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The European Union
and You

An up-to-date reference book and critique of the European Union. More information at
www.saxonbooks.co.uk

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David Roberts now has a new EU blog.Details Opposite


European Union, key issues, news, information, documents, expert witnesses. Written from a UK perspective.

Website edited by David Roberts, author of The European Union and You.


Latest additions to this website: 

The topics covered in this blog are: Accountability, Commission, Constitution, Council (of ministers), Democracy, European Council, Ever closer union/Integration, Fisheries, Human Rights, Subsidiarity, Transparency and the Treaty of Lisbon.

Treaty of Lisbon (The Reform Treaty)

Treaty of Lisbon key facts and issues

Introducing the Treaty of Lisbon

Gordon Brown on the Treaty of Lisbon

UK government Scrutiny Committee report on the Treaty of Lisbon

EU leaders plan to minimise public debate on the Treaty of Lisbon

EU leaders spill the beans about how they set out to mislead the citizens of Europe (What they actually said.)

Foreign policy issues (UK independence is not fully maintained)

Link to a side by side comparison of the two texts: The Treaty of Lisbon and the European Constitution. www.openeurope.org.uk/research/comparative.pdf 

 

Reform

How to reform the EU (The reforms the EU really needs)

The reforms EU Leaders wanted

See also Laeken Declaration below

 

Official documents or statements

The Laeken Declaration (text of official document)

Foreign policy section of the Treaty of Lisbon

Treaty of Lisbon on who is in charge of the EU

 

Referendums on the Treaty of Lisbon

For and against a referendum on the Treaty of Lisbon

William Cash MP makes the case for a referendum

UK MPs condemn betrayal of trust over the No-Referendum decision on the Treaty of Lisbon - Speeches in parliamentary debate, 21 January 2008.

Links to websites concerned with and about the EU
Links page


17 June 2008

The UK will ratify Lisbon, but you can register your objection with Downing Street. 

On Thursday 12 June the people of Ireland voted to reject the Lisbon Treaty. Under the EU's rules for the treaty to come into force all EU member states must ratify the treaty.

But politicians across Europe are refusing to accept the result.  They insist that the Treaty must go ahead regardless of the rejection by one of the member states. 

Despite the no vote, the UK Government is planning to carry on regardless, and ratify the Treaty in the House of Lords on Wednesday18th June.

Clearly EU leaders, including Gordon brown, have not been able to adjust to the legal reality of the Irish NO vote on Lisbon. 

To register a protest with Downing Street and send a message to Gordon Brown asking him to respect the verdict of the Irish people you can click this link and sign the petition.

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/Abandon-Lisbon/

17 June 2008

EU leaders reject their own rules on EU agreements

It took many months following the rejection of the EU Constitution in 2005 before EU leaders accepted that the Constitution could not come into force. Now we are seeing a re-run of this situation with EU leaders proclaiming that the Lisbon treaty is not dead.

"The Treaty is not dead. The Treaty is alive, and we will try to work to find a solution."- European Commission President, Jose Barroso.

"We are sticking with our goal for it to come into force. The ratification process must continue." - German Foreign Minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

"I don't think you can say the treaty of Lisbon is dead even if the ratification process will be delayed." - French Europe Minister, Jean-Pierre Jouyet

Spanish Europe Minister Lopez Garrido says: "The treaty will be applied, albeit a few months late."

"18 countries have now passed the reform treaty...each country must see the ratification process to a conclusion... there needs to be a British view as well as an Irish view."- British Foreign Minister, David Miliband.

Citizens of Europe, be thankful to the Irish for their No vote on the Treaty of Lisbon.

Ireland was the only EU country to be allowed a referendum on the Treaty of Lisbon. On Thursday (12 June) Ireland decisively rejected the Treaty of Lisbon with 53.2% voting against the treaty and 46.4% voting in favour. This is a remarkable result. The turnout was very high for a referendum - 53% (compared with only 34% in the Irish referendum on the Nice Treaty in 201).And all the main Irish political parties campaigned for a Yes vote. This suggests a deep distrust of both the EU and politicians.  

The vote cannot be dismissed as merely one per cent of the European Union rejecting the Treaty. This document was in all essentials the same as the European Constitution of 2004. Apart from a few details the differences were almost entirely changes in presentation: changes in terminology, a re-ordering of the articles and a change of name. (Evidence here.) That being the case we must add the Dutch and French rejection of the Constitution to the rejection of Lisbon by the Irish.

