
Can you imagine genuine federalists acting against the Rome Treaties 50 years ago, just because they had not been established in a participative democratic process?? Let alone the fact that they gave birth to a not so democratic system deprived of a directly elected European Parliament? Would this have been a sufficient reason for Ministers and MPs to resist the development of the EU? Amidst the inertia caused by the failure of the European Defence Community, the 1955 Conference of Messina re-launched negotiations behind closed doors. A small group of government representatives and legal experts gathered under the leadership of Paul-Henri Spaak at Val Duchesse. They were the Sherpa engineers of the 1950s who brokered a deal that led to the most impressive regional integration effort ever…
The Reform Treaty negotiations have been conducted in a completely legitimate way. None of the institutional proceedings, which were democratically agreed upon by all 27 national parliaments, have been violated. Moreover, it is widely recognised that governments have done their utmost to preserve many innovations of the Constitution. And this is just the way it works in a representative system: the citizens, through the European Convention, prepared the bulk of the texts and the governments through the Council cut the Gordian knots. It is thus only if one cherishes direct democracy principles that one could possibly attack the current state of affairs. The point is, however, that JEF is above all a pro-European organisation and only in the second place a pro-democratic movement. More democratic structures are of great concern to us, but there is, in the statutes of JEF-Europe, simply no reference to specifically direct democracy objectives.
JEF’s top priority is to vigorously support the EU’s gradual evolution towards a federal political system. Above all, we now want to be able to accommodate the Eastern enlargements and reinforce our European institutions. Let me therefore summarise which vital improvements are at stake:
- EU gets a single legal personality & reference to Fundamental Rights Charter make the document legally binding
- European Council President for a two and a half year term & High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy with diplomatic corps
- Smaller Commission & simplified “double majority” voting system in the Council (55% QMV and 65% population)
- One million citizens’ initiative
- More co-decision for the European Parliament in justice and home affairs
- Increased cooperation for security, immigration, climate change and energy sector
As always, there are shortcomings, delays and opt-outs due to the fact that all countries need to ratify the Reform Treaty in the end, but these are by far outweighed by the advantages. Whether we like it or not, the EU is still being managed and shaped by governments, too. They are fundamental building blocks and this is unlikely to change drastically in the near future. Less utopianism and more pragmatism would therefore demonstrate the seriousness of our organisation and our capability to understand how the EU actually operates.
Conclusion
Sure, we want to continue attacking the veto rights in the Council. Sure, we want to continue issuing critical press releases on the way Treaty negotiations are conducted and push for a real Constitution. And sure, we want JEF to put the citizen in the centre and advance more transparency and democracy in the decision-making system.
But we do NOT want JEF to fight against a Reform Treaty that allows the EU to progress, increase its efficiency and improve the democratic rules of the game step by step. On the contrary, we will need to summon up all our federalist campaigning strength for promoting the ratification of this highly important new Treaty, especially in the countries where a positive outcome cannot be taken for granted…




