Kinniken
Riding with William
this thread started in the "In which countries have you been?" thread, but I am seperating it to limit thread-jacking
Originally posted by Finmaster
Altough this year I'll get to travel to 2 new countries: In november I'll spend a week in Strassburg, France, where we will learn how the Eu works (as if everyone didn't already know that EU is just an organization where France, Germany and Italy can decide things for smaller countries without even asking the opinion of these smaller countries). Well, it is interresting to see if that trip turns my opinions into pro-EU or will they just make them more anti-EU...
Originally posted by Kinniken
The EU where France & Germany decide everything? Like during the Iraqi crisis, where Chirac & Schroeder got themselves isolated?
As for little countries not having a say, may I remind you that "little countries" have nearly half of the votes at European Council despite representing roughly one fifth of the EU's population? Or perhaps on the constitutional proposal, where any country, even tiny Luxembourg and Malta, has a veto right? Or maybe you are thinking of European Commissioners, who in the current constitutional proposal will come as often from small countries than from big?
Of course, the "big countries" individually have more influence than small one - which is quite normal given their demographic weight. But every rule in the EU is twisted in small countries' favor, not the reverse. And if you can point to a single other time in European History where little countries had an influence even remotely as big as today, I'm curious to hear it
Originally posted by Finmaster
Are you not aware of the way how the EU convention agreed on the constitution proposal? In the last meeting, where they made the final decisions, only representives of big countries were present. And it really shows in the constitution proposal: the number of comissioners would go down, so the smallest nations wouldn't have a commissioner at all.
Are you not aware that last week, Germany's foreign minister Fischer or whatever his name is, came to Finland and told our prime minister that "Finland better agree with convention's proposal OR ELSE!"
So we should let France, Germany and other big countries decide these issues for us without even having the right to disagree? That was the basic idea of Germany's foreign minister's words. Luckily, our prime minister was wise enough not to agree with him.
I don't see my country having ANY power in EU. We used to decide our own domestic affairs, but now France, Germany and the other big ones are deciding them for us. I just wish that some day Finland will leave EU and become independent again - altough I fear that that day might never come.
I have to agree that EU does bring economical stability and increasing wealth, and that is a good thing. But we are paying a price far too high for that - we are giving up our political freedom.
Originally posted by Kinniken
Originally posted by Finmaster
Are you not aware of the way how the EU convention agreed on the constitution proposal? In the last meeting, where they made the final decisions, only representives of big countries were present. And it really shows in the constitution proposal: the number of comissioners would go down, so the smallest nations wouldn't have a commissioner at all.
I have a copy of the Convention's proposal in front of me. Here is a loose translation from the part concerning the nationality of Commissioners:
Article I-25
3.a) Member states are treated with a strict equality concerning the order and length of service of their nationals in the European Commission ; thus, the difference between the total number of mandates held by nationals of two different countries can never be greater than one
What this means is that as the number of commissioners drop below that of member states (and it must to keep the Commission working), countries will obviously no longer have a commissioner every time - but big countries will loose "their commissioners" as often as small ones. Nearly half the time France, Germany, ect. will have no representatives on a 15 members body whose importance is getting stronger and stronger in the EU...
Originally posted by Finmaster
Are you not aware that last week, Germany's foreign minister Fischer or whatever his name is, came to Finland and told our prime minister that "Finland better agree with convention's proposal OR ELSE!"
So we should let France, Germany and other big countries decide these issues for us without even having the right to disagree? That was the basic idea of Germany's foreign minister's words. Luckily, our prime minister was wise enough not to agree with him.
I did not hear of that, and I could find no reference to it. But even if he did say that, the fact remains that the Constitution requires unanimous approvals and he knows it. I expect such a statement to be about as effective as Chirac's on "impolite new members".
Originally posted by Finmaster
I don't see my country having ANY power in EU. We used to decide our own domestic affairs, but now France, Germany and the other big ones are deciding them for us. I just wish that some day Finland will leave EU and become independent again - altough I fear that that day might never come.
I have to agree that EU does bring economical stability and increasing wealth, and that is a good thing. But we are paying a price far too high for that - we are giving up our political freedom.
Finland, like every country, has a limited but real influence in Europe. Your MEPs have the same powers as everybody's else... I agree that in an EU with 15 and soon 25 members, that power is limited, but it's still real. And alone, a country like Finland has no foreign influence, no impact on trade negotiations, and in general no influence in the shaping of rising number of issues which are decided at a global level - from world trade to environmental issues to the war on terrorism.