Plans for the transfer of power from elected state governments to Brussels do not have the support of the people of Europe. None of the parliaments of EU member states were elected on a manifesto to transfer more power from their states to Brussels. They are acting without and in most case probably against the known wishes of their citizens. If EU leaders were confident of popular support they would not be so adamantly opposed to referendums. But they know the results of opinion polls and have colluded to cheat the people of Europe of control of their own destiny.

French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, has described referendums as "dangerous". More explicitly, he said in November last year in a closed meeting with senior EU MPs, "France was just ahead of all the other countries in voting no. It would happen in all member states if they have a referendum. There is a cleavage between people and governments."

What EU politicians refuse to face is that the EU project to integrate the states of Europe into a single state, transferring more and more powers from the governments of member states to Brussels, cannot proceed any further. The EU project, which started in 1957, has reached its limit. So the first reform that must be made to the European Union is the scrapping of the repeated treaty commitments to "ever closer union". This is not a draconian measure. In itself it necessitates no change in the way the EU is presently run. Wholehearted European co-operation can and should continue.

But other reforms are vital, too. The EU must become fully democratic. There must be means to introduce new and alternative policies and people when there are failures of policies (for example, the catastrophic failures of the EU fisheries policies). The meetings of EU institutions must be opened up to public view. Their documents must be made available for all to see. Politicians and administrators must be fully accountable. Corruption must be ended. For a fuller discussion of these reform ideas see the reforms section of this website and my book, The European Union and You.

David Roberts, 14 June 2008.


The most important debate on Europe for more than 15 years

The British parliament began debating the new EU treaty, the Treaty of Lisbon, on Monday 21st January 2008. The Prime Minister was out of the country. The 5 hour debate was, at times, impassioned.

Constitutional Change?

The Foreign Secretary David Miliband, said "My case to this house is that this Treaty does not constitute fundamental constitutional change." Is this true? This important question and the possible effects of the new treaty are is explored on this website.

Referendum needed?

The other hotly debated issue was the question of whether or not the people of Britain should be allowed to vote directly on the ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon. Speaker after speaker spoke of a betrayal of trust if a referendum is not agreed to. This topic is explored more fully on the Referendum page. What MPs actually said on the topic can be read at MPs' on referendum.

 

Where does the editor of this website stand? For or against the EU?

I have just spent three years investigating the European Union - its merits and problems. My 600 page book, The European Union and You, is the result of this work.
The first question most people ask me is "Are you for or against the European Union?" The short answer is: We are part of the European Union. It is very important to our trade and way of life and there is no option to separate ourselves from the rest of Europe. But there are many serious things wrong with the way the EU operates. The EU is disconnected from its citizens who feel they don't understand it and are powerless to influence it. Therefore I am a critic of the EU, a Reformist European.
EU leaders back in 2001 recognised many of the problems I describe in my book. At that time they issued the Laeken Declaration which set out their concerns. The EU Constitution (now transformed into the Treaty of Lisbon) was supposed to deal with the problems. Unfortunately the Treaty of Lisbon fails to address the most important issues and in many ways makes matters worse. That is what this website and my book are mainly concerned with.
The EU must be reformed or member states are likely to change their relationship with it and withdraw from some aspects of EU centralised control. I think the Treaty of Lisbon creates many more problems than it solves. Fresh thinking is needed, but it seems to me that the EU's leading politicians are out of touch and out of ideas.

David Roberts

David Roberts                 David Roberts 

David Roberts has worked in industry, as a teacher, and for the past eleven years as a writer and publisher. He is editor of two anthologies of First World War poetry, author of a pamphlet on United Nations' reform and is preparing a book on international law. He has spoken on international relations at conferences and to interested groups including The Young Fabians, London, Oxford University United Nations Association, and the World Social Forum in London. He spoke on the EU in Brighton in May and discussed the topic with a the audience in the Brighton Festival Fringe.  

"The European Union and You" is the fruit of almost three years of full-time investigation.

 His publishing imprint is Saxon Books: www.saxonbooks.co.uk

His war poetry website is www.warpoetry.co.uk

Website last updated 18 July 2008

Website copyright©David Roberts 2008