatoes, it all means nothing. Giving more power to nothing, no thanks.
Screw them.
Isn't the EU constitution merely putting all existing treaties and regulations on a single piece of paper? The "constitution" is there, whether you ratify or not, since the component parts have already been ratified. What the top brass want to do is rationalise the whole massive unruly thing.
One thing I can't understand is why the French rejected it. They pass all the EU laws as have been argued by the member states, but they ignore anything that doesn't suit them, so "imposing an Anglo-Saxon model" shouldn't really affect them, since they'll do whatever they like anyway.
The more I look at things, the more I feel that Blair and Britain are the true Europeans, unlike the statist French. We've offered numerous concessions, including giving up much of our rebate, in exchange for reforms of farming subsidies. But the French farmers won't budge an inch (or even a centimetre).
True words indeed. Seems like it was a mistake to call it a "Constitution" and making noise about, because people started thinking in national terms and expectations changed. Ofcourse without this move, the central goal wouldn't have been reached (or at least attempted): familiarize the citizens of the EU with the whole structure and its treaties, by having a codified version of all previous ones in one document. It was also an opportunity to encorporate the European Convention of Human Rights, which was only typically in force and not in a binding documentfor all member states and european institutions.Isn't the EU constitution merely putting all existing treaties and regulations on a single piece of paper? The "constitution" is there, whether you ratify or not, since the component parts have already been ratified. What the top brass want to do is rationalise the whole massive unruly thing.
It must be said that internal politics had a lot to do with the rejections, as well as atavistic fear of the "unknown", or at least vague, something that the EU remains for the majority of the population.
I'm not so sure about it, because while Britain might be seeing it from a point of view based on global competitiveness, the whole agriculture issue has strong social connotations in the relevant countries and should there be a radical reform, it could cause a great deal of instability (plus, it'd be a political suicide). Ofcourse at some point a long-term solution should be found.The more I look at things, the more I feel that Blair and Britain are the true Europeans, unlike the statist French. We've offered numerous concessions, including giving up much of our rebate, in exchange for reforms of farming subsidies. But the French farmers won't budge an inch (or even a centimetre).
[VDM]Alexandros
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So does this "constitution" tell the government what it can't do or does it tell the people what they can do? I.E. free subjects vs. citizens.
Reinvent the British and you get a global finance center, edible food and better service. Reinvent the French and you may just get more Germans.
Ik hou van ferme grieten en dikke pintenOriginally Posted by Evil_Maniac From Mars
Down with dried flowers!
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
The French rejected it because they hate their government and would say 'no' to whatever it may propose.Originally Posted by Pannonian
While true thats not particually helpful to the current debate. The problem with the constitution is that it codified and fixed much in the EU which is still supposed to be temporary, for instance, the current VAT system is open to fraud because it is a transition model, rather than the final model which requires harmonisation of VAT accross Europe.
Another problem was that it would have made it much harder to ever leave the EU.
The EU needs to hand the power of law-making and treaty signing from the commision to the parliament. Until it does it has no right to aspirations of nation-hood.
Personnally, I want out. If in 30 years it has sorted itself out maybe I'll want back in.
"If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."
[IMG]https://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4917/logoromans23pd.jpg[/IMG]
Generalizations I'd say. While the Parliament's role can't be compared with their national equivalent, there are certainly reasons for this, federalization and regional integration theory 101. Ofcourse from republic day #1, there is a general tendency for the executive power to collect additional functions or at least exert some influence on them. But when we 're talking about regional organisations, we 're referring to international treaties, and as a general rule the negotiations required have been the realm of government premiums for quite some time.The EU needs to hand the power of law-making and treaty signing from the commision to the parliament. Until it does it has no right to aspirations of nation-hood.
The EU has progressed towards a more multifaceted organisation, and the Parliament is gaining steadily functions and powers. The Constitution would 've clearly marked a move towards a general rule of co-decision and as such, criticisms of not promoting a more democratic rule are inaccurate.
Anyway, people who mourn their tax-money, currently devoured by the unrelenting Brussels-bureaucrats [filed under: corrupt], could peruse a few pages from the official EU-sites.
