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Human Rights in IrelandPromoting Human Rights in Ireland |
NO TO NICE
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Sunday October 06, 2002 22:20 by sticks and stones
WP NO TO NICE 2 Why the Workers' Party says No to the Treaty of Nice BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT On 7th June 2001, the Irish people will be asked to make an important decision on the future of this country by referendum. That decision will affect the life of each and every citizen . It could drag Irish soldiers into wars started and sponsored by powerful nations happy to use the smaller countries as their pawns. Even on the most benign interpretation the route proposed by the Government, unless resisted, will change fundamentally the rules and institutions of the European Community. Despite this it is virtually impossible to obtain a copy of the subject matter of the referendum unless you have access to the internet. This is a referendum conducted by stealth. What is it about? Why is the Government holding a referendum? Why the cloak of secrecy in what should NO TO NICE
Why the Workers' Party says No to the Treaty of Nice
BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT On 7th June 2001, the Irish people will be asked to make an important decision on the future of this country by referendum. That decision will affect the life of each and every citizen . It could drag Irish soldiers into wars started and sponsored by powerful nations happy to use the smaller countries as their pawns. Even on the most benign interpretation the route proposed by the Government, unless resisted, will change fundamentally the rules and institutions of the European Community. Despite this it is virtually impossible to obtain a copy of the subject matter of the referendum unless you have access to the internet. This is a referendum conducted by stealth. What is it about? Why is the Government holding a referendum? Why the cloak of secrecy in what should be an open and democratic debate? Although the referendum will deal with a number of issues, in an attempt by the Government to cause the maximum confusion, the main issue for concern relates to the Treaty of Nice. The stated purpose of the Treaty of Nice is "to complete the programme of institutional reform designed to prepare the European Union for a significant expansion in its membership". In reality the Treaty of Nice is the next step in the relentless pursuit of European integration. The European Union was created and developed by a series of treaties over the past 50 years. Over that time the treaties were modified by various agreements and instruments, however, the constant theme has been European integration, or more particularly in its early stages, West European integration. The most significant treaties were the Treaty of Rome [1957], the Single European Act [1986], the Treaty on European Union, (the Maastricht Treaty) [1992] and the Treaty of Amsterdam [1997]. Ireland acceded to the European Communities in 1972. The Workers' Party opposed Ireland accession to the European Communities. The Party also opposed , the Single European Act [1986], the Treaty on European Union, (the Maastricht Treaty) [1992] and the Treaty of Amsterdam. The Workers' Party opposition to the Treaty of Nice arises from a consistent, principled position. The first myth which must be exploded is that the Workers' Party is anti-European. Nothing could be further from the truth. Our Party is an internationalist party and is deeply committed to the principles of internationalism. We are perhaps the only party in this country which has enshrined that principle in our Party Constitution and Party Members are obliged to actively subscribe to that principle. It is impossible to be a member of our Party without being an internationalist. Secondly, it has been the openly declared ambition of our Party for at least two decades that we want a socialist Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals. Our Party expressly rejects narrow myopic nationalism, racism, isolationism, national chauvinism and xenophobia. We are confident that our credentials in this area cannot be questioned and our approach to the Treaty of Nice is based on a fundamentally different approach. The Workers' Party believes that each nation is sovereign and independent. This involves the right of states to govern and control their own political, social, economic and cultural affairs, free from outside interference and intervention. These rights are scarcely revolutionary in themselves. They form the basis of the Charter of the United Nations and are emphasised in international law. National territorial jurisdiction is a central tenet of state sovereignty which should not easily be surrendered. The European Union is based on the concept of the supremacy of Community law. Member States are bound to fulfil Treaty obligations and to abstain from any measures which could jeopardise the attainment of Treaty objectives. The current European project contemplates the complete limitation of domestic sovereign rights and a transfer of powers to an increasingly powerful, unaccountable and undemocratic federal Europe. As a Party committed to the democratisation of all aspects of political life the Workers' Party opposes this transition. Our Party stands for an independent and sovereign nation in a community of independent nations and citizens working together and co-operating with each other for mutual benefit. In short, we are for Europe but a different type of Europe and we are against the type of Europe the Treaty of Nice proposes to implement. At present, the European Union is a capitalist project. It is designed to achieve economic growth and increased profits. The concept of the single market and a common currency is a characteristic of this project. In many countries of the EU unemployment has risen. European Directives