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Comments on the article: What Europe needs now

23/03/2007

On the eve of EU's 50th anniversary, German philosopher Jürgen Habermas sets out what he believes are the most pressing items on the European agenda

 
Larry Houle
(3 comments)
registered on 24/03/2007
THE EU’S DESTINY: A EUROPE WITHOUT BORDERS
Quote:
THE EU’S DESTINY: A EUROPE WITHOUT BORDERS A POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND SECURITY MASTERPLAN FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS
THE EU’S DESTINY: A EUROPE WITHOUT BORDERS
A POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND SECURITY MASTERPLAN FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS

The EU has brought 50 years of peace and security to Europe. In the 36 years between 1914 and 1945 110,000,000 million Europeans were killed, thousands of cities destroyed and entire nations laid waste. There isn’t a European alive today who shouldn’t get down on their knees and give thanks to the courage and vision, the original founders showed by the creation of the EU. For the nations of Germany, France, Italy etc to set aside hundreds of years of war, death and destruction to create a new country called The European Union was indeed one of the most courageous and visionary acts in human history.

The present Europeans – their descendents – must find the same vision and courage to bring all the European people’s into the European national family – to complete the national destiny of Europe: A Europe Without Divisions: A Europe Without Borders.

Following is a Political, Economic, and Security Masterplan for the EU’s future generations:

1. A Special Political and Economic Relationship between the EU and Russia.
2. Letters of Invitation for EU Membership sent to the European Nations of Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, and the Balkan states. As these countries are going through the 15 year process of completing the 35 chapters necessary to become full members of the EU – they would be immediately incorporated into a free trade zone starting an economic revolution (see 3).
3. Creation of a free trade zone including EU, Russia, Balkans, Ukraine, Moldovia, Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, the 5 Stan states, and Mongolia.
4. Expanding the NAFTA free trade zone westward and joining it to the EU and the above free trade zone creating an economic giant of 1.4 billion people
5. The EU would reduce its trade deficit with China by 10% a year over 10 years shifting 150 billion euros of trade ( the amount of the trade surplus China presently has with the EU) (go to www.chinademocracy.net) into the above free trade zone dramatically reducing the cost of accession of these countries into the EU.
6. The Brussels Parliament to be divided into 2 tiers of nations: Those nations seeking closer political and economic integration and all the other members. All laws affecting the whole EU would be voted on by the entire assembly. Those laws affecting the countries seeking greater integration to be voted on only by the parliamentarians from these countries.
7. A plan to bring Turkey into the EU.
8. Proposal of a Special Relationship for Iraqi Kurdistan.
9. A Special Political and Economic Partnership offered to the Israeli and Palestine peoples.
For a more detailed explanation of these proposals go to: www.eudemocracy.net

Written by

Larry Houle
E-mail: intermedusa@yahoo.com

Created on 24/03/2007 | Reviewed on 25/03/2007
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Forone
(11 comments)
registered on 18/01/2007
Proposing Not a Next Step but a New Structure
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"At the same time, the referendum would be binding only on those EU member-nations in which a majority of citizens had voted for the reforms. If the referendum were to succeed, it would mean the abandonment of the model of Europe as a convoy in which the slowest vehicle sets the pace for all."
I've been an admirer of Habermas, more as a cultural critic than political commentator, and typically find his vision of another referendum for consolidation of European central government, foreign policy and finances for selecting states impractical. Certainly the current EU members can and should take another referendum step together which is not the ridiculous bureaucratic dog's breakfast of the failed one. (Commentators who solemnly cogitated about some essential defect in the soul of Europe while neglecting the essentially soulless morass of what Europeans were asked to vote on simply missed the point.) Habermas sees that his vision is too far too fast for the current EU constituency, so proposes that a core of the willing should move separately to implement it for themselves. He apparently does not see or does not care that many or most of the nations that predictably fail to take the radical supra-national step (for fear of being subsumed by a mega-state in which their issues and interests would be lost) would never joint the core, but instead would make their own deals with each other and the rest of the world. One can sympathize, with hindsight, to suggest that the EU might have done better over the last 50 years to consolidate its institutions within its original core group before it admitted so many diverse, opportunistic and less developed member states, but those decisions cannot be undone now.
Created on 25/03/2007 | Reviewed on 26/03/2007
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padav
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registered on 28/04/2007
Country: NW England
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What Europe needs now (part 1)
A fascinating perspective from Habermas, in which he correctly identifies the real obstacle to advancement of the Union’s integration process; namely individual member state administrations who are all, to a greater or lesser degree depending upon the particular issue at stake, apprehensive about/hostile to any kind of debate leading to the ultimate establishment of more conventionally recognisable forms of European governance.

