http://www.brussels journal.com/ node/1907
Published on The Brussels Journal (http://www.brussels journal.com)
Germany’s EU Plan: The Constitution Is Dead, Long Live the ‘Basic Law’
By Elaib Harvey
Created 2007-02-14 20:48

Sometimes I sit in my office and listen to the so-called debates in the
Parliament chamber through a nifty little device hidden behind the ashtray on my
desk. Yesterday was one of those times. The speaker was the President of the
Parliament Hans-Gert Poettering putting forward what he would like to achieve in
his period of office which runs until 2009 and the European elections. It
appears he would quite like it to run a little longer than that, 1000 years
maybe…

What got me is when through the simultaneous translation he said “Treaties are
to be obeyed.”

Today I got the English transcript of the text from the Parliament interpreters
who are given the text in order, sensibly, to make life easier for them,

No country, no nation of the European Union is to be left alone with its
problems. But this also rules out national selfishness. Anyone who only serves
the interests of his own country will ultimately squander these as well, because
he will destroy the solidarity necessary for the defence of those interests.

Sorry I cannot see the causal link in this statement. If you defend your
national interest you are condemned to failing in defence of those interests. I
guess we should all give up and go home to allow those nice technocrats to run
everything. What utter twaddle. It is true that sometimes actions that are taken
in the national interest are taken without full knowledge of the facts, and
sometimes these actions are counter productive, however to suggest that all
actions in the national interest are counterproductive is sophistry.

We intend to help to ensure that under the German Council Presidency a road
map and a mandate are agreed at the summit in Brussels on 21 and 22 June, as the
outcome of which full implementation of the substantive core of the European
Constitution will be in place by the next European Parliament in 2009. I would
like to remind you that the Constitutional Treaty was signed by all 27
governments. Of course we have to respect the results of the referenda.

This is where things get really serious. Please note the comment about the 2004
signing of the Constitution in Rome. Essentially when a head of government signs
up, really that is all there is there. As far as I can gather – and yes I do
have this on good authority – the plan is as this:

Over the last few weeks German diplomats have been subtle arm twisting to get a
text together for the Berlin March 25, 50th anniversary signing of a solemn
declaration by the 27 heads of government. This solemn declaration is 95%
written and is a great waft of well meaning guff about the continents liberal
tolerant history and how all governments in the 27 are terribly nice, and how we
all love fluffy bunny wunnys and kiddiewinks and motherhood and apple pie and so
forth.

Then on the evening of the Brussels Council Meeting and International Woman's
Day (8th March) at a dinner in Brussels the final phrases will be included. This
phrase will commit the signatories to the ratification of a ‘basic Law’ which
will replace the Constitution. It will be short, much less that 50 pages unlike
the Constitution that weighed in at well over 300. The word Constitution will be
expunged. It will, as Mr Poettering points out, contain the substantive aspects
of the Constitution including the Foreign Minister, the Defence Minister, the
end of vetoes in 47 separate areas of policy, and so on.

Interestingly one on the signatories to this document will be the new Dutch
Prime Minister who is expected to announce his cabinet the previous week. This
of course means that one of the countries with the biggest interest in the new
Constitution will not have been able to discuss its position in time for him to
make a decision, he will be bounced.

Poettering went on,

But regardless of that [the referenda results]: If a change of government in
a country of the European Union calls into question what has been agreed, not
only is society split in that nation, but our continent, which is quite
complicated enough, is increasingly incapacitated. We must commit to our
European legal principles: pacta sunt servenda – treaties are to be honoured.
[not obeyed, but maybe the interpreter was more accurate than the prewritten
text, I don’t know]

Eh, run that past me again. If a country votes for a government that opposes the
Constitution – and yes he does mean the UK here, wake up at the back – then he
is suggesting that the government, you know, the democratically elected one, has
no right to recind a previous government’s position. Yes treaties should be
honoured, but pacta sunt servenda, (article 26) though it requires good faith on
the part of the contracting parties and does not require slavish devotion.
Moreover, ‘no parliament may bind its successor.’

Currently the Swedish government is taking a lot of pressure to start the
ratification process. Of course the only country where there is a constitutional
requirement to hold a referendum is Ireland, but they do not envisage serious
problems there. Poland is weakening, its Prime Minister who once said that
Poland would never ratify the Constitution is now making noises about the need
for a mini treaty. The new Government in the Czech Republic is no longer nearly
as hostile to the idea (though how they will persuade Vaclav Klaus to sign
remains to be seen). Slowly and surely all the countries will be expected to
submit to the ‘basic Law’ of the community until there is one left in glorious
isolation, yup that'll be the UK again. Then we will be told, ratify or leave.

Now if under the dubious enforceability of pacta sunt servenda, Mr Blair signs
up on March the 25th in Berlin, and then follows this up at the June summit, he
then leaves, with Gordon holding an impossible baby. He will try, no doubt, to
force this through like John Major did the Maastricht Treaty. But I just don’t
think that that will wash. He would be flirting with revolt. Is that what Mr
Poettering was talking about when he said that societies may split.
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