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Ireland: 67,1%

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Title: Ireland: 67,1%


1
Ireland 67,1
  • Lisbon treaty is ratified by Ireland, and by
    Poland. The Czech Republic yet needs to ratify.
    Very likely that they will (divisions between
    Vaclav Klaus and Jan Fischer).
  • The potentialities of the treaty are important
    more defined roles, more defined figures, a
    European diplomatic body, a stronger Parliament
    The EU judiciary gets strengthened...
  • Valéry Giscard dEstaing a toolbox for future
    statesmen
  • The EU will become a stronger pole of power.
  • Yet the potentialities will unravel only with
    time, and in the cracks left by the states
  • A European dictator! States surrendering their
    powers and sovereignty on the altar of EU
    bureaucracy!
  • At least, some debate Definitely the end of the
    permissive consensus

2
Tony Blair?
  • Future president of the Council of Heads of
    states?
  • Council of Heads of States (Sweden), Commission
    (José M. Barroso), Council of Ministers,
    Parliament (Jerzy Buzek)
  • France supports Tony Blair
  • Germany and others support someone else
    Jean-Claude Juncker, Jan Peter Balkenende or
    (surprise) Paavo Lipponen
  • War in Iraq, fear of small states towards a
    representative of a great power, federalists
    against intergovernmentalists
  • Why does France support Blair?
  • A strong voice for the Council in front of the
    Commission especially Barrosos Commission. The
    guarantee of an intergovernmental Union
  • Seems strange Isnt France the defender of
    strong European institutions? Commission as the
    center, able to level the field, to act as an
    arbiter between France and Germany?
  • But there was always an ambiguity in Frances
    European policy between building European
    architecture able to help France AND keeping
    these institutions under control and not
    surrendering too much sovereignty
  • One should not mix the attitude of French
    European civil servants (often federalists) and
    the official French policy.
  • Frances European engagement is a conditional,
    reluctant affair (if sincere at times)
  • On the other hand, the first Communities are
    built according to a French vision of economy and
    politics at the time centralized, dirigist, etc
  • Take your bets!
  • For me Jean-Claude Juncker or a compromise name

3
The Beyen plan
  • Following the demise of the ECD (august) and the
    signature of the Paris Accords (October),
    European integration comes to a standstill
  • The Common Assembly, the High Authority and the
    governments of the Benelux try to find a new
    momentum. The emphasis comes back to technical,
    economical projects.
  • Johan Willem Beyens project is the first to come
    up
  • Prime Minister of the Netherlands, federalist
  • A large economic and customs union between the
    Six general integration, liberalization Lets
    not use the F-word
  • Holland needs markets and free trade for its
    economy. Also, importance of keeping the pace of
    political cooperation.
  • April 4th 1955, memorandum to Paul-Henri Spaak,
    the Belgian Minister for Foreign Affairs, and to
    Joseph Bech, the Luxembourg Minister for Foreign
    Affairs, in which Beyen advocated the
    establishment of a customs union designed to lead
    towards economic union.
  • April 21st, he publically revealed the project
    before the Dutch national council of the European
    Movement.

4
The Monnet plan
  • Jean Monnets project
  • Head of the High Authority of the ECSC
  • Sectorial integration with a long term goal the
    creation of a common market, sector after sector
  • Enlarge the capacity of the ECSC to other domains
  • Create a community in the Nuclear energy sector
  • Monnets pet project in the summer of 1954
  • A vivid discussion on nuclear energy in Europe at
    the time the creation of the European Centre for
    Nuclear Energy in Geneva in 1953, the Armand
    report in France, etc
  • Technical, symbolic, gives a measure of control
    on Western Germany in this area, acceptable to
    the French as support for their own program

5
Liberate to integrate, or integrate to liberate?
  • Beginning of 1955 Spaak has two projects on the
    table one sectorial integration project, and one
    general integration project with a clear
    federalist tinge.
  • Two versions of federalism
  • Spaak, Joseph Bech, and Beyen met in The Hague on
    April 23rd 1955.
  • Everybody agrees
  • On the need for a new political and symbolic
    momentum
  • On the need to be cautious, to remain at first in
    technical matters
  • They adopt the principle of a joint memorandum
    combining the ideas of Monnet and Beyen, and
    decided to propose to their European partners a
    sectorial approach for transport and energy,
    especially nuclear energy, and the parallel
    establishment of a general common market
  • 20th May 1955 the Benelux memorandum is
    submitted to W.Germany, France and Italy.
  • This is to be studied and discussed on 1, 2 and 3
    June 1955 at the Messina Conference to be
    attended by the Foreign Ministers of the six ECSC
    Member States.

