The European Council on Foreign Relations

Five reasons why Europe is cracking

Francois Godement has written a response to this article - 'The EU in the doldrums: we have to hit the right nails'.

Denmark has reintroduced border controls with the populist excuse of controlling crime. By taking this step, the country that was once a model of democracy, tolerance and social justice has placed itself on the frontlines of a Europe that is increasingly surrendering to fear and xenophobia. Greece, meanwhile, has spent more than a year teetering on a cliff edge and few fellow European governments seem disappointed that it might abandon the euro –some of them are even secretly supporting the markets against Athens. Finland has thrown itself into the arms of xenophobic populism and, following in the footsteps of Slovakia, has refused to finance the bailout of Portugal. With elections around the corner, France and Italy have taken advantage of the Tunisian uprising to restrict the free movement of people within the European Union. And Germany, unhappy at managing the euro crisis amid regional elections, has broken ranks with France and the United Kingdom in the United Nations Security Council, ignoring the Libya crisis and undermining 10 years of European security policy.

With the future of the euro in doubt and the Arab world erupting, European leaders are governing on the basis of opinion polls and electoral processes, hanging on to power through any means possible even if that results in undoing the Europe that it took so much time and so many sacrifices to build. Few times in the past has the European project been so questioned and its disgraces so publicly exposed. It would seem that in the Europe of today, having a large xenophobic political party is obligatory. The truth is that Europe is cracking along four fault lines: its values, the euro, foreign policy and leadership. If there is no radical change, the integration process could collapse, leaving the future of Europe as an economically and politically relevant entity up in the air.

1. A project without fuel

This crisis is neither brief nor temporary: we are not just going through a bad patch, nor are we victims of groundless pessimism. To see the danger facing the project of European integration we only have to look back one decade. The contrast with the current situation is revealing. After launching the euro on January 1, 1999, the European Union approved the Lisbon Strategy, which promised to make the EU the most dynamic, competitive and sustainable economy in the world. The bloc also committed itself to expanding freedom, security and justice, taking European integration into areas such as policing, justice and immigration, which until then had remained on the sidelines of the construction of Europe. And to culminate this process and to give itself a real political union that would allow the bloc to become a relevant global actor in the 21st century world, it launched the process of drafting the European Constitution.

But the EU did not just look inwards, it also looked outwards: it carried out the largest expansion in its history, incorporating 10 countries from Central and Eastern Europe in addition to Cyprus and Malta, and, in a move filled with strategic vision and forward-thinking, it committed itself to opening membership negotiations with Turkey in a move that would create a valuable bridge with the Arab and Muslim world. At the same time, the bloc established the pillars of a real foreign and security policy: after years of impotence and humiliations in tiny Bosnia, the French and the British agreed to more closely coordinate on defence. Meanwhile, the European countries united, Germany included, to halt the attempts of Milosevic to ethnically cleanse Kosovo and pledged to launch a rapid reaction force of 60,000 soldiers who could be deployed outside of European territory for crisis containment and peacekeeping missions. Now accustomed to being belittled by the great powers, it is revealing to remember that, back then, with the euro in circulation, expansion underway, a Constitution around the corner and with a foreign and security policy polished by the leadership of Javier Solana, talk of Europe did not provoke weariness or indifference, but rather admiration and even, in Washington, Beijing and Moscow, unconcealed jealousy.

A decade later, this brilliant list of achievements and optimistic promises is more than just being questioned: in the place of the successful and open Europe that we promised ourselves, we encounter a Europe that, despite the enlargement, has shrunk; that, despite the euro, has turned egotistical and unsupportive and which has stopped believing in and practicing its values in order to enclose itself in fear of the outside world and worries about loss of identity. Many regret the enlargements and don't want to hear talk of any further expansion; they are not interested in fulfilling their promises about Turkey's membership and are not even capable of considering the admission of the Balkan countries. The more than 20 years that have passed since the fall of the Berlin Wall is more than enough time for Europe to have completed itself, both inside and out. But the reality is very different: after the expansions, we speak of enlargement fatigue; after the failed constitutional process, we see weariness from political integration; after the euro crisis, we hear of economic and financial exhaustion. After 10 years of institutional reforms and institutional introspection, the Lisbon Treaty, which was meant to save Europe from paralysis and drag it into the 21st century, is barely known and its achievements invisible.

