Posted on 05/31/2005 3:36:56 PM PDT by MadIvan
THE Dutch are expected to deliver a resounding no to the European constitution today, killing off the treaty in the wake of rejection by France.
Tony Blair will attempt to pick up the pieces when Britain assumes the European Unions presidency next month, but President Chirac complicated that task yesterday by appointing Dominique de Villepin as his Prime Minister in place of Jean-Pierre Raffarin.
M de Villepin, whose heroes are Napoleon Bonaparte and Charles de Gaulle, is a staunch nationalist whose views are mostly anathema to Britain.
As Foreign Minister, he fought passionately to stop Britain and the US going to war in Iraq. He champions the state-led French social model over Anglo-Saxon economics.
Both M de Villepin and M Chirac promised to inject fresh life into the French economy, but the President emphasised that this would be with total respect for the French model . . . This model is not one of the Anglo-Saxon type.
Polls in The Netherlands showed the yes campaign trailing by 20 points, and even the most ardent supporters of the constitution admitted that it would be a small miracle if they win today. The European Commission and seven member states which have called referendums insisted that ratification would proceed regardless. But officials privately conceded that a second emphatic no from a founding member would probably prove fatal.
There is a limit to what we can say before the Dutch vote. But things will change afterwards if they say no, one Commission source admitted.
No country wants to be held responsible for killing the constitution by being first to abandon a referendum, but diplomats said that everyone is talking to everyone about how to proceed.
We dont want to be the first to say no. We wont say no unless there is a general decision not to go forward, said one diplomat from a state which has promised a vote.
In Britain, two leading allies of the Prime Minister made clear that the Prime Minister believes it would be disastrous to try to revive the treaty.
Writing in The Times today, Stephen Byers, the former Transport Secretary and a close friend of Mr Blair, says that calls for another vote in France betray the sort of institutional arrogance that the French public rejected.
By their decisive vote, the people of France have killed the European Constitutional Treaty, he says. It would be a grave mistake . . . to ignore or try to explain away this expression of popular feeling.
Lord Kinnock of Bedwellty, the former Labour leader and EU commissioner, said that the period of reflection that Mr Blair had requested in the wake of the French vote can only sensibly come to one conclusion . . . Referendums produce results and results have to be lived with.
Officials said that Mr Byers and Lord Kinnock were both expressing their own views but they are unlikely to have spoken without consulting Mr Blair.
Jean-Claude Juncker, the Prime Minister of Luxembourg, who holds the EU presidency, will today start a round of meetings to try to find a way through the impasse before the June 16 summit of EU leaders. Mr Blair wants his fellow leaders to use the summit to find a way forward.
Britain is the only country not to have given a clear indication that still it intends to ratify the constitution. All the countries still due to hold referendums Luxembourg, Ireland, Portugal, Poland, Denmark and the Czech Republic insist that votes will go ahead.
But I'm afraid the only message the French government and other europeanists are taking from this is that they should never allow the people to decide important questions.
Just like in China, which may be the model the EU is trying to emulate, whether they are aware of it or not.
Chirac is one of those serene souls who is never troubled by the thought that he might be wrong or that a majority should be honored if it disagrees with him.
Is Chirac and the elite so arrogant that they think they can push this down peoples' throats?
Yes
Did the vote results mean nothing to them?
The vote results mean to them that they shouldn't have gone the referendum route.
That is not true. It only takes 1. That was some idiot in Brussels mouthing off.
star wars III revenge of the sith had a huge opening in france. its not likely that any frenchmen seeing that movie would not make the connection of the assention of the sith lord to the assention of the brussels bureaucrats.
C'mon Dutchies !
Stem Nr !
All the countries still due to hold referendums Luxembourg, Ireland, Portugal, Poland, Denmark and the Czech Republic insist that votes will go ahead.
-------
Nice to see. This will yet be a ved-d-dy intel-esting situation. If they go the way of the French, it will speak volumes.
To totally kill this "constitution" off deader than a doornail requires 6 no's. If 1-5 say "no" there is some possibility of renegotiation or something like that. However, given that France & Germany are the two "most influential" (not my belief) of the EUers, France's NO carries almost veto power, as far as I can tell... Not formally, but effectively.
The Dutch "no" by itself, in addition to France's, is going to send them all into a real tizzy.
How great they were? When?
My opinion of the 6 votes:
Luxembourg: Yes, Ireland: Yes, Portugal: No, Poland: No, Denmark: No and the Czech Republic: Yes
I hope Ireland can muster a NO.
Hi, knighthawk. I remembered you are Dutch. Any comments?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.