Tracking the Emerging Beast Power
European Parliament Ratifies Lisbon
Treaty Despite Protests
Deutsche Welle
The European Parliament on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly in favor of
the Lisbon Treaty, which reforms the European Union's institutions.
There were, however, some protests from Euroskeptics demanding
referenda.
| Euroskeptics accuse the EU leaders of refusing to give citizens a say on
a text that is practically identical to the draft European constitution
already rejected by French and Dutch voters in referenda in 2005. |
Parliamentarians endorsed the treaty by 525-115 with 29 abstentions.
European Commission Vice President Margot Wallstrom told lawmakers that
the agreement signed by heads of state and government in the Portuguese
capital last December "strengthens Europe's democratic legitimacy".
All 27 EU member states must individually ratify the wide-ranging text
for it to come into effect by next year, as scheduled. But only Ireland
is constitutionally bound to put it to a plebiscite. The governments of
France, Hungary, Malta, Romania and Slovenia have already approved the
document on behalf of their citizens.
Euroskeptics accuse the EU leaders of refusing to give citizens a say on
a text that is practically identical to the draft European constitution
already rejected by French and Dutch voters in referenda in 2005.
The constitution repackaged?
Like the rejected charter, the treaty provides for a longer-term
president and a foreign policy envoy, a simpler, more streamlined
decision-making system and more say for the national and European
parliaments. It does not include such symbols of statehood as a flag or
an anthem.
The agreement was painstakingly hammered out over months and includes
key policy opt-outs for Britain and Poland from the EU's Charter of
Fundamental Rights and judicial co-operation.
"This is nothing less than a massive exercise in deceit," said Nigel
Farage of the UK Independence Party. He reminded parliamentarians that
former British Prime Minister Tony Blair had promised the British people
a referendum on the constitution.
Defence of Parliamentary ratification
Slovenian Secretary of State for European Affairs Janez Lenarcic, whose
country holds the rotating presidency, responded: "There is nothing
wrong with parliamentary ratification. All EU member states are
representative parliamentary democracies."
European Parliament President Hans-Gert Poettering, a German Christian
Democrat, said the assembly represented the European people. He told the
protesters: "If your parents could see you, they would be ashamed."
Spanish conservative MEP, Inigo Mendez de Vigo, who was one of the
authors of a parliamentary report on the Lisbon Treaty, welcomed the
agreement. "The treaty is a political solution, a compromise to get us
out of the crisis, the impasse. But it also gives the European Union all
the instruments to respond to the concerns of the citizens."
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