segunda-feira, 18 de julho de 2016

Federalist dream not dead yet, at least in the European Parliament


Federalist dream not dead yet, at least in the European Parliament

Undaunted by Brexit, leading MEPs are busy writing manifestos for more Europe.

By
Harry Cooper
7/19/16, 5:26 AM CET

Donald Tusk, Jean-Claude Juncker and other leaders now preach a gospel of Euro-realism, but there’s still one place where it’s safe to make bold proposals for reform of the EU in the post-Brexit era, even if they have little chance of becoming reality: the European Parliament.

Several leading MEPs are crafting reform manifestos that call for everything from more integration among eurozone countries to full-on reform of the EU treaties. Authored by members of three of the assembly’s biggest political groups — the center-right European People’s Party, the center-left Socialists, and the centrist Liberals — the reports are already setting off alarm bells with Euroskeptics across the Parliament.

Few European leaders want a repeat of the tortuous negotiations that preceded the ratification of the Lisbon Treaty in 2007. Those who matter, especially Germany’s Angela Merkel, have already rejected calls for treaty change in response to the U.K.’s decision to exit the EU. Even Juncker, president of the European Commission and, to many, the archetypal federalist, has said that he is “not an advocate for a United States of Europe.”

But given the Parliament’s role in Brexit — it doesn’t have a formal part to play in the negotiations themselves but must approve the final agreement — EU leaders will not be able to completely ignore the advice they’re about to get from MEPs on how to fix Europe.

One of the leading MEPs drafting a report, Guy Verhofstadt, insists the Parliament should even play a big role in the Brexit talks themselves — similar to the one it had during negotiations in February on reforms aimed at keeping the U.K. in the EU. “If we aren’t involved from day one [in the U.K.’s exit negotiations] we won’t give our consent,” said Verhofstadt, leader of the assembly’s centrist Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe.
Guy Verhofstadt gives a press conference in Strasbourg

Guy Verhofstadt gives a press conference in Strasbourg | John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

The federalists in the Parliament think now is the best time to overhaul the EU, arguing that the rise of anti-EU populist sentiment across the Continent is being misread. Verhofstadt argues that people “are rejecting Europe as it is now,” not as it could be. Citing findings from Eurobarometer, the EU’s official polling agency, he believes people want more action in areas ranging from securing the EU’s borders to establishing a digital single market.

This line of thinking is reflected in the parliamentary reports, which overlap substantially with each other. A draft report from center-right German MEP Elmar Brok and center-left Italian MEP Mercedes Bresso looks at what can be achieved within the Lisbon Treaty as it currently stands, such as streamlining how legislation is made in Brussels and enhancing the role of the Parliament in eurozone governance.

Verhofstadt calls for full-blown treaty change in order to strip out the various exemptions that allow countries to opt in and out opt out of EU rules, such as those that allow the U.K. and Ireland not to participate in the Schengen area. Instead he wants to create an “associate status” for those countries that don’t want to fully participate in the EU.

Proposals from Socialist French MEP Pervenche Bères and German center-right MEP Reimer Böge focus on the idea of giving the eurozone its own budget capacity, reflecting themes in the other two reports.
Parliament’s heavy hitters

A view that permeates all the reports is that the intergovernmental approach — which relies on finding consensus among an increasingly fractious group of EU countries — is not working. Bresso describes this process as “thousands of meetings whose result is too little, too late.”

Verhofstadt said the coordination is deliberate. By ensuring that each of the reports is drafted with cross-party support, the federalists hope to secure a majority of MEPs to ratify them after the summer. The positions would not have any legal force, but if adopted by a majority vote of the Parliament there would be some political pressure on EU leaders to take them into account.

It is also no coincidence that the lead MEPs hail from Germany, Italy and France, founding EU member countries whose support would be needed for any major constitutional reform.

National blocs are likely to cringe at the notion of “more Europe”

But finding common ground among Parliament’s political groups beyond a core of stalwart federalists may prove difficult. Aside from the fact that proposals from the constitutional affairs committee, the home of two of the reports, are rarely taken seriously by the rest of the Parliament, most of Böge’s and Brok’s German compatriots are extremely hostile to any calls for further eurozone integration. A much less far-reaching proposal to introduce a European deposit insurance scheme is snarled up in both the Council and the Parliament’s economic affairs committee due in large part to German objections.

And outside the German center-right delegation, other national blocs are likely to cringe at the notion of “more Europe,” either with or without an overhaul of the Lisbon Treaty.

Gunnar Hökmark, a Swedish MEP in the same group as Böge and Brok, said “a lot of people agree with Elmar, but a lot of people have other views.” He dismissed calls for a new eurozone finance minister, suggesting that Europe “already has a finance minister and he or she is called the Stability and Growth Pact.”

That was echoed by Romanian MEP Siegfried Mureşan, also from the EPP and a member of both the budget and economic affairs committee, who said “the rules are correct” and dismissed calls for major institutional reform.

Aside from internal politicking within the EPP, many MEPs wonder why anyone should bother calling for more Europe at a time when Euroskepticism is on the rise in many countries. Syed Kamall, British leader of the European Conservatives and Reformists bloc and a supporter of Brexit, said recently, “Whatever the challenge, more Europe is not always the answer. Ignoring the results of national elections and referenda and saying ‘we continue anyway’ is not a good enough response.”

Even Bresso, co-author of one of the reports, thinks that “now is not a good time for those who want to advance the ‘ever closer union.'”

Quentin Ariès contributed to this article.

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