6
Reactions
  • The German and Italian governments quickly
    defined their positions in memoranda of their
    own.
  • The German paper was a compromise between Ludwig
    Erhard, the Minister for Economic Affairs, who
    was opposed to command economy and
    supranational powers, and Chancellor Konrad
    Adenauer, who was more interested in the
    political aspects of economic union. Support for
    the Beneluxs plan
  • The Italian memorandum underlined the need to
    coordinate economic policies within the future
    common market.
  • In substance, the three memoranda, which stressed
    the importance of involving Britain in future
    deliberations, envisaged a general common market
    while agreeing to sectorial measures for atomic
    power and transport. All three were on the agenda
    for the conference of ECSC Foreign Ministers
    the first since the failure of the European
    Defence Community (EDC) in August 1954 which
    was to be held in Messina.

7
French reactions
  • A heavy atmosphere
  • A project that goes against a French policy of
    protectionism and state intervention in economics
  • Edgar Faure (Prime Minister) and Antoine Pinay
    (Foreign Minister) oppose the Beyen approach of
    general integration, and give only cautious
    support for sectorial integration
  • Faures press conference of May 25th 1955
  • Economic integration should proceed. We should
    create something more than a club of
    ambassadors If the term of supranationality
    is absurd, it is nonetheless necessary to give to
    it (the organization) some powers of decision
  • Walking a fine line between domestic situation
    and the need to pursue cooperation with Frances
    partners

8
The Messina conference, June 1st-3rd 1955
  • The Italians on their ground, eager to push the
    process forward
  • The succession of Jean Monnet, and the memoranda
  • Monnet had resigned from his post in November
    1954, and created the Action Committee for the
    United States of Europe
  • He knows he will not be nominated again. He has
    resigned in 1954, and his successor is a less
    controversial character, René Mayer, ex-Prime
    Minister
  • Discussions are difficult and tensed
  • Nobody wants to create a new ECSC
  • Too dirigist for the W.Germans, too invasive
  • Yet nobody wants to appear as the one that will
    break the momentum
  • Difficult technical issues, general reluctance to
    big projects
  • In the night of June 2nd-3rd, a last minute
    resolution (the Messina resolution)
  • A vague document, emphasizing the need to further
    economic integration, free market, harmonization
    of legislations, and common institutions
  • A committee is created to investigate further

9
  • Messina, June 1955
  • Beyen Gaetano Martino, Italian Minister for
    Foreign Affairs Joseph Bech, President of the
    Government of Luxembourg and Minister for Foreign
    Affairs and Foreign Trade and Wine growing
    Antoine Pinay, French Minister for Foreign
    Affairs Walter Hallstein, Secretary of State at
    the German Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    Paul-Henri Spaak, Belgian Minister for Foreign
    Affairs

10
The Spaak committee
  • A group of experts created to work on the next
    step. Led by Paul-Henri Spaak, the committee
    starts working in July 1955, in Brussels, with a
    deadline in October 1955
  • The French are extremely active, bringing to the
    fore their national interests and generally
    impeding progress in the negotiations
  • Pinay and Faure emphasize collaboration in
    nuclear energy (a capacity enhancer for France, a
    technical domain out of the peoples eye) but
    oppose a liberal European free market
  • But the French are pressed to give way to the new
    movement
  • October 1955 nothing comes, and Spaak creates a
    new, smaller committee that works faster and
    drafts a report for April 26th 1956
  • The creation of a common market for agricultural
    and industrial productions
  • Corrected liberalism inside a free market, with
    an external common customs barrier, harmonization
    of policies, etc
  • Institutions mirroring the ECSCs institutions

