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B-EUtiful Or EUseless - What should we do about the EU?

Freedom | 16.05.2004 10:14

As ten more countries join the European Union, just what is it exactly? And how should we relate to it?
Freedom delves into the murky world of the European Union bureaucracy

[This article taken from Freedom, Anarchist News and Views]

Ten new countries have joined the EU, and Tony Blair has agreed to call a referendum on a proposed EU constitution.
Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia joined on the 1st May, possibly to be followed by Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey in 2007.
EU documents also mention a desire to expand further, taking in every eastern European state (including Russia), parts of North Africa and the Middle East. These plans are tentatively envisaged to happen within the nest 20-30 years.
It is thought that the influx for this year will make the 'Old' EU states £6 billion, with £15 billion being made by the newcomers.
The new constitution meanwhile is being pushed hard by Blair as a good thing (he has ordered his party to vote for it), despite an approval rating of just 42 per cent in recent polls, the second lowest in the EU.
Both of these issues have been hyped as history-making because they affect the EU 'bloc', that half-mythical beast that hangs over all our lives. But what is the European Union all about? Is it a positive or a negative thing?

What it does

The remit of the EU is massive. First envisaged by Hermann Goering as the European Economic Community and ratified in the 1951 Treaty of Paris, its laws and agreements cover trade, environment, employment, foreign policy, immigration, border control, drugs and terrorism to name but a few.
Upon its founding the EU accepted the Human Rights Act, which nominally guarantees various rights for all EU citizens (such as the right to privacy).
In much the same way as the American constitution, the HRA was written with altruistic notions, which has allowed some victories for groups such as prisoners, who can take human rights cases to the EU court with some hope of success even if the UK system lets them down.
However, this altruism did not spill over into the EU's economic laws and policies in quite the same way. Although measures such as the Maximum Working Week have had a positive impact on many people's lives, others clearly favour big business over people.
Recent measures include:
- A ruling by the European court of Justice in March that corporations can changed their official addresses within the EU for free. This is likely to mean that big companies paying 30 per cent corporate tax in Britain can move for free to Estonia which hasn't got a tax at all. It will also mean that corporations will much more easily be able to shut up shop in Britain and relocate to countries where workers receive lower wages.
- Setting up 'Europol', an armed body of police who are 'immune' from the law. Files on undesirables are kept and can contain up to 56 different types of information on each suspect.
- A series of measures allowing police to read confidential emails without permission.

How it's run

The EU is split into several sections. One is the European, where MEPs voted in by the public check and vote on new treaties and measures. Second is the European Commission, a group of MEP appointed bureaucrats who draft the laws which are to be discussed. Third is the Council of Ministers, the main decision making body, headed by a president who is rotated every six months and run by a selection of unelected ministers from each state. Fourth is the Central European Bank, an institution holding most of the member state's gold reserves, who handle and apportion the vast quantities of money. They are also unelected.

Trust

In effect three of the most powerful bodies in the EU are unelected, but according to many the parliament is just as bad. The population of Europe currently stands at 450 million people across 25 states. European elections are the most underattended in Britain, meriting a mere 18 per cent turnout.
These are the bodies we are currently reliant on for much of our law and economic policy making. They are not based in the UK, they aren't elected by the UK. Even for non-anarchists it must seem a bit far-fetched that it is designed to help us.
The only non parliamentary groups able to wield power in Brussels and exert pressure are big businesses and accepted institutions, and they are talking to a series of political bodies with even less reason than most to care about local issues.
It is partly as a result of this that economic policies such as the notorious Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) continues to go from strength to strength, despite the estimated cost to consumers of an extra £1,000 per person every year.
The various bodies are so badly policed that fraud now takes between $4-6 billion a year from the EU's coffers, money taken originally from our taxes (we pay on average £450 per person to the EU). Rather than deal with the problem, a vote last week absolved European Commissioners of all responsibility for departmental failures by a vote of 515 to 88 in the European Parliament.
The referendum, when it happens, looks likely to be fought on the issue of trust - whether we, the public, feel we can trust the EU leadership to run our lives from offices across the channel. Given the evidence, Freedom would argue no.

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This article taken from Freedom, Anarchist News and Views, 15th May 2004.

Also in this issue
* Iraqi prisoner torture * Double-page Mayday pull-out * More cops = more crime * Rural rail under attack * Regulars: Prison news, strikes, A sideways look, Anarcho-Quiz and more...

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Comments

Display the following 2 comments

  1. look East or look West — pragmatist
  2. ideas — Matt