2. Crisis of values and political short-sightedness

The severity of the current European crisis has its origins in the convergence of four centrifugal forces: the rise of xenophobia; the euro crisis; the foreign policy deficit and the lack of leadership. The issues are parallel, but they crossover dangerously under the same common denominator: the absence of a long-term vision. The result is that every difference between members, no matter what shape it takes, becomes a zero-sum game, a ferocious battle where anything goes in order to achieve a victory that can be shown off back home in the national capital, no matter how small and how damaging it may be for the common project.

Almost three years ago the smoke that rose from burning Gypsy camps in Italy served as a warning for what was to come. Since then, election after election, xenophobic forces have gained ground in new countries (Sweden, Finland, the United Kingdom and Hungary) and have consolidated in places where they already had a significant presence (Italy, France, the Netherlands, Denmark). Like a cancer, they have taken over the political discourse and agenda in all states, toughening border controls, imposing restrictions on immigration, making family reunification more difficult and restricting access to social, health and educational services. Worse still, such as the case of Thilo Sarrazin in Germany, some have crossed the line from xenophobia to throw themselves into a blatantly racist discourse about the inferior intelligence of Muslims, dangerously evoking memories of how the Nazis called Jews, blacks and Slavs "untermenschen" (inferior human beings). The result is that, today, in the midst of the economic crisis, the values of tolerance and openness that built the most important heritage we have, are in doubt or even in retreat.

This fear of foreigners is surprising, given that Europe's problems cannot at all be blamed on immigrants. In fact, the opposite is true. In addition to the moral suicide brought about by the predominant attitude toward immigration in almost all of Europe, if there is no change in the demographic trend Europeans are heading for economic suicide because at current birth rates the continent's working-age population will shrink and face greater social costs to sustain an increasingly old and dependent population. Europe should look at itself in the mirror of the United States, which has been able to integrate immigrants from all over the world, contributing not only to their own wellbeing but to the wellbeing of the country. Instead, however, Europe prefers to create a false problem and, around it, build solutions that will do nothing more than accelerate its decline.

The simple-mindedness and stupidity of the racists and xenophobes prevents many people taking them seriously. However, their capacity to influence traditional political parties is considerable and increasing. Every time one of them gets power in a member state, their illegitimating, racist and anti-European agenda collides head on with the European institutions. In order to stop it, the other governments should dare to invoke the treaties and sanction the xenophobes and authoritarians, just as they want to sanction those countries that fail to comply with the rules on budget deficits. But unfortunately the weak response of European institutions and governments in the face of the expulsion of Romanian Gypsies from France, the excesses regarding freedom of the press in the Hungarian Constitution or the harassment of irregular immigrants in Italy suggests we should expect little from them when it comes to standing up against other governments.

3. The end of solidarity

It is said that the economic crisis is to blame, but that is not entirely true. The main risk to the European project doesn't come from the crisis itself: Europe has faced crises before and has emerged strengthened from them. Amid the crisis of the 1980s and under pressure from the technological advances of the United States and Japan, European governments decided to make a qualitative leap in integration. Back then, European leaders clearly foresaw what was at that time called the "cost of the non-Europe," in other words the wealth and wellbeing that could be created by eliminating the obstacles that slowed economic growth.

Today, with all the serious and hard-to-solve challenges that are facing the European economy (particularly with regard to the aging population and the loss of competitiveness), there is a broad consensus on how to overcome these problems. The real problem therefore should be sought elsewhere: in the existence of irreconcilable understandings of how we got into the euro crisis and, in consequence, how we should get out of it. For some, led by Germany, we are facing a crisis born of the fiscal irresponsibility of some member states. The solution therefore, the thinking goes, is for those states to simply comply with the austerity measures that were in force and which have now been strengthened. The solution is presented hand-in-hand with moralizing and condescending preaching as if the deficit or surplus of a country reflected the moral superiority or inferiority of a whole group of human beings. Many would like a two-speed Europe, not based on merit, but rather on cultural and religious stereotypes: in first class would be the virtuous savers who practice the protestant faith; in the second, the profligate Catholics who cannot be trusted and who have to be kept in line, or, if it comes down to it, kicked out into the street.

