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European citizenship and the British Richard Laming 20 January 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "European citizenship and the British Richard Laming 20 January 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 European citizenship and the British Richard Laming 20 January 2010

2 Four dimensions of citizenship Shared justice Shared influence Shared identity Shared resources

3 Features of European citizenship Prior to the Lisbon treaty In the Lisbon treaty itself In other recent developments British perspective

4 Shared justice: prior to Lisbon Cooperation largely intergovernmental – e.g. TREVI, Prüm European Arrest Warrant Charter of Fundamental Rights, but with no legal force Anti-discrimination measures

5 Shared justice: in Lisbon treaty General move to Community method for legislation Charter of Fundamental Rights has legal force Anti-discrimination provisions retained

6 Shared justice: other developments Stockholm Programme - rights of the individual in criminal proceedings, e.g. time limits, language conditions, proportionality Proposals for mutual recognition of judicial judgments Proposals to simplify marriage, divorce and inheritance – 13% of marriagess and 13% of divorces are “international”

7 Shared justice: British perspective Suspicious of Charter of Fundamental Rights, ECJ and EU law in general Opted-out of much JHA cooperation Has to decide on Lisbon opt-outs in 2013 UK not in EU enhanced cooperation group for divorce proposal

8 Shared influence: prior to Lisbon Directly elected European Parliament, with legislative poweres Turnouts lower than in national elections (average of 43% compared with 75%) Lower public recognition for MEPs and Commissioners than for national politicians Commissioner formally independent of national interests, but often seen as an advocate for them Right to vote in European and municipal elections in other member states, but not national elections

9 Shared influence: in Lisbon treaty Wider powers for the European Parliament Commission president to be elected by the European Parliament after the elections Council of Ministers required to legislate in public Citizens’ initiative

10 Shared influence: other developments European parties nominate candidates for Commission president? A common election day for EP elections? MEPs elected from transnational lists?

11 Shared influence: British perspective Low turnout in European elections and low recognition of MEPs – regional list system weakens identification and lacks credibility Conservatives refuse to be part of main centre-right grouping Little media coverage of EU affairs Low level of recruitment of UK citizens into EU institutions – 5% of staff

12 Shared identity: prior to Lisbon Exchange schemes, e.g. ERASMUS, Leonardo EU funding for cultural programmes Single market spin-offs, e.g. football European flag and anthem often used Free movement for EU citizens – 11 million EU citizens live in another member state; 13% of marriages are between citizens of different member states The euro

13 Shared identity: in Lisbon treaty Flag and anthem not added to the treaty EU gains supporting competences in sport and tourism

14 Shared identity: other developments ???

15 Shared identity: British perspective Low rate of speaking or understanding foreign languages (62% speak only English) Government practice not to use the European flag except where pushed Europe Day is not generally celebrated Outside Schengen Outside the euro (and illogically proud)

16 Shared resources: prior to Lisbon EU budget maximum level of 1.23 % of GDP (3% of public spending) Redistribution: farming (40%), regional development (35%) European Court of Auditors qualifies the EU accounts every year EU policies on conservation – birds, habitats, etc EU attempting to be world leader in fight against climate change EU policy on fisheries

17 Shared resources: in Lisbon treaty Budget not affected EP gains co-decision power over the budget

18 Shared resources: other developments Age of austerity - pressure to reduce the budget Sovereign debt guarantees in eurozone, implying greater financial solidarity between rich and poor EU marginalised in Copenhagen summit; climate change policies declining in profile and significance

19 Shared resources: British perspective Net budget contributor (one of the largest) Rebate needs to be defended Some parts of the country receive extensive European funding UK fishing industry has been in decline, wrongly blamed on EU policy Won’t be part of the sovereign debt guarantee arrangement, in whatever form it emerges

20 Conclusion: shared justice A programme that delivered rights to British citizens might be welcomed But will have an impact on UK legal practice The benefits will be seen and felt rarely, the impact will be more visible The single market had this PR problem

21 Conclusion: shared influence European Parliament undervalued in public opinion Political parties remain distant Will the choice of Commission president be put to the public in 2014? Will Conservatives rejoin the centre-right grouping?

22 Conclusion: shared identity No substantial lobby in politics for Britain to join Schengen or the euro New government is encouraging the learning of foreign languages in school, reversing the policy of its predecessor

23 Conclusion: shared resources Exclusion from sovereign debt guarantee system - yet another way in which the British are different The notion of Europe as a leader in the fight against climate change possible, but environmental policies do not have their former salience

24 Thank you!


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