May 9, 2005 16:41 | by Jan
Marijnissen
Before the Dutch people say 'yes' to the European Constitution
they have to understand that, if it is accepted, the Netherlands
will become a powerless province, argues Jan Marijnissen
According to opinion polls, only a minority of the Dutch population
is aware that a referendum on the European Constitution will take
place on June 1st. Even those who do know have in most cases no
idea what this proposed Constitution contains. The reason for this
is clear: 'Europe' is not a live issue, the European Constitution
is an odious and ungainly creature and the political parties which
are supposed to be its champions haven't turned up for the joust.
Most people feel a bond to their town or village and to their country.
Some make a point of proclaiming themselves citizens of the world
- but 'European'?
'Europeanness' is all about the process of European integration
which has taken shape over the last few decades, a top-down process
directed from behind the scenes. Slice by slice, successive governments
have handed to Brussels our rights as a nation. The people have
never been asked what they think of this and European questions
have never played a role in national elections. The Brussels Eurocrats
can tell us how important they are, but a great majority of the
Dutch people aren't listening. In general, this is also true of
the media. With a few exceptions, what comes out of Brussels is
dull and depressing.
Now that the process of economic integration is as good as finished,
Europe's elite is getting down to some serious work on the task
of political federalisation. The European Constitution, a remarkable
mishmash of generalisations, meaningless slogans, bits of old treaties
and a political programme, forms the first important step on the
road to a federal Europe within which, self-evidently, big countries
will be dominant. Our country will be reduced to wielding 3 per
cent of the votes, even fewer than the small region of Friesland
controls in our own Senate. We will become a powerless province.
Although it is to be welcomed that the Dutch people will have the
chance to express their views on this important European development
- which was unfortunately not the case when we adopted the euro
- it has to be said that the idea of holding a referendum over the
question of a complicated and deadly dull tome of fully 482 pages
is somewhat bizarre. Insofar as there has been any discussion of
the text at all, it tends to take the form of a confusing run through
all of its different aspects: legislative processes, institutional
competences, the relationship between the text and policy formation,
and whether the Constitution can in the future be amended. Whenever
specialists in constitutional law or other experts get launched
on such questions, most people decide that the best thing is to
leave them to it.
Another reason why a real public debate has failed to get off the
ground in our country is that the Constitution's supporters are
frightened of it. The polls show that even in our the Netherlands,
which has always been 'pro-European', the result is no foregone
conclusion. Because of this, the major players of Dutch politics
have little enthusiasm for active campaigning. In contrast to the
euro-celebrities wheeled out by D66 and GroenLinks (Green Left),
the leaders of the CDA (Christian Democrats), the VVD (right-wing
liberals) and the PvdA (Labour Party) are ill-inclined to put their
political future in the balance by embracing the Constitution. They'd
rather let the cabinet do their dirty work for them. So the government
is forced to do the splits - because on the one hand it's responsible
for the organisation of the referendum (by means of which the people,
and not the government, have to take a decision) and on the other
hand it wants to take the lead in the 'Yes' campaign. The cabinet
really shouldn't be playing such a double role, a role which gives
it the power to make a million euros available to social organisations
on both sides of the debate, but also to control a warchest, for
the exclusive use of the 'yes' campaign, of 1.5 million euros. This
doesn't look at all good.
For anyone who hasn't read the Constitution and can't be bothered
to follow the debate, let me just say one thing: this Constitution
comes from the same team that gave us the Stability Pact and the
euro.
Jan Marijnissen is leader of the Socialist Party of the Netherlands
(SP), as well as of the party's eight-strong team in the lower house
of the national parliament, the'Tweede Kamer'. This article is translated
from a piece which first appeared in the national newspaper NRC
Handelsblad on 18 April 2005.
See also http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/Constitution2.htm
http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/Tobias.htm
http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/MarinissenEU.htm