This version of the crisis, which risks the end of Europe, must be contested. That countries as different as poor Greece or rich Ireland, a first-class champion of corporate power, neo-liberalism and deregulation, find themselves in similar situations force us toward more sophisticated explanations. We are suffering a crisis of growth, a logical phase in the process of constructing a monetary union in which the existence of a single monetary policy, not adequately complemented by fiscal policies and regulation of the financial system, causes imbalances that build up until they cause the problems we currently see. In this situation, and given that the monetary union was designed without taking into account the necessary mechanisms to deal with a crisis like the current one, the logical thing to do would be to discuss how to perfect the union so that it functions in a balanced way and, as seems necessary, improve its governance through the introduction of new instruments and reinforcing the authority of its institutions.

But instead of following the path toward deepening the union, what we are seeing is a winner/loser attitude in which some are using the current situation to impose their economic model on others, as if all countries are in the same condition and can function under the same rules. The consequence of all this is that, in the absence of more ambitious measures, we lock ourselves into a situation of permanent crisis. Meanwhile, the adjustments and cuts associated with the current bail outs will worsen the crises that some countries are suffering rather than help them emerge from them. On this path, deterioration is inevitable, because if growth and jobs do not appear soon, societies will rebel against the adjustments and the excessive debt loads or, alternatively, the markets and creditor governments will work together to quarantine or expel from the euro those countries with solvency issues. If it goes on like this, the European Union will end up being, in the eyes of many Europeans, what the International Monetary Fund was for many Asian and Latin American countries in the 1980s and 1990s: a tool for the imposition of an economic ideology that lacks any legitimacy but which is obeyed because of the lack of any alternative. It could be that it works, but Europe will no longer be a political, economic and social project, but rather a simple regulatory body charged with overseeing macroeconomic stability that suffers from a severe democratic and identity deficit.

4. Absent from the world

Just as serious as the breakdown of internal agreement is Europe's inability to speak and act with a single voice in the 21st century world. Despite being the largest economic and trade bloc on the planet, the world's largest provider of development aid and, even, despite the cutbacks, continuing to possess a considerable military and security apparatus, Europe still exercises its power fragmentally and as a result, as we see every day in relations with the United States, Russia or China or with its actions in its Mediterranean neighbourhood, clearly ineffectively. Obviously, Europe's strength is not comparable to a great power nor does it want to exercise it as they do. The problem is that Europe is not able to act in a united and decisive way even in its closest geographic areas such as the Mediterranean, where its strength should be overwhelming, while neither is it influential or effective in institutions such as the UN, the G-20 or the IMF where its political and economic power is enormous. In all of these multilateral institutions, there are many European countries, but little Europe, and, what is worse, there are few policies that fit with their interests.

More than a year after the entry into effect of the Lisbon Treaty, which promised us a new and more effective foreign policy, the paralysis of Europe's foreign affairs is complete. The response to the Arab revolutions was, without doubt, the straw that broke the camel's back. For decades, in exchange for protecting its interests with regard to immigration, energy and security, Europe has supported the perpetuation in power of a string of authoritarian and corrupt regimes, largely turning a blind eye to the promotion of democratic values and respect for human rights. But when, finally and without any foreign help, the people of the region have taken their destiny in their own hands, the response from Europe has been slow, timid and lazy, with leaders appearing much more interested in protecting their economic interests and controlling immigration flows than supporting democratic change. In this, yet again, short-sightedness is evident, given that if the Arab revolutions succeed, the economic dividend of democratization would be so great that it would overshadow any calculation on the cost of the turbulence.

It is true that Europe has avoided falling into the abyss it would have created had it let Gaddafi invade Benghazi. That would have turned Europe's clock back to the days of Srebrenica and triggered an irreparable moral and political crisis. But let us not fool ourselves, in the Libya uprising, like in the euro crisis, after avoiding an abyss there is still a lot to be done: in addition to achieving a peace that stops Gaddafi's regime from remaining in power, Europe should restore credibility in its military capacity, which has been called into question, as well as in its security and foreign policy institutions, which have been battered. The frustration with these new foreign policy institutions, especially the role of the permanent president of the Council, Herman Van Rompuy, the high representative for foreign policy, Catherine Ashton, and the new European External Action Service (EEAS), is so vast that European capitals have started decoupling themselves from these institutions and coordinating and working on their own. Paradoxically, where we hoped there would be a fusion of European and national interests, of Brussels and national capitals, we now find an increasingly large fracture: on the one hand, a European foreign policy that merely exists on paper and lacks any strength; on the other, a series of policies based, in fits and starts, on the formation of coalitions of volunteers with exclusively national resources. If the Arab Spring had ended quickly and happily, the failures of Europe would have ended up being invisible. But if what lies ahead, as seems to be the case, is a very rocky road toward democracy, replete with partial victories and defeats and a lot of instability and uncertainty, Europe will divide, it will be incapable of exerting any influence and it will become irrelevant abroad. With no role in the Middle East, Turkey humiliated by the roadblocks facing its adhesion and a Mediterranean region left to its own fate, Europe will cease to be a credible political actor in the world.

