Shared sovereignty
2008-11-27
Václav Klaus lost his battle with the Constitutional Court
yesterday over the Lisbon treaty, but the war continues. He
signaled that another challenge will be submitted, and he called
for a public discussion on the document. So far, Klaus has been
better at dissing the treaty than the government has been at
extolling it. Klaus risks overdoing it, as several analysts have
noted, but so does the government if it's forced to engage in a
substantive debate. Just a few weeks ago, PM Mirek Topolánek
and his team were criticizing the main European powers for their
handling of the financial crisis. Finance Minister Miroslav
Kalousek told Euro that certain EU states, led by Sarkozy, were
using the situation to slide through long-blocked measures that
had nothing to do with the crisis. He said it was almost like what
the U.S. did after 9/11 in terms of limiting freedoms in the
name of fighting terror. Such comments make it harder to argue
now that ceding more "shared sovereignty" to these same big
states is in the interest of all Czechs.
[Czech Republic European Union Sept. 11, 2001 United States of
America]
|