CZECH PRESIDENT VACLAV KLAUS
ON EUROPE AFTER THE IRISH NO
DATELINE 20TH JUNE 2008
Rodney Atkinson writes:
I am pleased to publish on the Freenations website an interview given
by the Czech President Dr Vaclav Klaus whom I know personally and whom
the free peoples of Europe recognise as a champion of democratic sovereignty
and a Europe of free nation states. As he says in this interview "Europeanness
is Esperanto: an artificial, dead language." It is indeed and like
Esperanto it is sustained as an empty shell by a pseudo intellectual
class totally divorced from cultural, linguistic and democratic reality.
And when their artificial language and artificial State is rejected
they blame the people, despise them and seek to circumvent them!
Interview with President Klaus about Irish rejection of the Lisbon
Treaty
Autor: Petr Kolár | Publikováno: 20.6.2008 | Rubrika:
Rozhovory
What do you think about the Irish NO?The whole of Europe should thank
the Irish people for slowing down the current erroneous processes towards
more unification, towards the suppression of nation states, towards
a Europe of regions, and towards greater centralization
from above, which the Lisbon Treaty embodied. The referendum was a perfect
example of what ordinary people think about this development
at odds with the EU-supporting politicians whose motivation lies elsewhere.
I thanked a few Irish personally.
What does the Irish NO mean for the fate of the Lisbon Treaty in
your view? What impact will it have on the EU as a whole?
I cannot imagine any development other than recognition of the fact
that this is not the way to go. Lets seek a European model different
from a supranational state with its centre in Brussels. Lets go
back to a community of friendly, effectively cooperating states. Lets
keep most of the competencies on the level of states. We should let
people living on the European continent be Czechs, Poles, Italians,
Danes, and not make Europeans of them. That is a flawed project. The
difference between a Czech, a Pole, an Italian and a Dane (as random
examples) and a European is akin to the difference between Czech, Polish,
Danish languages and Esperanto. Europeanness is Esperanto:
an artificial, dead language.
What follows from the Irish NO for the Czech Republic? Should we
continue preparing for ratification under these circumstances, or is
it no longer necessary? The British, for instance, have declared that
they are going to continue the ratification process regardless of the
results in Ireland...
Ratification cannot be continued, the Treaty can no longer enter into
force. To continue as though nothing has happened would be pure hypocrisy.This
would be more significant news about the state of the Union
than the Irish NO. The ratification of the Lisbon Treaty in the Czech
Republic ended last Friday. To pretend something else is undignified
at least if we presume to live in a world where one plus one
equals two. I dont think the British themselves declared anything;
it was the Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown who made a declaration.
British democracy is much more complex.
Does the Irish NO change your attitude towards the possibility of
holding a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty in the Czech Republic? And
if so, how?
There is now no need to hold a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty in our
country as there is nothing to vote on. The only possible question would
be: Do you, the Czechs, want the Irish to vote again and differently?
It is not about us today.
Should the European Union attempt to create an entirely new document
in the wake of the Irish NO, instead of dusting the Treaty off or revising
it?
A document is only ever the last step. We need a new perception of
the European integration process. It is necessary to explicitly refuse
the post-Maastricht development towards an ever closer union. The resulting
document must be written on a different basis and by different people.
It cannot be written by a German politician who thinks in federalist
terms and has been in the European Parliament for the past 30 years.
Nor can it be written by a French politician for whom Europeanisation
is a way to increase the greatness and the importance of France, or
by a representative of a country which wants to find solutions to some
of its historical traumas via Europe.
What is needed is detached consideration about the correct administration
of public goods which of them belong at the level
of towns, regions and states and which at the level of the continent.
And above all, which of them do not belong anywhere, because the issue
is not public but private good, which must remain subject
to the decision-making of free individuals.
What impact will the Irish decision have on the Czech EU Presidency
in 2009?
We will have a few more competences than we would have had had the
Lisbon Treaty been in force. The Treaty substantially weakened the states
and therefore also the presidency of any one of them. But let us not
live in illusions. I know well that the entire concept of a rotating
presidency is, to a certain extent, just playing at real democracy.
Petr Kolár, Lidové noviny, 16 June 2008