Edit: found PDFs of the Convention's proposal on the EU's website: in english and in finnish . Check Title IV, Article I-25, 3.b
Originally posted by Finmaster
Originally posted by Kinniken
What this means is that as the number of commissioners drop below that of member states (and it must to keep the Commission working), countries will obviously no longer have a commissioner every time - but big countries will loose "their commissioners" as often as small ones. Nearly half the time France, Germany, ect. will have no representatives on a 15 members body whose importance is getting stronger and stronger in the EU...
I understand that. However, some bigger countries are currently having two comissioners and they won't lose more than one while those who are having one comissioner won't have any comissioners at all. So the biggest countries will always have at least one comissioner. This most definetly does not progress equality among member states. I think it is a fair demand from the smaller countries that all countries are to have at least one comissioner all the time.
The way I see it, the only way to ensure that the big nations won't get the gap to dictate the entire Europe is to grant one comissioner position to each nation. This would be trivial to me if the bigger nations wouldn't try to dictate the domestic issues of smaller nations... but they are, as Germany's foreign minister showed last week, and as none of the smaller nations were heard when making final decisions about the constitution. Believe me, if someone had asked the opinion from the smaller nations, the consitution proposal would look very different.
Originally posted by Kinniken
I did not hear of that, and I could find no reference to it. But even if he did say that, the fact remains that the Constitution requires unanimous approvals and he knows it. I expect such a statement to be about as effective as Chirac's on "impolite new members".
It was the biggest news in Finland last week, it was on all papers and even our prime minister spoke about it on national television. Tell me, if the constitution must have unanimous approvals then why weren't the representives of small nations allowed to decide the final form of the constitution?
Also, I think that the fact that the constitution requires unanimous approvals is not a good reason to dismiss all demands of democracy and equality - not to mention the freedom of speech, which Finland's government is trying to do. Apparently Germany's foreign minister wouldn't want that...
Originally posted by Kinniken
Finland, like every country, has a limited but real influence in Europe. Your MEPs have the same powers as everybody's else... I agree that in an EU with 15 and soon 25 members, that power is limited, but it's still real. And alone, a country like Finland has no foreign influence, no impact on trade negotiations, and in general no influence in the shaping of rising number of issues which are decided at a global level - from world trade to environmental issues to the war on terrorism.
Edit: found PDFs of the Convention's proposal on the EU's website: in english and in finnish . Check Title IV, Article I-25, 3.b
I agree that Finland's influence on international issues has not been big. Altough I'm not sure if it has grown a lot, since as you might have noticed EU does not have very united foreign policies. We did have trade affairs before we joined EU and we are among the wealthiest nations in EU. Our gross-national product will be 1.6 times as big as the EU average on march (Learned this in history class, so I can't really provide you the source). Altough if I remember right, the soon-joining, poorer-than-average Eastern European countries joining in 2004 were also calculated in this average. So I'd say that our economy was doing well enough even before joining the EU. But I admit that when we look at it stricktly economically, Finland (as well as all small nations) will be doing better economically after joining the EU than before, that is an undenyable fact.
Notice also that when I say that EU takes away our political freedom, I am not talking about foreign policies. I don't see why a northern, small country like Finland even should be demanding influence on world affairs. I am quite happy to leave that to the superpowers, since they are so eager to want it. I just want the superpowers not to be telling Finland what we must do (hint hint, Germany's foreign minister). Notice also that so far we haven't completely followed EU's opinions in all our foreign policies: our foreign policy is and has been for a long time to work with the UN. That's why Finland has had influence in many UN peacekeeping missions, and that is also why our stand in the Iraq-war was to let UN take care of it. EU, in the meanwhile, has not formed a united opinion, and as long as it won't it will be somewhat weak as a unit on the stage of world affairs.
But what bothers me is not the foreign policy part; I have to admit that on the long term, EU is likely to increase our influence rather than decrease it. What bothers me are our domestic policies, and EU's growing influence on them. And as small nations lose more power to the bigger nations due to the new constitution which was completely decided by bigger nations, our government has to make decisions they wouldn't want to make because some crazy law passed again in the European Parliament. The way I see it, we have lost our independence on domestic affairs. We have already lost a LOT of it since joining the EU; we have had to ruin our agriculture for example. Also, because of EU's decisions we have had to remove taxes A LOT from cars, alcohol, etc... and instead take that money off from healthcare and education. This is making Finland more rightist. Don't get me wrong; I have nothing against Finland turning a bit more rightist. My problem is when our country is turning rightist while most of our people AND our government is not wanting that to happen.
My opinion on this would change if the EU constitution was made fair for all countries. Of course it now says that it's fair, but it doesn't say in the paper anything about the actions how to make it fair. And as long as there are people like Germany's foreign minister ordering small countries around, I don't think it will be very fair for the small countries no matter what beautiful ideologies are written in the constitution.
Btw, thanks for providing the constitution. I don't have time to read it now (besides it's kinda long) but I might quickly check out the most important parts when I have time.