5. The rebellion of the elites

For years, the European project has progressed on the basis of the implicit consensus between citizens and elites regarding the benefits of the integration process. This consensus has now been broken on two fronts. On one side, citizens have withdrawn the blank cheque they gave to the European institutions to govern them "for the people but without the people." With time, the process of integration has touched the most sensitive fibers of national identity, especially with regard to the welfare state and social policy. The economic, liberal and deregulatory bias of European construction has ended up politicizing and idealizing a project that previously was thought best left in the hands of experts and bureaucrats. But what is more surprising is that, alongside this rebellion of the masses, there has also what we could call "a rebellion of the elites."

Germany is perhaps the clearest example of this phenomenon. According to opinion polls, 63 percent of Germans have stopped trusting Europe and 53 percent see no future for Germany in the bloc. For the elite, things aren't much different: at a time when exports to China are on the verge of surpassing exports to France, the south of Europe is seen as a hindrance to growth. The memory of the European commitment has disappeared with generational change: only 38 of the 662 current members of parliament held their seats in 1989. Without any doubt we are looking at a new Germany. Given its weight and importance, any change in Germany has a deep impact on European construction. And because the key characteristic of the new Germany is a lack of confidence in the European Union, Germany is exporting distrust rather than trust, as it did in the past. An essential component of the European engine has therefore seized up, without any alternative existing to substitute it. France can survive economically without Germany's faith, and it could even use the United Kingdom to fill the holes Germany has left in foreign policy, but it is evident that Europe cannot advance without a Germany fully committed to European integration.

In the absence of German leadership or any alternatives, the process of integration becomes frayed. The presidents of the Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and the Council, Herman Van Rompuy, and the high representative for foreign policy, Catherine Ashton, are wandering lost in the European fog, incapable of voicing a simple discourse that would connect them with the pro-Europeans who still believe in the project. Only the European Parliament rises occasionally in moral conscience, building walls against the populist and xenophobic excesses and trying to advance the process of integration. However, only a handful of members of the European Parliament have their own voice and are willing to turn against their own governments and national parties when it is necessary. In Germany, France and Italy, but also in many other places, we find ourselves confronted with a generation of leaders ever more short-sighted and given over to electioneering: among them, none speak to Europe or for Europe.

Epilogue

With every passing day, the sensation that Europe is cracking is more real and more justified. Can Europe break apart? The answer is evident: yes, of course it can. At the end of the day, the European Union is a human construction, not a celestial body. That it is necessary and beneficial justifies its existence, but that will not prevent it from disappearing. Just as a series of favourable circumstances led to the risky launch of this grand project, the unleashing of a series of adverse circumstances could very easily make it disappear, especially if those responsible for defending it shirk their responsibilities. Many committed pro-Europeans are conscious that the danger of Europe unravelling is very real, and they are duly worried about the course of events. However, at the same time, they fear that feeding the pessimism with warnings of this nature could only serve to accelerate the collapse. But when, day after day, we see the red lines of decency and the values that Europe embodies being crossed by bigoted politicians who unscrupulously fuel the fears of citizens, it is impossible to continue looking the other way. Seeing the clarity of ideas and the determination with which the anti-Europeans pursue their objectives, it is hard to believe that mere optimism will be sufficient by itself to save Europe from the ghosts of doggedness, egoism and xenophobia that are haunting it at present. Without an equal level of determination and clarity of ideas from the other side, Europe will fail.

