http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic/NewsST062103.html
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic/NewsViews.htm

EUROPE'S NEW CONSTITUTION: NO SUPERSTATE, YET
by Srdja Trifkovic

Beethoven�s Ode to Joy, the anthem of the European Union, accompanied
the official presentation of the Union�s draft constitution last week.
The 75-page document was prepared by a 15-member �Presidency�
representing 105 members of the Convention on the Future of Europe,
headed by former French president Valery Giscard d�Estaing. The insanely
grandiloquent Ode to Joy quite properly makes a sensible person weary of
any event it accompanies�such as Hitler�s birthdays and East German
state ceremonies�and the launching of the EU constitution was no
exception. Its preposterous Preamble opens with a quote by Thucydides
(�Our Constitution is called a democracy because power is in the hands
not of a minority but of the greatest number�). Both in sentiment and
style it would be approvingly signed by any Jacobin fanatic sitting at
the Ev�ch�:

Conscious that Europe is a continent that has brought forth
civilization; that its inhabitants, arriving in successive waves since
the first ages of mankind, have gradually developed the values
underlying humanism: equality of persons, freedom, respect for reason,

Drawing inspiration from the cultural, religious and humanist
inheritance of Europe, the values of which, still present in its
heritage, have embedded within the life of society its perception of the
central role of the human person and his inviolable and inalienable
rights, and of respect for law,

Believing that reunited Europe intends to continue along this path of
civilization, progress and prosperity, for the good of all its
inhabitants, including the weakest and most deprived; that it wishes to
remain a continent open to culture, learning, and social progress; and
that it wishes to deepen the democratic and transparent nature of its
public life, and to strive for peace, justice and solidarity throughout
the world,

� etcetera, etcetera; you get the idea. The best that can be said of the
document is that in some important respects it does not appear to be
quite as bad as some anti-federalists had feared. The EU shall in future
have �legal personality� and a president, but the dreaded word �federal�
has been dropped in favor of the more vague �Community way.� Any
European State can join or leave the Union. The proposal that the EU�s
current designation be changed to �United Europe� has been abandoned,
and Article 1 of the constitution recognizes that the Union derives its
power and authority from the member states:

Reflecting the will of the citizens and States of Europe to build a
common future, this Constitution establishes the European Union, on
which the Member States confer competences to attain objectives they
have in common. The Union shall coordinate the policies by which the
Member States aim to achieve these objectives, and shall exercise in the
Community way the competences they confer on it.

The federalists had hoped for an �improvement� in the machinery of
foreign policy making but they have failed. The crisis surrounding the
war in Iraq demonstrated the divisions within the Union on a major
foreign policy issue and led to a weakening of the original proposal.
The new post of EU �foreign minister� (possibly under a different
designation) will combine the roles currently played by Common Foreign
and Security Policy Commissioner Javier Solana and the External Affairs
Commissioner Chris Patten, but the position will not have any additional
powers. There will be no qualified majority voting over CFSP:
intergovernmental procedures will continue to rule most, if not all,
policy decisions.

To Britain�s Foreign Secretary Jack Straw all this was sufficient to
attack the Euro-skeptics� �myths and hysteria� that surrounded the
constitution�s public presentation. �The treaty confirms the EU as a
union of nations, not a super-state,� he said, pointing out that there
would be no substantial expansion of Union-wide powers, and no radical
overhaul of its existing Treaties and competences: �We are talking about
a Treaty which can bring much needed clarity to European citizens, which
equips the Union with the machinery it needs to embrace the challenge of
enlargement.�

The main bodies of the Union will be a Council with Ministers from each
member state; a European Parliament with MEPs from each member state; a
slimmed-down executive European Commission of 15 full members; and a
Court with Judges from each member state. The European Council
(member-countries� prime ministers in concert) will be in charge of the
Union�s political direction. Acting within its guidance the Commission
will propose EU laws, and the Council will decide on them, often by
majority vote, and jointly with the European Parliament.

The novelty comes with the proposal for a President of the EU Council of
Ministers, with a mandate of up to five years. By replacing the current
system of six-monthly rotating presidencies, it ensures that the major
countries, such as France, Germany, Italy, and Britain, will retain most
influence, since the president will be elected by qualified majority.
Future smaller members of the club, such as Malta, Slovenia, and the
Baltic countries, will not be able to grandstand as Greece, Denmark,
Ireland, and Luxembourg had been able to do at times over the past
decade. They may fret at the strengthening of the Council and the
weakening of the Commission, which is seen as the champion of the small
countries, but they will not be able to change the end result.

On balance, however, the beleaguered British and Continental
Euro-skeptics have little to celebrate. Article 10 establishes the
primacy of EU law over national law, and Article 15 also hints at
supra-nationalism by obliging member states to �actively and
unreservedly support the Union�s common foreign and security policy in a
spirit of loyalty and mutual solidarity. They shall refrain from action
contrary to the Union�s interests or likely to impair its
effectiveness.� In the economic sphere, �[t]he Union shall have
competence to co-ordinate the economic and employment policies of the
member states.�

Furthermore, a legally binding Charter of Fundamental Rights, including
labor and social policies, forms the entire second part of the document
and presents as great a threat to national sovereignty and good life as
any overt federalist declaration. It introduces references to equality
and non-discrimination, specifically with reference to homosexuals, and
invokes the need to combat �social exclusion� and respect �diversity.�
The Constitution and EU law are to have �primacy over the law of member
states� formally making the EU superior to national constitutions and
parliaments. Member-states can only act �to the extent that the Union
has not exercised, or has decided to cease exercising, its competence.�
In case of doubt, the European Court will have the power, under Article
28, to �ensure respect for the Constitution and Union law� and to rule
on the Charter of Fundamental Rights, which is to be made legally
binding.

All this has prompted a British representative on Giscard�s commission,
Conservative MP David Heathcoat-Amory, to assert that the entire
exercise was integrationist by nature. He warns that the constitution
will mean more decisions on foreign policy, criminal justice, economics
and employment being taken in Brussels. He is calling for a referendum
on the constitution�something that Prime Minister Blair has rejected so
far�saying that �this must be challenged by all who believe that
democracy is more important than expedience, and that constitutions must
be decided by the people.�

The draft will be presented to EU leaders at next Friday�s summit in
Salonika, and its details will be subsequently discussed by an
intergovernmental conference (ICG) next fall. The formal approval will
come some time after May 1 of next year, when the next round of
enlargement is supposed to take place.

Even if it is subsequently subjected to a test of electoral
acceptability�and nine out of ten Britons demand a referendum�it is
clear that the EU constitution in its present form cannot significantly
impact, let alone overhaul, the current structure of the Union�s
institutions. That structure will remain inherently bureaucratic rather
than democratic, reflecting the aspirations and interests of the
post-national, post-Christian ruling elites rather than the people. This
was amply demonstrated in the Convention�s specific support for
unnatural lifestyles in the Charter of Fundamental Rights, and in its
refusal to include Christianity in the Preamble as part of Europe�s
�cultural, religious and humanist inheritance.�

Even so M. Giscard would claim that he has come some way to meeting his
critics: when he first unveiled the preamble�penned by his own hand�it
included specific references to Greece, Rome, and the Enlightenment,
with a yawning thousand-year gap in between. The pagans and Voltaire
would approve, but an overwhelming majority of all Europeans who have
ever lived would turn in their graves.


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