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Support for EU crashes across the Continent.
The Business Online ^ | 6 November 2005 | Fraser Nelson

Posted on 11/07/2005 10:40:45 AM PST by lowbuck

CONFIDENCE in the European Union (EU) is in freefall across almost every member state, according to the EU’s own opinion poll. The pan-European survey, prepared for the European Commission, also reveals that only one-third of Britons see benefit in continued membership, the lowest in the 25 countries polled.

Trust in the Brussels commission, the executive branch of the EU, has plunged from 52% to 46% throughout the union. In Britain, the commission is trusted by 31% and distrusted by 38%.

Fall-out from the recent French and Dutch campaigns for the EU constitution referendum has prompted a fundamental rethink across Europe about the future of Brussels, the majority of Europeans believing the European Commission’s budget should be frozen.

The cascade of negative data from the study is the most severe since records began in 1975, according to Taylor Nelson Sofres, the research firm which conducted the survey. In what it describes as the largest opinion poll in the world, the Eurobarometer project conducted face-to-face interviews with 30,000 respondents and found a sharp reversal on the steady build of goodwill towards the EU recorded in recent years.

Particular dismay with the EU was found in Britain, where a majority – 42% to 40% – believe the UK has not benefited from its 30-year membership and only 36% of those questioned considered membership “a good thing”.

Of the 25 members, only 10 countries say they have a “positive image” of the EU. Again, Britain is at the bottom of this poll, with only 28% regarding Brussels in a positive light. Ireland records the highest satisfaction, with 68%.

All 10 new EU members are shown to be going cold on the euro, with a marked drop in those believing it would be good for their countries, the fugures falling to 38%, from 44% and interest in the single currency is now a minority issue, at 48%.

Across all 25 countries, there is concern about expansion of the Commission’s E121bn ($146bn. £82bn) budget. When asked if the EU’s “political objectives justify an increase in the union’s budget” 50% of Europeans say “no” and only 32% yes. Even the European Central Bank has been affected by the downturn. It had previously been trusted by 51% of Europeans, a majority; support has now fallen to 46% in tandem with increasing dismay at the euro.

Leendert de Voogd, managing director of Taylor Nelson Sofres Opinion & Social, said he was struck by the sharp drop in trust. “It’s highly unusual to see so sharp a change,” he said. “Also when we ask if their countries benefit from being in the EU, we see a clear negative trend.”

Much of this, he said, can be attributed to the referendum campaigns and the accompanying publicity. “During the referendum, there were adverts for plumbers coming to our country to steal our jobs. Such images make sense to a majority of people.”

Open Europe, a new Eurosceptic think tank, said the poll compounds the case for reforming the EU that is being made by Tony Blair, the British Prime Minister, during his low-key six-month presidency which ends at the end of next month. “It is striking that most people in the UK now think there are no benefits to Britain from EU membership,” said Neil O’Brien, Open Europe’s director. “Unless the EU transforms itself more and more people will turn against it.”

The 440-page Eurobarometer report offers several other insights on the EU, especially the growing hostility towards the United States, which a majority of 55% consider to be a “negative force” for peace. Only 25% consider it a “positive force”. Britain is found to be little different, with 47% seeing the US as a negative force, and only 23% disagreeing.

There is a big split on Turkey’s accession to the EU. The British support its membership by 45% to 37%, but the average across the EU?is 55% to 32% against. The Eurobarometer poll found the main objection to Turkey was its human rights record, followed by its poor economy. But losing jobs to low-cost member states was the first objection raised to expanding the EU beyond its 25 members.

The survey had much to support Blair’s theory that voters are ripe for liberalism. Of all various words tested, “monopoly” solicited the most hostile reaction (69%). Next came “protectionism” (49%) and then “globalisation” (46%). Concern for unemployment was he highest in its 30-year history. Some 47% of respondents said the EU should prioritise fighting unemployment. Blair wants the EU to liberalise to meet this goal.

Since Eurobarometer sbegan polling in 1975, Britain has been the most sceptical country – but now vies with Sweden, which is more adamant than any other member state that it has not benefited from EU membership.

Eurobarometer is not known for producing negative opinions about the EU in Britain. It has produced the only poll to show a UK majority for the written constitution – 43% in favour and 36% against. It also suggested the French and Dutch favoured of the idea by 60% to 28% and 53% to 38% respectively.

Referendums in both countries returned a decisive “no” verdict by 55% to 45% for France and 53% to 38% for the Netherlands.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: eu; schadenfreude
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To: americanbychoice2

I´m all for fair financing. But this EU budget isn´t fair. The economic powerhouses get money while the "sick man" pays the bills.

Today, at least two good decisions were made by the future Grand Coalition: the coal subsidies will end in 2008 (and not in 2012 or later) and the people will get pensions with the age of 67 in 2035.


21 posted on 11/07/2005 11:52:41 AM PST by Michael81Dus
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To: TASMANIANRED
The little episode happening in France is the death knell of the European Union.

It will be reincarnated in the western hemisphere, with our own president presiding. Its called the FTAA, and it is modeled in its entirety on the EU. In fact the Summit of the Americas meeting last week was to help get the FTAA back on track for implementation.
22 posted on 11/07/2005 12:07:25 PM PST by hedgetrimmer
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To: lowbuck

Good. The EU is a farce. Let it die. Borders, language, culture.


23 posted on 11/07/2005 12:40:26 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: Michael81Dus
Huh? Spain, Italy and many other countries GET subsidiaries from Brussels, on the expense of Germany (by far biggest netto-payer), Britain, Netherlands and a few others. Guess how the south-European countries improved their infrastructure??

Can you provide any links to sources giving net payments for EU countries. I've read similar things before, but have no references. I've also heard the EU characterized as a French scam to get war reparations from Germany.
24 posted on 11/07/2005 12:58:33 PM PST by caveat emptor
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To: lowbuck

Never has so much been written about so little. Even EU treaties and the constitution are massive. It has been an interesting exercise, but it appears Aristotle would have been mystified by such a futile attempt. Aristotle is probably out of fashion anymore, but he did say that when a constitution does not reflect the nature of the state, the constitution will fail. And be ignored. It is complex legal arrangements like the EU constitution that drive real people to go extralegal. Count on it.


25 posted on 11/07/2005 1:04:27 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: i_dont_chat

You are quite the optimist. Outside of us who is going to get any information about that trial? CBS/ABC/NBC/NYT/WP will not pause one beat in their continuing campaign to destroy the Administration.

80% of the population will not even be aware there is a trial going on.


26 posted on 11/07/2005 1:05:23 PM PST by justshutupandtakeit (Public Enemy #1, the RATmedia.)
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To: Michael81Dus

we have had 67 for quite a few years now, I just made it under the wire at 62. :)


27 posted on 11/07/2005 1:28:08 PM PST by americanbychoice2
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To: caveat emptor

Note that the statistic is per capita, so you can imagine that Germany is the biggest net contributor to the EU.

28 posted on 11/07/2005 1:38:05 PM PST by Michael81Dus
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