25
Apr
2024
Watch
Pre-enlargement reforms and policy reviews (debate)
Madam President, in order to manage a future enlargement to eight new countries, i.e. 60 million inhabitants, which colleagues seem to consider as already agreed, their conclusion is obviously that the Treaties must be reformed. The treaties on free and undistorted competition or on the dogma of free trade are not reformed. No, what is proposed by colleagues, but also by eminent leaders – I was reading Mr Draghi not long ago – is obviously a federal leap, i.e. the creation of a European state in which most of the powers would be exercised in Brussels and in which the right of veto of states would be abolished, including on diplomacy and defence. There, I can tell you that it is still a big problem, because that is what I call forward flight. Those who believe in the virtues of forward flight fall into illusions, because it does not solve any problem. How can we avoid the implosion of the common agricultural policy in an enlarged Europe, particularly in Ukraine? How can the risk of social dumping be reduced even more violently than it has been since the 2004 enlargement? How to find a center of gravity at a set so stretched and disparate? You do not provide any answer to these questions, and the convention you intend to set up to rewrite the treaties and cut back on national sovereignty will not be different from the one that failed to convince the French and the Dutch in 2005, because it will work in a vacuum with proposals disconnected from reality and people’s lives. If on such serious issues you really want to convince, the best thing is called democracy. Consult people everywhere and all the time.