demand deregulation and privatisation of the public sector. The Treaty on European Union demands the removal of controls on the movement of capital as part of the Single European market. The EU demands austerity and promotes monetarist economic policies and we in Ireland have recently witnessed the impact of this when the EU has attempted to dictate domestic spending. It demonstrates how far we have come. The Irish government will be unable to spend a budget surplus on much needed public expenditure on education, health, housing and social welfare. Monetary union will lead to an increase in business competition which will, in turn, lead to competition for the lowest wages and lowest social benefits in the Union. This will further increase unemployment and lead to cuts in social welfare spending. Ireland will lose control over its economy, monetary policy, taxation, interests rates, exchange rates. The European Central Bank will have responsibility for monetary policy. Countries, with a weaker economy, which could previously use monetary policy against stronger competitors will no longer have the necessary powers to do this. The national economy will be laid open to the unrestricted and unrestrained movement of capital and the avarice of banks and multinational corporations whose sole objective is profit, not people. Nation states will be severely restricted in pursuit of their own social, economic, labour and environmental policies. In the field of environmental protection the EU has also failed. Pollution has increased and the omission of comprehensive legal provisions in the Treaty of Union for environmental protection and the protection of natural resources demonstrates that profit is a higher priority than protection. The lack of democracy in the European Union has also long been a concern for the Workers' Party. Power has been progressively transferred from national parliaments to Europe but there has been no reciprocal democratisation of the European institutions. The gap between the citizen and the decision-maker, the governing and the governed, has widened. The EU is a centralised and bureaucratic construction largely divorced from the citizens of the EU. Further integration and federalism will not address the democratic deficit, it will simply cause it to increase. The European Parliament does not have the same rights or role as national parliaments. The legislative authority in the European Union is the Council and it is not answerable to the European Parliament. It is also a critical concern that the European Union has the objective of building its own military force. It has long been envisaged that the Western European Union should be gradually integrated into the European Union. Simultaneously, there has been a sustained effort to transfer decisions on foreign and security policy to Europe - a concern heightened by a movement towards taking decisions in these field s on the basis of qualified majority voting. It is proposed to co-ordinate the European arms industry, creating a European military-industrial complex. It is within this context that our analysis of the Treaty of Nice is based.
THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE TREATY OF NICE 1. Democracy There are already fundamental problems concerning a lack of democracy and accountability in the European Union. The Union is essentially bureaucratic and anti-democratic with the principal focus being on freedom of movement for capital and business. If adopted, the Treaty of Nice will increase the democratic deficit. The Treaty will open the route to a two-tier Europe, establishing a leading elite of powerful states which will be able to dominate the institutions of the EU economically, politically and militarily. At present unanimity is required in vital parts of the decision-making process. This, in theory, requires consensus and, at least formally, places all Member States on an equal footing. The original thinking was that no major political or constitutional development could take place without the agreement of all Member States. However, even from the beginning the authors of the Treaty of Rome intended that there should be a progressive move towards voting majorities and the qualified majority voting procedure already applies in certain situations. The Treaty of Nice abolishes the requirement for unanimity set down in the Amsterdam Treaty. The formal "equality" is to be removed and the instrument to effect this change is the further substantial expansion of qualified majority voting. Matters of major political and constitutional importance will no longer remain within the jurisdiction and control of individual Members States. Decisions may be taken without the agreement of an Irish government on the basis of qualified majority voting. Depending on the numbers voting an Irish government may not even be able to block a decision which has major adverse implications for this country. In those circumstances it will be the qualified majority which decides what is possible. Nice also has serious implications in respect of the operation of the European Commission. Previously, the President of the Commission has been appointed on the basis of a unanimous decision of the Member States. Under the Nice provisions the President must first be nominated by qualified majority vote between the Governments and Heads of State. The Treaty of Nice is about taking power away from the citizen and the national government and giving it to the European Union. It will remove the national veto in 35 new areas, including, asylum, refugees and immigration; measures for the introduction of the euro; reform of structural and cohesion funds; the appointment of the President and members of the Commission and, significantly, the appointment of Common Foreign and Security Policy special representatives and related international agreements. These developments will increase the prospects for "Fortress Europe" The Irish government actively colludes in this anti-democratic exercise by selling the Treaty of Nice as a treaty on enlargement. In reality, the Treaty of Nice is not about providing enlargement and extending the "benefits" of the EU to those outside the Union. The Union is about limiting the effects of enlargement. The European Union does not want the people of the candidate countries but it does want their markets. The trick is to bring these countries into Europe and render their peoples second-class citizens. Already a number of powerful Member States have attempted to impose a moratorium on the free movement of labour for new Member States. The Amsterdam Treaty permitted the EU to enlarge without further amendment of the Treaties. The Treaty of Nice proposes changes which will have the effect of increasing the power of the powerful states The Treaty of Nice is concerned with the creation of a two-tier Europe. The object is to further centralise the EU. On the one hand the first-class members will press ahead for ever closer union. This group, aiming for the creation of a single federal Europe, will become the Euro elite. This elite will not be bound by a requirement for unanimity and extending the use of "enhanced cooperation" will allow groups of eight member states to proceed with "policy initiatives" even if the smaller countries voted against it. The creation of such an elite with a controlling influence in the institutions of the Union and committed to a strongly centralised federal state cannot be to the benefit of democracy in general or the interests of the smaller states, in particular. The concept of a Europe of equals will have effectively disappeared. It is no exaggeration to say that the Treaty of Nice is sounding the death knell of whatever little democracy already exists within the European Union. 2. National Sovereignty, Independence and Neutrality It is the concept of "enhanced co-operation" and the fundamental change which this makes to the European Union which necessitates a referendum in Ireland. The Treaty of Nice has serious implications for the Irish constitution. This referendum may be the last opportunity for the Irish people to defend its sovereignty and constitutional rights. The Treaty of Nice also provides the basis for moving to the next stage of the militarisation of Europe. The ambition is to create a European superpower equipped with its own arms industry and its own defence and foreign policy. The Amsterdam Treaty provided that the Western European Union [WEU] was "an integral part" of the development of the European Union. The Treaty of Nice removes the reference to the WEU and the EU will now take on a military function. The European Union will be equipped with military capabilities and, whatever the protestations of the YES camp, the structures and resources are being put in place for the creation of a European army with the development of a 60,000 strong Rapid Reaction Force, deployable within sixty days and sustainable in the field for one year. This force, far from "defending" Europe will be capable of operating outside the Union and outside Europe.
The threat to Irish neutrality does not stop there. The erosion of Ireland's capacity to operate an independent defence and foreign policy continues. On 11th April 2001, Dr. Guenter Burghardt, the Head of the European Commission Delegation to the US, stated at the Executives' Club of Chicago, that he firmly believed that the European Security and Defence Policy [ESDP] "will complement NATO and help the EU to become a fuller partner of the US". Dr Burghardt talked of "a more efficient common foreign security policy". It will certainly be "more efficient" if there is no dissenting voice to the growing militarisation of the EU and a partnership with the US in exploiting and intimidating the less powerful nations of the world. There is no protection for Irish neutrality or the independence of Irish foreign policy. The Irish government has not attempted to criticise this process nor has it tried to negotiate a special protocol to ensure the protection of our traditional neutrality. It is scarcely surprising that this referendum appears clouded in secrecy . In view of the contents of the Treaty of Nice and the implications for our sovereignty and independence one might at least expect that the Irish people would be told what the referendum was about. It is not enough to issue trite, and misleading, statements on enlargement in an attempt to replace democratic debate with uninformed emotion. If this referendum is to be effective it requires open , transparent public debate on real issues. That debate must involve the wide dissemination of information which is objective, balanced , comprehensible and accessible to all. The Government and the media have a duty to ensure that a fair and balanced debate takes place although presently the signs are not favourable that this will happen. The YES Vote will have huge resources and the NO campaign will have scarce resources and will face the usual vilification and abuse which takes the place of rational debate. Nevertheless this is a referendum proposal which can be defeated. The Economist Intelligence Unit has reported that the Irish people could vote against the Treaty of Nice. The Government received a shock at the time of the Amsterdam Treaty. It is now time to deliver an unequivocal message that the unrestrained march towards the creation of a European superpower must be reversed and the destruction and erosion of Irish sovereignty, neutrality and independence halted. A NO Vote on 7th June is not anti-European. It is, on the contrary, a positive vote for an equal and co-operative relationship with our European neighbours and beyond. It is a voice for an alternative democratic Europe, a people's Europe, a Europe of the nations. The Workers' Party will play its part.
NO TO NICE! YES TO A WORKERS' EUROPE!
