Monday, June 23, 2008

Ireland to Hold Second Referendum

Curt Here....

Well it appears that the powers that be within the EU will not let the Lisbon Treaty die. After the people of Ireland rejected the Lisbon Treaty earlier this month the Irish Government has been continually pressured by Brussels to somehow figure out a way to push through the failed Treaty.

The latest idea is to hold a second referendum in Ireland and to somehow convince the people of Ireland that they really do want the treaty. This is a repeated pattern within the EU, if you don't first succeed, try try again. We will see if it works.

Stay tuned.

Curt

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

THE Irish Government is expected to bow to Franco-German pressure and hold a second referendum to try to rescue the Lisbon treaty that voters rejected this month.

The plan for a possible new vote in Ireland, being discussed by some ministers in Dublin, will be greeted with outrage by opponents of the treaty in Britain.

Irish ministers say they might be able to rescue the treaty if they can secure concessions from Europe to placate voters on a list of issues.

"A yes vote can be achieved if the Irish people are offered guarantees on issues like defence and taxation," said one senior Irish official.

"The no campaign will be picked off one by one. Everyone has a price."

The likely time for a new referendum is next spring so that the treaty can come into force before the June 2009 European election campaign for the Brussels parliament.

The date is favoured by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

If the Irish vote no again, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown would have to choose between siding with Ireland to stop its citizens being turned into second-class Europeans or siding with France and Germany to push ahead with further EU integration.

Concessions likely to be sought by Ireland include guarantees to protect its neutrality in the event of European armed forces being created, the reinstatement of its right to a European commissioner, and the right to set its own abortion laws and corporate tax rates.

Mr Sarkozy is determined to "save" the EU as France takes over the rotating presidency on July 1. "It is not written down in the summit conclusions, but everyone agreed that we need to get out of this before next year's European elections," Mr Sarkozy said last week.

He said European leaders had already mandated France to ensure the EU "does not grind to a halt".

Both Mr Sarkozy and Ms Merkel have exerted subtle pressure on Ireland and its potential allies by threatening the end of the EU's enlargement east if theLisbon treaty does not come into force.

The French President will visit Ireland on July 11 for talks with Brian Cowen, the Taoiseach, or Prime Minister.

"We will try to make this 'no' an opportunity," he said, pledging to use "English pragmatism" to find a solution.

The Irish Government has to decide its next move before the European Council meeting on October 15.

A spring referendum date is seen as crucial by several European leaders, but no strict timeline has been imposed on Ireland to come up with a response to the no vote; and there has been no formal declaration from the European Council that the country has to hold a second referendum.

"The council did not impose a timeline or plan B or C upon us," an Irish government official said.
"That would have left us in a difficult space. Now they await our detailed analysis of where we go from here."

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23904137-2703,00.html

Friday, June 13, 2008

Ireland Vote Rejects EU Treaty

Curt Here...

Ireland has rejected the EU treaty and has at least temporary put on hold the implementation of the unification of Europe under one constitutional treaty. This will more than likely bring shock waves to many of the EU leaders who have dedicated much time and energy to this document and to the ratification process.

Somehow, I believe that there are few in the higher levels of leadership within the EU who are not as concerned. You see, there is an existing document that has been in place since June of 2000, that will give complete power to one individual over the entire EU in the event of an emergency. It is of course Recommendation 666.

You can read it here. http://www.assembly-weu.org/en/documents/sessions_ordinaires/txt/2000/jun00_txts_adopted.php#P51_3072

I believe that all of the groundwork for the future AC to assume complete control over the EU is all ready in place. So, if you were this individual waiting to assume power when the timing was right would you be worried about some treaty that didn't get passed today?

Not hardly.

Curt

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ireland has rejected the EU reform treaty, politicians said based on a wave of returns from the referendum on the issue.

Tallies of votes produced nationally by election observers, as well as early official returns, all showed the "no" camp ahead in the vast majority of Ireland's 43 electoral constituencies. Pro-treaty voters were clearly ahead in only a few.

Electoral officials expected to confirm the result later and send shock waves throughout the EU.
The euro fell to a one-month low on the news.

Irish Justice Minister Dermot Ahern said he expected all other 26 EU members to ratify the Lisbon Treaty through their national parliaments by the end of this year.

This would leave Ireland - the only member to put the mammoth, often-unreadable document to a national vote - diplomatically isolated but nonetheless wielding the power to prevent the treaty from becoming law and forcing a period of renewed negotiations.

"Obviously it's disappointing. It's quite clear there's a very substantial 'no' vote," said Mr Ahern, who noted that 58% of voters rejected the treaty in his home district.

"If we're left as the only country that has not ratified the treaty, it will obviously raise questions. We're in uncharted waters," he said.

The outcome appears likely to throw the EU into renewed diplomatic turmoil and fuel appeals across the continent for more democratic accountability.

The Lisbon Treaty was painstakingly negotiated following the failure of the EU's proposed constitution, which French and Dutch voters rejected in 2005. Both documents sought to reshape EU powers and institutions in line with its rapid growth in size and population since 2004.

http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5gPHV1GQqXyAB3JJ3Sn2NczRhF1JA