» Monday, March 29, 2004

European Constitution

Questioned about the timescale for applying the European Constitution were a deal to be agreed by June 17, the Prime Minister’s Official Spokesman (PMOS) said that while we wanted to make progress as soon as possible, these matters were not totally in our control. First, we would need to obtain an agreement. Secondly, even if that were to happen by June 17, it would be necessary to format it into draft EU legislation before we were able introduce it as a Parliamentary Bill. Both processes would obviously take some time. That said, as the Prime Minister had had made clear in his Statement to the House this afternoon, we hoped that progress would be made as quickly as possible because it was important for a Europe at twenty-five to work efficiently.

Briefing took place at 15:45 | Search for related news

5 Comments »

  1. Lack of a referendum on this plus the lying and cheating on immigration under Hughes is likely to finish Labour as a whole as well as Blair as a person. Worse – it is likely to increase BNP participation in politics.
    Labour MP’s need to get a grip
    Hipster

    Comment by Hipster — 30 Mar 2004 on 2:16 pm | Link
  2. Really? I’ll bet that the EU constitution and Beverley Hughes’s competence are matters of supreme irrelevant this time next year.

    I wouldn’t hold a referendum on the EU constitution not because I don’t approve of democracy, but because I know it couldn’t be conducted in an atmosphere of reasonable and fair debate.

    And the BNP’s miniscule involvement in politics will increase (if it does at all) because of the panic and distortions of the media, not because of anything the Government does or doesn’t do.

    Comment by Marek Ostrowski — 30 Mar 2004 on 5:13 pm | Link
  3. Hmm. I agree on Beverley Hughes, but the Constitution might still be a live issue if we or one of the other member states reject the thing in a referendum.

    I also disagree that a referendum "couldn’t be conducted in an atmosphere of reasonable and fair debate". I don’t see why this should be any different in the case of the EU constitution to the circumstances of a general election. At least the Constitution isn’t a manifest object and can’t be followed around the country by a man from the Sun in a giant chicken suit.

    A more serious objection to holding a referendum is that the Constitution is enormous and pretty incomprehensible. If you believe that the meaning of laws should be comprehensible to those to whom they apply, then you’d reject the Constitution out of hand (as well as a lot of current legislation and the existing EU treaties too, but there’s no chance of being offered a choice on those). As I’ve said before, I’ll vote against the thing until they can get it down to one or two sides of A4.

    Comment by Chris Lightfoot — 30 Mar 2004 on 9:02 pm | Link
  4. Chris Lightfoot says, of the proposed EU constitution: "As I’ve said before, I’ll vote against the thing until they can get it down to one or two sides of A4."

    Is this a cry for form over content or a desire for brevity at the expense of clarity?

    Answers please, on two sides of A4.

    Comment by nigel — 31 Mar 2004 on 11:33 am | Link
  5. Neither– just a desire for simplicity. After all, the Americans manage with a comparatively short constitution, despite the fact that their federal government has much more power than does the EU. Is the releationship between the EU and its member states really so complicated that it needs 200 pages to describe it? (There’s lots more EU legislation, much of it very complicated, often for good reasons. But the Constitution itself should be as short and clear as possible, so that any European can understand what rights and obligations it creates for them and for the governments of their countries.)

    Comment by Chris Lightfoot — 31 Mar 2004 on 2:18 pm | Link

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