Join the Workers' Party campaign for a NO vote to the Treaty of Nice
Contact the Workers' Party Referendum Committee at 23 Hill Street, Dublin 1. Tel: (01) 874 0716 E-mail: [email protected] |
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Release Date :19/09/2002
Headline : European Union told "stop meddling in Irish referendum"
Story :
The Workers’ Party has called on the European Union, its institutions, the governments of other member states and aspirants to “stop meddling” in the Irish referendum on the Nice Treaty and to allow the Irish people reach their own decision on the treaty. Workers’ Party President Seán Garland said he sincerely hoped that next months EU summit in Brussels or the ‘mini summit’ to be held in Denmark which was announced by the Danish Presidency this morning would not be used in an attempt to coerce the Irish people. “It is quite evident that the Irish government and the EU institutions are prepared to go to any lengths to have the Nice Treaty passed and they have already shown scant regard for the people’s democratic rights by ignoring the first referendum in which the Irish people rejected the Nice Treaty”. “It is ironic that those who constantly accuse the No side of scare-mongering are the chief users of that tactic and are also engaging in plain bullying, threatening and cajoling voters”. “I can only assume that the Danish ‘mini-summit’ is being created as a platform for the leaders of aspirant countries to condemn and berate the Irish people for their No vote and to implore them to vote Yes. However we will not see or hear the many voices in these countries – from the Czech Republic to Estonia – nor indeed from the 500 million Europeans, who have been denied a referendum. Ireland alone is having a referendum and the bureaucratic institutions of the EU are determined that our referendum will not derail their plans to further undermine democracy and accountability in the European Union”.
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Release Date :26/09/2002
Headline : Garland launches Workers' Party campaign for NO vote on Nice Treaty
Story :
Text of address by Party President Sean Garland at launch of the Workers' Party campaign for a NO vote on the Second Irish Referendum on the Nice Treaty. "This is the second occasion on which the Workers’ Party has launched its campaign for a No vote on the Nice Treaty. It is the first election or plebiscite of any kind that I remember in which we’ve had to vote twice on the exact same issue within a few months. In the referendum on 7th June 2001, despite massive resources and a cacophony of well funded voices telling the Irish people that they must vote Yes, the people did not do so and by a majority of 54% voted No". "In a democracy that would have been the end of the matter. The Nice Treaty would have had to be renegotiated or a new Treaty would have been drafted and put to the people. And what’s wrong with that? Surely those people who have gone into overdrive telling us what a great project the European Union is don’t have a problem with basic democracy? If they do, then there is clearly a problem with the European Union and those who run it". "On Wednesday, after finally surfacing to deal with questions on the €900 black hole in the nations finances, Charlie McCreevy insisted that the people knew exactly what they were voting for in the recent general election. This is quite rich coming from a government which insists that the people didn’t know what they were voting for in last year’s Nice Treaty referendum. I suggest that they did indeed know what they were voting for in relation to Nice and they didn’t like it. They rejected it and I am confident they’ll reject it again on October 19th". "Without labouring the point, it is worthwhile looking at the government’s contention that the people just didn’t know what Nice was about when they rejected it last year. If this is the case, and I don't accept that it is, then what efforts have been made to redress this? There has been no information campaign. Just a hard-sell in the form of the government’s hastily reprinted White Paper on the Nice Treaty. Six hundred thousand Euro was spent on repackaging the White Paper but the Treaty is still the same" continues over/-- WORKERS' PARTY LAUNCHES 'NO' CAMPAIGN.........2 "The government has made much of the actions of one small element in the No campaign. We have all been tagged with the same label – if you’re against Nice you are racist, anti-immigrant and intolerant. It would be laughable if it weren’t coming from the likes of Enda Kenny and the party which defended Noel O’Flynn after his deplorable comments in Cork during the general election". "The Workers’ Party rejects the idea that opposition to Nice amounts to anti-Europeanism or that we have suddenly become fellow travellers of the British Conservative party. Unlike the government we have put forward reasoned and crystal clear analysis of the Nice Treaty from a socialist perspective. It is on the table for all of you to see and read in our document" "Labelling us with anti-Europeanism simply won’t stick. The Workers’ Party is an internationalist party. Internationalism is enshrined in our party constitution. Europe to us is a geographical location and what’s important about it is its people, not lines on a map". "The pro-Nice lobby believe that to be European automatically means that you accept the capitalist vision of Europe as embodied in the European institutions, treaties and in the Nice Treaty in particular. The Workers’ Party believes that the people of Europe should be allowed decide not only that they wish to have a European Union but they should also have a say in what type of European Union they want to live in. Put starkly the EU establishment’s view of the Union is akin to Henry Ford’s famous statement about the Model-T “You can have it in any colour you like as long as it’s black” – In Eurospeak it means – You can elect any party you like but the system will always be capitalist and the people can only have their say within certain parameters". "The European Union and its institutions are remote and disconnected from the people. The decision making bodies are undemocratic and unaccountable. It has become a union of selfish economic interests alone, not a union of equals or a union that reflects Europe’s rich social and cultural traditions. Is it any wonder that people are apathetic when the institutions of the European Union and of national government are cloaked behind smoke and mirrors". "The Workers’ Party opposes the Nice Treaty because it fundamentally alters the European Union’s structures and shifts the balance of power to the bigger countries creating a two-tier Europe. It is a bad deal for small countries like Ireland and for most of the applicant countries also. Enlargement is not about bringing others into the European family but about creating new markets in order to maximise profits. It imposes neo-liberal economic doctrines such as privatisation upon all member states. It takes us a further step along the road to the militarisation of the European union". "The Nice Treaty is being sold on the basis that it is the only blueprint for the future of Europe. We are told we must have total faith in this blueprint. We have no choice, we are told. Referendums are about choices. Ireland was the only country to have a referendum on the Nice Treaty. This was not of course because the government wanted to allow the people to decide. If that were the case our first decision would have been respected. Our original referendum took place because our constitution – Bunreacht na h-Eireann – demanded a referendum" "The Nice Treaty is not set in stone. It can and should be changed and the people of the other member states and aspirant states should all have a say. A No vote will guarantee a renegotiation and will allow all of the people of Europe - of existing EU member states and all the applicant states- to have a say. The Workers' Party says very firmly IT'S OK TO SAY NO. It is the democratic right of the Irish people and they should not be bullied by anyone.
