Klaus must (not) sign
2009-06-24
How would Czechs feel if Brussels told them they "must" ratify
the Lisbon treaty? If it were put this way, they would probably
tell Brussels where to stick it. Yet the ratification language used
in the Lisbon treaty and the Czech Constitution is nearly
identical. The EU text states that "this Treaty shall be ratified by
the High Contracting Parties," and the Czech Constitution says
that "the president shall ratify [or ratifies] international treaties."
When the chief justice of the Constitutional Court and other
constitutional experts tell Václav Klaus that this means he "must"
ratify the treaty, he understandably adopts a defensive posture.
A more reasonable approach would be for them to use all the
time they devote to anti-Klaus rhetoric to explain why the
president "should" ratify the document. But that would require
them to defend the reality of encroaching European federalism,
and they'd rather not go there.
[Czech Republic European Union Pavel Rychetský]
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