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AnonymousInactiveFrench Voters Reject European Union’s First
ConstitutionPARIS(May 05)-In a stunning rejection of the European
Union’s latest ambitious move to unite its 25 nations, French voters shot down
the bloc’s first constitution, dealing a potentially fatal blow to the charter
and humiliating President Jacques Chirac.Sunday’s referendum in France,a cradle of continental
unity for more than half a century and the country where much of the
constitution was painstakingly written, threatened to set back plans for broader
European integration by years.About 55 percent of voters opposed the treaty – the first
rejection in Europe. France’s repudiation came ahead of Wednesday’s referendum
in the Netherlands, where polls show even more resistance to the constitution,
and had EU leaders scrambling to do damage control.”The result raises profound questions for all of us about
the future direction of Europe,” British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said.But the European Union’s industry commissioner, Guenther
Verheugen, said the vote was not a catastrophe and that the situation should not
be over-dramatized. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, while
conceding the outcome was a ”serious problem,” insisted: ”We cannot say that
the treaty is dead.”Chirac had waged an all-out campaign to persuade nearly 42
million sharply divided voters to approve the charter. But the electorate was in
a rebellious mood, with unemployment running at 10 percent and unease about the
direction Europe is taking.Turnout was close to 70 percent – testifying to the
passions that the treaty and the debate surrounding it aroused.Chirac argued that the constitution would streamline EU
decision-making and make the bloc more accessible to its 450 million citizens.
But opponents feared it would strip France of its sovereignty and generous
social system and trigger an influx of cheap labor.They feared the treaty would open the EU to unfettered
free-market capitalism, trampling on workers rights.Treaty opponents chanting ”We won!” gathered at Paris’
Place de la Bastille, a symbol of rebellion where angry crowds in 1789 stormed
the Bastille prison and sparked the French Revolution. Cars blared their horns
and ”no” campaigners thrust their arms into the air.”This is a great victory,” said Fabrice Savel, 38, from
the working-class suburb of Aubervilliers, distributing posters that read: ”No
to a free-market Europe.”Ahmed Meguili, a militant leftist, noted the significance
of the Bastille for the ”no” camp’s celebrations.”In 1789, the revolutionaries freed the prisoners and
frightened the king,” he said. ”This is the same thing. This is yet another
divorce between the leaders and the people.”All 25 EU members must ratify the text for it to take
effect as planned by Nov. 1, 2006. Nine already have done so: Austria, Hungary,
Italy, Germany, Greece, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain.The constitution’s main architect, former French President
Valery Giscard d’Estaing, said countries that reject the treaty will be asked to
vote again.Chirac said the process of ratifying the treaty would
continue in other EU countries.”It is your sovereign decision, and I take note,” Chirac
said. ”Make no mistake, France’s decision inevitably creates a difficult
context for the defense of our interests in Europe.”But Philippe de Villiers, a leading opponent, declared the
treaty dead.”There is no more constitution,” he said. ”It is
necessary to reconstruct Europe on other foundations that don’t currently
exist.”De Villiers called on Chirac to resign – something the
French leader had said he would not do – and called for parliament to be
dissolved.Jean-Marie Le Pen, the extreme-right leader who campaigned
vigorously against the constitution, also called for Chirac’s resignation.
Chirac ”wanted to gamble … and he has lost,” Le Pen said.Chirac and other European leaders had said there was no
fallback plan in the event of a French rejection. But voters did not believe
that. Many, especially on the left, hoped their ”no” vote would force the EU
back to the drawing board and improve the 448-clause document.Nicolas Sarkozy, the head of Chirac’s ruling Union for a
Popular Movement and a leading campaigner for the ”yes” camp, called Sunday’s
defeat ”a major political event.”Looking ahead to France’s next general elections in 2007,
Sarkozy said: ”We must decide on an innovative, courageous and ambitious plan
of action.”Chirac’s popularity ratings have plummeted in recent weeks,
and in his television address, the president said he would announce ”my
decisions concerning the government and its priorities” in coming days. There
was widespread speculation that he would dump unpopular Prime Minister
Jean-Pierre Raffarin. -
AuthorMay 30, 2005 at 10:13 AM
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