11
Reactions to the Spaak report
  • The Benelux, Italy, Western Germany quickly show
    their approval, and France is under pressure
  • Domestic changes in France
  • January 1956 elections, Socialists emerge
    victorious. They look at the reactions of the
    German SDP, positive towards a possible Common
    Market
  • The role of French Prime Minister Guy Mollet
  • Socialist, Prime Minister after January 1956
  • Strong advocate of European integration, he will
    actively endorse the Spaak report
  • Christian Pineau, foreign minister, and Emile
    Noël, head of Mollets cabinet
  • A group of key personalities
  • May 1956 conference in Venice that approves the
    recommendations of the Spaak committee
  • Potential problems liberalism, question of
    institutions, and the French government
  • Mollet emphasizes nuclear cooperation and
    agriculture, and tries to control economic
    cooperation and the supranationality of the
    institutions

12
The negotiations of the Val Duchesse
  • Negotiations start in the castle of Val Duchesse,
    near Brussels, on June 26th 1956
  • In the autumn 1956, things are blocked on the
    institutions, the technical modalities of a
    common market, and especially social
    harmonization (nobody wants it, except the
    French)
  • The experience of the ECSC had provided a
    counter-example it was considered as too
    powerful
  • November 1956s breakthrough
  • Suez crisis shakes Frances position the real
    extent of French impotence
  • The treaty on the Saarland, October 27th 1956,
    improves Franco-German relations
  • The result an economic package deal
  • Western Germans and Benelux get a common market,
    economic opening of borders, free trade
  • France gets the Euratom, a corrected market,
    specific relations between this common market and
    ex-French African colonies (Lomé convention), and
    markets for its agricultural products
  • Trade-off Germans will eat French cassoulet, the
    French will drive BMWs

13
The treaties of Rome, March 25th 1957
  • Create two new communities the Euratom and the
    European Economic Community
  • An institutional architecture mirroring the
    ECSCs, but with less powers to the two new
    commissions
  • 3 Council of Ministers, 2 commissions and the
    High Authority, 1 Common Assembly, 1 Court of
    Justice
  • Ratification in France under the shadow of
    August 1954
  • Mollets crafty parliamentary politics
  • Issue linkage between Algeria and European
    integration
  • To the right if you want Algeria, give me the
    treaties of Rome
  • At the same time, a strong negotiating position,
    emphasizing French interest, and lots to bring
    back home
  • July 9th 1957, the Parliament accepts to ratify

14
  • A highly debated compromise, mostly dictated by
    French terms
  • Transitional period of 12 years after January 1st
    1959, inclusion of French colonies into the
    common tariff, harmonization of social regimes,
    special regime allowing France to re-establish
    tariffs in case of balance of payments problems,
    etc
  • A package deal between openness and regulation,
    the EEC and Euratom, a protective bubble
  • Less supranationality, less power for the
    commissions, but the possibility to develop
    common policies managed at the European level
    (For example, the potential for a Common
    Agricultural Policy)
  • A customs union with a common external tariff
    that, governed by the competition principle and
    developing common policies, would at some future
    date ideally be also free of non-tariff barriers
    to trade.
  • French European policy
  • Some, but not too much
  • Domestic changes dictate the attitudes from
    Mendès-France to Mollet, from Mollet to Charles
    de Gaulle

15
European integration in the 1950s
  • Community Europe (organization of economic
    cooperation under supranational institutions) won
    the day. The inner six create a standard, from
    the intergovernmental track (OEEC) to a regulated
    supranational system
  • Why?
  • Structural imperatives (economic, political
    incentives to organize in a novel way Milward)?
    Path-dependency (once the ECSC was created,
    replication of the process)?
  • A fiercely fought political battle, as we see
    with the French example
  • The advocates of a novel approach managed to
    impose it against other ways to organize European
    cooperation and solve current problems
  • No European destiny, no inevitable rational
    solution, but the result of a political fight
    over how to solve problems, constant compromises,
    and the mix of domestic and international forces
  • Gradual, sectorial integration Technocracy and
    defiance towards the instability of diplomacy and
    parliamentarism a regulated market as the basis
    for common policies
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