Friday, 21 March 2008
Translucent
It is impressive that such an organisation can run as smoothly as it does, but being impressed by an organisation's efficiency is still a far cry from being impressed by its output. The website EU Observer notes that the European Parliament has come a long way since its early days as a 'talking shop', but it spends a lot of time discussing issues over which it has no control such as foreign policy, rather than sticking to areas in which it has real power. The reason why the Parliament does not want to stick to the areas over which it has control are probably similar to the reasons why so many people fail to take an interest in European politics: mainly the fact that those areas over which the Parliament does have control are largely extremely unglamorous. The Common Agricultural Policy, the Common Fisheries Policy, transport initiatives and emissions trading schemes - whilst being extremely important to the running of our infrastructure, our food supply and the welfare of our communities - are not the sorts of things people usually get excited about unless they happen to be farmers, fishermen or any of the other minority groups that are directly affected by such issues. Politicians want glamor, they want headlines, they want acknowledgment for their supreme talents, and the only way they are going to get this is with 'sexy' politics. Unfortunately the ranks of political egos that make up the governments of the constituent nation states would never be foolish enough to let anything 'sexy' fall out of their sphere of influence, which leaves the ranks of political egos in Brussels desperately scrabbling around for anything they can get hold of, or simply talking 'sexy' even if they can't legislate 'sexy'.This means that people generally fail to take any interest in the actual business of the EU and only take an interest when the Parliament or the Commission make statements inflammatory enough to upset the national tabloids. The upshot of this is the miserable turnout at the European Parliamentary elections and the weakening of the democratic accountability of the Parliament and the therefore the EU as a whole.
It is incredible, I am trying to come to this with an open mind, but each time I think about it I end up becoming more cynical. I suppose I want a parliament like those of the member states, that has genuine legislative clout, but I'm not sure that the EU as it exists is capable of such things, and I'm not sure that it would be what people want, or at least think they want. Anyway, regardless of what people want, the national politicians certainly don't want a powerful EU, at least not at the expense of their own power. It may also simply be that the EU is a victim of its place in history. Since the treaty of Rome fifty years ago, and certainly over the last twenty years the trend of politics in Europe as a whole has been towards a centre ground, with any differences in policies between most parties these days being minuscule in comparison to the vast gulf that existed between the extremes of the political viewpoints of the early to mid twentieth century. Politicians have to a large extent become glorified administrators, so it is no surprise that a political institution that has grown up during this period of homogenisation should not resemble the great institutions of the past, but a large and efficient office, or one that at least appears efficient, or tries to look busy when the boss is around...
Perhaps it is then, that the European Parliament will not become more like the national parliaments, but the other way around. Once everything has been privatised, and almost all of what was the public sector is run by a selection insurance companies, 'government' will simply be bodies of administrators squabbling over the bones of whatever system is left. With nothing 'glamorous' or controversial left for the politicians to do, voter apathy would skyrocket, finally allowing us to opt ourselves out of democracy. So, the EU – not a dysfunctional democracy at all, but a vision of the future?
Friday, 14 March 2008
A Constitutional
A constitution would be a single document that would replace all the various establishing and amending treaties that have gone before it. It would be easy to argue for or against, because it would be the whole thing, a complete description of the Europe that we wish for, whatever that wish might be. Note that I say ‘a constitution’, not ‘the constitution’, for in a way many of the moaners at Westminster have it right, just the wrong way around: the rejected constitution was too similar to the Lisbon treaty and the others that have gone before it. What we need for Europe is a constitution fundamentally rebuilt from the ground up, not plastered around the cracks in the existing structure. Furthermore – here’s a radical idea – we could actually ask the people of Europe how they’d like that Europe to be built. I’m not the biggest fan of focus group politics – I believe that it has led British politics to its current apathy fuelled stalemate – but there is a place for focus groups in every political system; when was the last time anyone heard of EU wide consultation on the structure of the European political system?
Well I've done my research now, and I can confirm that there was a consultation before the failed constitution, it was known as the European Convention and it consisted 'mainly of representatives of national parliaments, not only from existing member states but also from candidate countries, as well as representatives of heads of state and government.' Apparently it was tasked with consulting as widely as possible about the structure of the Union. I'm sure that they did consult 'as widely as possible', as long as the phrase is caveated with 'amongst other politicians'.
