Here's another document that I've read lately, which you might find of interest. The good news is that I can now remove it from my in-tray and file it...
The European Union must take a decisive step towards a federal economic
government, with common fiscal policies and a larger budget, if it is to save
the euro. Saving the euro is the precondition for the economic recovery of all Europe . Therefore a major revision of the EU treaties can no longer be avoided.
EU states which choose not to accept political union will have to be
offered a new form of associate membership. At any rate, the new treaty, which
will be prepared by a democratic Convention, must be allowed to enter into
force before all 27 member states have completed their ratification processes.
These are the main messages of a hard-hitting new pamphlet
written by Andrew Duff and published by the Federal Trust.
In Federal Union Now
Duff defines what he means by a federal Europe and points out the steps needed
to transform the Lisbon treaty into a
more durable constitutional settlement for the EU. He argues that the current
negotiations on the reform of the EU’s finances must aim to transfer items from
the states’ budgets to the EU budget in the interests of efficiency savings.
Such a shift in the levels of spending must be reciprocated by the creation of
genuinely autonomous streams of revenue to the EU.
Duff draws a distinction between the tight coordination of
national economic policies around a German agenda and that of a genuine fiscal
union run by a democratic federal economic government. He strongly opposes the
practice of intergovernmental cooperation outside the EU treaty framework,
which has always failed in the past.
The new form of EU federal government will require the
creation of an EU treasury and the integration of the presidencies of the
European Commission and European Council. The author advances the European
Parliament’s efforts to improve its own political legitimacy by installing a
pan-European constituency for the election of a certain number of MEPs.
A veteran of the EU’s two earlier constitutional
Conventions, Duff argues that comprehensive democratic reform will only be
achieved through a third Convention composed of ministers, MPs and MEPs.
In a major departure from the status quo, Duff wants the new
treaty to enter into force as soon as it has achieved national ratification by
only four fifths of the states.
In a stark warning, Andrew Duff says that the recent EU Act
of the UK parliament, which
installs British referendums on all EU treaty amendment, has imposed an effective
unilateral veto on Europe ’s
evolution towards a federal union. The author asks whether the coalition
government has either the moral authority or the political will to prevent the
rest of the EU from doing whatever it takes to save the euro. As a contingency
plan, Duff proposes that a new category of associate membership be created to
cater for the likelihood that the UK will decide not to follow, at
least for now, the federalist integration of its mainland European partners.
Andrew Duff MEP (UK/Lib Dem) is President of the Union of European Federalists and spokesman on constitutional affairs for the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE). He is co-chair of the Spinelli Federalist Intergroup and the Parliament’s rapporteur on electoral reform.
No comments:
Post a Comment