Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Understanding The EU: Gaullistes Versus Monnet-ites.

A major debate about the future of Europe took place in France in the late 1950s and 1960s, with de Gaulle’s supporters insisting that its membership of the European Economic Community must not end France’s national sovereignty. (The EEC became the European Union in 1993.) Against the Gaullist conception of European cooperation between sovereign governments and parliaments, the followers of Jean Monnet proposed an eventual United States of Europe. In Monnet’s federal structure national governments and parliaments would be subordinate to a both a supranational bureaucracy in the European Commission and a federal judiciary. De Gaulle resisted the Monnet approach, which was of course backed by elite German opinion, in the celebrated Empty Chair Crisis of 1966.
Almost 50 years later it is obvious that Monnet has won. Intergovernmental-ism, national sovereignty and the veto have been defeated by supra-nationalism, federalism and qualified majority voting. The EU bureaucrats have outclassed and outmanoeuvred democratically-elected politicians from the member states, including Britain. (Monnet despised democracy, as did many of the architects of ‘the European construction’ in the 1950s and 1960s.)  Prof.Tim Congdon.

Has He Ever Been On Our Side?

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