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Secret new
plan for EU superstate
UK Daily Express | June 17, 2007
By
Geoff Marsh
TONY Blair wants to hand the
European Union radical new powers in his last act as Prime Minister,
it emerged today.
The Prime Minister has welcomed
controversial plans to bring back the troubled EU constitution by
the back door - totally bypassing the need for public referendums on
sweeping new powers for Brussels.
German chancellor Angela Merkel
has suggested ditching the name "constitution" from the title and
instead calling it an "amending treaty” - to avoid having to seek
the approval of voters.
French and Dutch voters rejected
the original plan - which would hand Brussels the power to represent
individual countries at the UN and change national laws - two years
ago.
Britain's voting rights would be
reduced by a third under the scheme and our hard-won veto on
European directives would be torn up. Britain could also lose the
right to impose quotas on immigration.
Shadow Foreign Secretary William
Hague said: "If Tony Blair thinks he can hoodwink the British people
by smuggling in the rejected EU consitution under another name, he
had better think again.
"He underestimates the British
people. They will see right through any shabby stitch-up.
"If the Labour Government sign up
to a new treaty that takes powers from Britain and hands them over
to the EU, the British people must have the final say in a
referendum."
The Germans believe "as much of
the substance of the constitution as possible" should be kept,
renamed and put into law.
Scrapping the name will help Mr Blair
reach agreement at what will be his last EU Summit and virtually his
last public duty before handing over to Gordon Brown.
But the document makes no
reference to one of Mr Blair’s previous key demands - an “opt-out”
from a shift to more joint European decisions affecting criminal law
and justice.
A Government spokeswoman welcomed
the latest approach to what is being billed as one of the most
important EU Summit gatherings for years.
“We fully support the German
Presidency’s desire to reach agreement on institutional reform, she
said.
"We welcome their proposal to
return to the classical method of treaty change whereby the existing
treaties would be amended.
“We believe an amending treaty
should help to make the EU more efficient. The more effectively the
EU works together, the more that it is in our national interest as
well as our international interests.”
The German plan talks about
calling the result of any Summit agreement a “Treaty on the function
of the Union” - removing the federalist implications which have been
plaguing efforts to get EU reform plans back on track.
But the report makes clear the EU
would still develop a “single legal personality” - a bid to give the
EU collectively more weight on the world stage, and fuelling
Eurosceptic fears of a further whittling away of national status in
Europe.
On the Summit agenda will be the
removal from any new reform document of other contentious plans,
such as promoting the EU flag and EU anthem.
But the German Presidency expects
to see a “charter of fundamental rights” given legal force as part
of any reform package.
EU foreign ministers meet in
Luxembourg on Sunday for a first discussion of the options.
EU leaders gather in Brussels next
Thursday, prepared to launch “an intergovernmental conference” on
the details of a new treaty if they can agree the outline.
Neil O’Brien, director of the
think-tank Open Europe, expressed surprise that a “single legal
personality” for the EU was still being considered. It was an
unpopular move already flatly rejected by the UK and would not, he
predicted, survive in any final deal.
Mr O’Brien went on: “This memo
suggests that the new version of the constitutional treaty is likely
to be more radical than expected, and it will strengthen calls for a
referendum.”
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