din ciclul 'ce se intimpla cu uniunea europeana'
http://www.europe.org.ro/forum/viewforum.php?f=@

Poland deals new blow to wounded EU constitution
Tue Jun 7, 2005 01:58 PM BST 
  
By Paul Taylor 

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Poland dealt a fresh blow to the European Union's 
wounded constitution on Tuesday, saying it may delay a planned referendum 
despite efforts by France, which voted against the charter first, to keep 
the treaty alive. 

Aleksander Kwasniewski, president of the bloc's largest new member, said he 
might put off the vote from his favoured October date if next week's EU 
summit took no decision on the fate of the constitution. 

Poland should not set a date until the bloc had discussed the crisis caused 
by the rejection of the charter by French and Dutch voters, he told public 
radio in an interview, noting Britain had just shelved plans to hold its own 
referendum. 

Kwasniewski raised the prospect that EU leaders might either decide on June 
16-17 to call a pause in ratification, or fail to agree on any joint way 
forward. 

"(At the summit) we may decide to give ourselves a few months and meet 
(again) when we are better prepared," he said. "A lack of a decision is also 
a decision." 

Opinion polls in countries such as Denmark, Poland and even Luxembourg, 
which plan to hold referendums, have shown a sharp swing towards the "No" 
camp since the French and Dutch results, threatening more governments with a 
humiliating defeat. 

In an interview published a day after his government put legislation to hold 
a referendum on ice, Prime Minister Tony Blair said EU leaders should focus 
on Europe's economic and social direction rather than ploughing on with the 
constitution as if nothing had happened. 

"If two countries, particularly two founder members of the European Union, 
vote "No", then it obviously makes a difference," he told the Financial 
Times newspaper. 

INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS 

Blair hinted that in the longer term, EU leaders would have to salvage key 
institutional reforms from the charter, providing a more stable leadership 
and a more efficient decision-making system to keep the expanding block 
working. 

"When you enlarge to 27, and then 28, you know we will need that set of 
rules, and it is not for Britain to turn round and say the constitution is 
dead," he said. 

However, diplomats said it was too early to start salvaging some of the 
rules from the wreckage of a constitution which many EU leaders do not 
acknowledge is sunk. That process might take another year to crystallise, 
one said. 

France's new foreign minister, Philippe Douste-Blazy, on a maiden visit to 
the European Parliament, sought to rebuild momentum for approval of the 
treaty by saying it was "normal" not to stop the ratification process. 

After talks with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso in 
Strasbourg, he said France "more than ever" wants to take part in building 
Europe. 

In Luxembourg, EU finance ministers sought to limit the economic and 
monetary damage from the constitutional crisis, dismissing calls from one of 
Italy's ruling parties for an exit from the euro as "nonsense" not worth 
discussion. 

French Finance Minister Thierry Breton pledged that the new Paris government 
appointed after the referendum defeat would respect its European budget 
discipline commitments and not try to spend its way out of trouble. 



-- 

______________
EuroAtlantic Club
monitoring Romania's journey towards the EU
http://www.europe.org.ro/euroatlantic_club/
mail to: P.O.Box 13-166, Bucharest 70700
e-mail to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]





------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Give underprivileged students the materials they need to learn. 
Bring education to life by funding a specific classroom project.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/FHLuJD/_WnJAA/cUmLAA/RR.olB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

*** sustineti [romania_eu_list] prin 1% din impozitul pe 2005 -
detalii la http://www.europe.org.ro/euroatlantic_club/unulasuta.php ***

 



 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/romania_eu_list/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Raspunde prin e-mail lui