[VDM]Alexandros
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Did you consider that by your no-vote you prevented the EU from aquiring the tools necessary for any effective common policy in the first place?Originally Posted by Fragony
That´s gotta be the reason they elected it.Originally Posted by A.Saturnus
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Then again, people can often choose only between two evils.![]()
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
Main problem is that nobody knows what it is and what it is supposed do.
The politicians don't know, I don't know, you don't, Chuck Norris doesn't know and several of the Lesser Know Divine Beings are having problems with it.
Chuck Norris know eveything. He's just not telling.![]()
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There are times I wish they’d just ban everything- baccy and beer, burgers and bangers, and all the rest- once and for all. Instead, they creep forward one apparently tiny step at a time. It’s like being executed with a bacon slicer.
“Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy.”
To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticise.
"The purpose of a university education for Left / Liberals is to attain all the politically correct attitudes towards minorties, and the financial means to live as far away from them as possible."
They could have elected another government, but they would have hated that too.Originally Posted by Husar
Maybe true, still the Constitution unfortunately didn't feel like a constitution. That wasn't the main reason for its failure, but it may have contributed.Originally Posted by Louis VI the Fat
The other option was a French Hitler.Originally Posted by Husar
The EU aspires to nationhood, don't insult my intelligence by telling me any different. The commision is composed of PMs, Chancellors or whatever else claims rights on the issue at hand. I don't want Tony Blair representing me or making these decisions for me, I want an MP.Generalizations I'd say. While the Parliament's role can't be compared with their national equivalent, there are certainly reasons for this, federalization and regional integration theory 101. Ofcourse from republic day #1, there is a general tendency for the executive power to collect additional functions or at least exert some influence on them. But when we 're talking about regional organisations, we 're referring to international treaties, and as a general rule the negotiations required have been the realm of government premiums for quite some time.
The EU has progressed towards a more multifaceted organisation, and the Parliament is gaining steadily functions and powers. The Constitution would 've clearly marked a move towards a general rule of co-decision and as such, criticisms of not promoting a more democratic rule are inaccurate.
The EU is moving towards a federal state, until the power to make decisions of law and treaty are done democratically and transparently I won't be happy.
In Britain the Prime Minister can't just sign treaties without Parliament's approval, but thats exactly what he does in Brussles.
Its not right. You can't leave these decisions to so few people so far from reality.
"If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."
[IMG]https://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4917/logoromans23pd.jpg[/IMG]
No, the EU doesn't aspire to nationhood. What it aspires to depends on whom you ask and when. Although, generally, one can safely say that a steady course towards a federation or an ever-deepening confederation is what europhiles promote.The EU aspires to nationhood, don't insult my intelligence by telling me any different. The commision is composed of PMs, Chancellors or whatever else claims rights on the issue at hand. I don't want Tony Blair representing me or making these decisions for me, I want an MP.
I don't know what you mean with "the commision". If you have something specific regarding the EU legislative procedures to blame the Commision or the Council for then better name it because it's hard to converse on a positional basis when such issues are put forward.
BTW, the EU hasn't got a clear legal personality, as outlined by the Constitution Treaty.
It's also very useful checking in which fields the EU has common policies and how they function.
Last edited by L'Impresario; 07-23-2006 at 00:07.
[VDM]Alexandros
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It is good firstly because it codifies a lot of existing treaties. And mainly because it would streamline EU decision making. Amongst others by allowing qualified majority for a lot of policy rather than having to rely on all member states agreeing on every single subject brought up.Originally Posted by Eclectic
There can be no effective EU with each country retaining a veto. The last round of enlargement brought the number of member states up to 25, members as different as Sweden and Cyprus.
It isn't.Why is it bad?
The irony is that this constitution would've repaired a lot of the shortcomings of the EU, but got rejected precisely because of exasparation at those shortcomings.
Last edited by Louis VI the Fat; 07-21-2006 at 23:56.
Yes, but the EU is not a country. It is a supranational organization. The two cannot be compared.Originally Posted by Keba
This EU constitution is not a constitution in the classical sense, but a misnamed treaty on the functioning of an supranational organization of sovereign states.
And now for something completely different...
I thought this was funny:
Originally Posted by Guardian
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