Of course Commissioners, members of national governments and probably MEPs would say that this is a complete consultation, as the consultation of the people happens through the process of electing the MEPs and national governments, who in turn nominate their commissioners (for now). However to say that is meaningless for two simple reasons: firstly, the approach to Europe as a policy in of and as of itself is so far down the list of priorities for voters in national elections as to be negligible; secondly, for the reasons that I shall expand upon later, elections of MEPs are met with even more apathy than National elections and are therefore usually hijacked by the lunatic fringe or voted on along national party lines. Obviously there are parts of Europe where the two above statements are not so accurate, but by and large (and most certainly in the UK) they hold sway.
The upshot of this is that the only people who might have access to the general public opinion are given little of it except by the most vocal Europhiles or Europhobes. This is not a balanced picture, and besides it only really affects the MEPs in any meaningful sense. So the people with the power to change things – the commissioners and their armies of bureaucrats – are so far removed from the people of Europe as to have no idea what they might or might not want, so they dream up any old nonsense that might get them onto the world stage and invited to more pointless conferences and then wave it in front of the Parliament who rubber stamp it, and the national governments, who water it down to a point where it is meaningless, before looking for some other flimsy idea to legislate over. The constitution was a failure because it was a pile of crap that no one wanted and even fewer people cared about. If only someone would have the balls to come up with a proper constitution for a proper EU someone might take enough of an interest to vote for it.
Unfortunately this is unlikely because the national governments prefer the unwieldy and crumblig structure that the Lisbon Treaty will stick another plaster over. We need some way to take the lead, take the power away from the national governements and the Comission and give it back to the people of Europe. Doing this would cause massive consternation amongst the national governments and the entrenched power systems of the EU (not to mention the right-wing media), but then real change has to be resisted somewhere.
Monday, 10 March 2008
Is it just me or...
I heard not so long ago that Tony Blair was considering running for president of the EU (the post is actually president of the European Council), and whilst this depressed me deeply, it seemed quite fitting in many ways. It seems that Tony Blair has reached that stage in his life where he is so completely divorced from reality that the only place for him really is somewhere like the committee rooms of European government. There he can continue the charade of his self-delusional self-belief, safely cosseted away from the evils of public opinion and the democratic process. Am I being too harsh? Possibly on the EU. Perhaps it is more democratic, more in touch with its constituency than I give it credit for, but that is not the perception. To most people, the governing structure of the EU is as opaque as the personal logic of Tony Blair.
Now I don't pretend to understand the structure of government of the EU completely myself, I don't pretend to be an expert on Europe, but it has always struck me as something one should take an interest in. It is, after all one of the three major forces of government in our lives.
I remember a few years ago that a group of Cornish fishermen were protesting against EU fishing quotas by sailing up the Thames to Westminster. This struck me as seeming quite odd at the time, because if the quotas were European, surely they should be protesting to the European Parliament (although I'm not sure one can sail a fishing boat all the way to Brussels) rather than Westminster. Now again, this may be due to my lack of understanding of the finer points of the power structures; perhaps the fishermen felt that they should make representations to the UK government because they select the most powerful UK representative in Europe: their commissioner. Perhaps the fishermen felt that it was easiest to make representations to Westminster because, like me, they are baffled by the labyrinthine complexity of the organisation that would have faced them in Brussels.
Whilst I cannot lay claim to being a expert on the EU, I think I can fairly justifiably say that anything so opaque cannot be very democratic. I am willing to be swayed on this, I am going to try and learn what it's all about, but I should make my starting position clear: I think that the EU is a fundamentally flawed and wholly undemocratic institution. So I'm going to try and learn what I can about it, partly by reading about it, partly by posing theories, and hopefully by getting into debate. I want to find ways that we can genuuinely make the EU something that the people of Europe are proud of, rather than a bureaucratic nuisance and drain on our resources. I'm not saying it's all bad by any means, I'm just sure it could be a whole lot better.