As a genuinely interested citizen, I have viewed the evolution of the “European project” during the last twenty five years with a growing sense of frustration. There have been highs and lows along the way but one seminal factor has become abundantly clear to me with the passage of time and that is the inherent flaw represented by the “Europe of Nations” geo-political template upon which entire integration process of European Union was founded. It is this omni-present orthodoxy that now governs the entire deliberative activities of any and all relevant parties involved and shapes policies influencing the pace and direction of European integration.

Time and again we (as Europeans) bear witness to the damaging impact of this potentially negative force operating both within political élites and the wider public environment:

• The presumption of National electoral platforms as the only legitimate means of testing public dis/approval of proposed political decisions
• The denial of access (by National actors) for constitutional sub-national tiers of governance to any meaningful contribution in the development of policy/strategy at European level
• The exclusive representation of Europe’s “official” diversity using member state labels
• The reinforcement of member state (National) labels in European media reportage
• The hybridised nature of the Union’s institutional architecture
• The Nice Treaty as a prime example of increasingly elaborate voting weight mechanisms designed around perceived and / or factual representations of each member state’s worth / contribution
• The rotating EU presidency and absence of unified EU head of state
• The practice of allowing each member state to appoint one European Commissioner
• The retention of individual member state veto (over changes deemed as significant) as a sanction of last resort
• The obsession with measuring each member state’s nett fiscal balance in the EU budget
• The lack of a coherent single foreign policy for the EU
• Official public opinion measures primarily delineated using member state criteria
• The continued dominance of individual member state media infrastructures
• The apparently sacrosanct nature of individual member state national interests in pan-European negotiations

No doubt readers can think of a myriad of other examples
Created on 29/04/2007 | Reviewed on 30/04/2007
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padav
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registered on 28/04/2007
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What Europe needs now (part 2)
The absence of any significant form of Europeanization within general political discourse across the Union has a “double whammy” effect in so much as it acts to frustrate the emergence of aspirational strategies whilst simultaneously providing succour to those (essentially Nationalist inspired) groupings who remain implacably opposed to the general process of integration in any shape or form.

The ongoing constitutional debacle is symbolic of this deeper malaise. We should recall that the entire process aimed at developing a constitutional framework for the Union, beginning with the Laeken declaration of November 2001 was fatally flawed from the outset because it decreed that the dominant parties involved in the complex negotiating procedures were individual member state administrations.

In the initial stages of the Convention established by Laeken, groups representing civil society were the main protagonists and with a few exceptions the general tone of the debate remained essentially optimistic and progressive. Here were genuine stakeholders in everyday European society elaborating, in an open and transparent manner, upon their vision for more inclusive “bottom up” forms of governance driven by the genuine diversity of our continent rather than the artificial variety represented by “officialdom”.

In stark contrast, once member state administrations (particularly those of the larger states) took hold of the Convention’s deliberations, the process reverted to type in the form of closed session back room bi-lateral wheeler dealing. The Convention’s output, in attempting to accommodate the so called National interests of these powerful parties, became an incredibly complex and impenetrable document, far removed from the aspirations of ordinary European citizens for a simple statement of shared values and the establishment of a framework of genuinely European significance.

In short, the Constitution should have been an exclusively European document, debated in the European arena and deliberated upon by a European electorate. The constitutional process presented a golden opportunity, spurned yet again, to Europeanize the debate and send a powerful message: “Europe matters so we will let the European people decide its future”

What we got was a “dogs’ breakfast” of complexity, vacillation and compromise driven by the orthodox “Europe of Nations” model, now manifestly past its sell by date in the 21st century.

To top it all, the very same fixed mindset decreed that the ratification process should follow the individual member state approval route. Thus a document of potentially monumental significance to present and future European generations was effectively held ransom to the petty diktats of individual member state political squabbling; a situation prevailing today.

Therefore some increasingly germane questions European citizens should now be asking en-masse are:

• How should the Union’s “Diversity” be represented (officially)?
• How can the complex and hybridised nature of the Union’s institutional architecture be simplified, democratized and legitimized?
• Do individual member state administrations (particularly the larger examples: UK, France and Germany) really represent the collective interests of European citizens or do they actually conspire to protect their own fiefdoms of power and influence?
• Is the dominant “Europe of Nations” geo-political template still fit for purpose? (If the answer is NO, what credible alternatives are on offer?)
Created on 29/04/2007 | Reviewed on 30/04/2007
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