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Release Date :25/07/2002
Headline : Fire & Brimstone sermons won't save Nice Treaty - Halligan
Story :
The Workers’ Party has accused the Taoiseach of resorting to “Fire & Brimstone style sermons” warning people of dire consequences if they once again democratically reject the Nice Treaty. Workers’ Party spokesman Councillor John Halligan said that recent statements from both the Taoiseach and a plethora of leading business figures on the Nice Treaty had the air of desperation about them. Cllr. Halligan in particular referred to today’s address by the Taoiseach to the ‘Social Partners’ in which he invoked a warning from the Intelligence Unit of the Economist magazine about the possible dangers to Ireland’s relationship with other EU members if we again reject Nice. “The Taoiseach invoked the Economist as if it were some type of impartial and sane voice on European Affairs. It is nothing of the sort. The Economist is mostly owned by the Pearson Media Group through its subsidiary the Financial Times. This is a multi-national conglomerate which is a strong supporter of globalisation and the needs of big business. It is hardly and independent voice”, said Cllr. Halligan. “Ireland’s position within the European Union is protected by the laws and charters of the EU which still stand regardless of what happens to Nice. We cannot be thrown out of the European Union, nor can our status within the Union be downgraded simply because the Irish people choose to democratically reject a seriously flawed treaty that poses a threat to our neutrality and sovereignty. Claims to the contrary are totally false and deliberately misleading”. “Once again the Irish government is not prepared to engage in a genuine debate about the future of Europe. Instead it is using taxpayers’ money and the services of senior officials of state and semi-state bodies to terrify the people into ratifying a Treaty they have already democratically rejected”, said Councillor Halligan.
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Release Date :30/05/2002
Headline : Forum on Europe Chairman's formula on Irish Neutrality not enough - Garland
Story :
NEWS RELEASE 30th May 2002 FORUM CHAIRMAN’S FORMULA ON NEUTRALITY NOT ENOUGH The Workers’ Party has said that the formula proposed by the Chairman of the Forum on Europe, Senator Maurice Hayes in relation to Irish Neutrality does not go far enough. Workers’ Party President Seán Garland said that the formula, contained in the Chairman’s second phase report, was unacceptable in that it only called on the government and the other EU governments to produce a “plainly worded statement” on Irish neutrality. “We have seen many ‘plainly worded statements’ from the government and the EU before, but the only thing that would have recognition in EU law is a Protocol to the Nice Treaty expressly recognising Irish neutrality”, said Mr. Garland who is his party’s representative on the Special Observer Pillar of the Forum on Europe. “It is disappointing that while the Forum on Europe clearly heard the points made by the opponents of the Nice Treaty, it has taken none of our proposals on board in terms of proceeding with enlargement of the European Union without further dilution of sovereignty and neutrality and without going further down the road of integration which is what the Nice Treaty proposes”. “The Workers’ Party will continue to strongly oppose the Treaty of Nice and if the government is foolish enough to proceed with second referendum in the Autumn we are confident that Nice will be defeated again and there will be no question for a third outing for it”, said Mr. Garland.
And why is the Workers Party very actively supporting a pro-Nice candidate in the SIPTU General Secretary election?
Because the Workers Party are just remnents of Stalinist class traitors. They will prop up any bureacrat as long as its in their interests just like their co-thinkers internationally