This piece first appeared in El País (Spanish)

You can read François Godement's response to this piece by clicking here: "The EU in the doldrums: we need to hit the right nails"


13 Comments

#2

Nice article Mr.Torreblanca,you told many truths really profoundly hidden to yours days deep in human nature and resurfaced just after the hearth and soul eroded due to the crisis.But she was provoked just by this english-protestant way of thinking-i come,i conquer,i exploit and after me should be the flood,i don’t care…This was the real time bomb who trigger this crisis,exploitation without care of anything valuable,just dip out and run away.It come one day the boomerang return back.Europe is here to stay,i don’t believe in english “skepticism” or german nationalism or any other “-ism”,they are sticks in europian char and contain destruction in it,released by angry and greed people who don’t share the vision of united Europe just because they want all profits for herself.For this type of vision the game is over.We are called to build new society with more human face,more social oriented businesses and less money.Europe is on the route to achieve that and this continent was and will be the leading place in the world,we need to remember how at the past our system worked without money,how the peoples was friend and not concurrent like in present days.We need interior transformation in our souls to forget the national interest and promote the global ones,that’s the future.Unite Europe and look forward,never backward.Forward is progress,backward is regress,do not exist state between.We are the World model,be that!

George Gustinov | Canada/Bulgaria | 18 May 11, 18 May 11 EST
#3

Never mind today’s situation, but right before the fiscal crisis broke-out Ireland had the highest GDP/capita in Europe, second only to super-tiny Luxembourg. Just because Greece’s was lower than Ireland’s (as was even Germany’s or Sweden’s), didn’t make Greece “poor” - as you state under the momentum of the 80s and the 70s notions about the country - since Greece’s GDP/capita was roughly the same as that of Spain and Italy and well over 90% of the EU average. So, is it, according to you, a country with something like 95% of the EU average “poor”? Not to mention actual poor country per capita GDPs like some East European member-states, Portugal etc, that barely touch 60% or 70% of the EU average.

Of course, today’s crisis will “re-shuffle” everything across Europe since this is a ‘fluid’ period

Dimis | Greece | 18 May 11, 18 May 11 EST
#4

The unanswered question is that if Europe should crack apart and fail, then to what extant would it matter?

J. Tattersall | U.K | 18 May 11, 18 May 11 EST
#5

Eventually someone will point the finger at Moody´s, Fitch and Standard & Poor’s. This troika is the major responsible for the european euro-crisis, although I couldn’t agree more that lack of leadership and the absence of plan for the common future helped tremendously.
Europe hasn’t aged well, the founding fathers of the EEC would have been ashamed of today’s ruling politicians. A legacy has been lost.
In the end, everyone is hoping that somehow we manage to pull this one through until a new generation of more altruist, educated and down-to-earth generation of politicians rises.

Miguel | Portugal | 18 May 11, 18 May 11 EST
#6

The problem is Berlusconi. Commentators both Italian and non-Italian alike tend to underestimate the importance of Italy and its potential to weigh negatively upon events.
Due to the presence of the Vatican on Italian soil, our country is the miner’s canary of liberal democracy and has been for most or all of its existence.
Ten years of a nationalist, far-right, mediatic dictatorship (one perhaps more virtual than “real”) within a major, founding nation of European integration (TREATY OF ROME 1957) has done untold damage to the European project. If there had been a Prime Minister such as Romano Prodi (just to name an example) in these years, things would be much different today across the continent.
What has happened, as in the 30’s, is that Italy’s political lunacy has spread to other countries…

Joe Solaris | Italy | 19 May 11, 19 May 11 EST
#7

“Never mind today’s situation, but right before the fiscal crisis broke-out Ireland had the highest GDP/capita in Europe, second only to super-tiny Luxembourg”
If this is true it should also trigger instantly the question why Ireland has never - never! - paid anything net into the EU. How come France in 1999 paid net 15,5 million € and Germany did in 1999 net 8,4 BILLION € into the EU?

Answering that question will also answer how Germany trned eurosceptic to a certain extend. France used to abuse the system without shame. And that the “political elites of Europe” (Whole point 5 only talks about germany, no other country mentioned at all, why not say it out clear that the EU depends on german politicians keeping germans in shakles)... that that elite stopps telling their own population that everything is god and more roses will be on the way shouldnt come as a surprise.

Fix the EU budget, fix the gap between the ability to force others to pay taxes for you and the inability of the same to influence your decisions and much will be won. “No taxation without representation”... no? without a stronger - not rabbid anti-german - federal body the EU has a bad hand.

All I read in german papers is that germany must artficially make itself less competative so that we shall suffer and others shall benefit, we shall also keep paying most of the EU budget at the same time. And we shall also pay most into rescuing those other countries that failed in their national policy. And we shall have no say in how to remedy those.

Germany is a federation and has been since its unification in 1871 and even before. Dont look at us as if we’re too stupid to grasp it.

Its always nice to see our fellow europeans acknowledging german importance. Why is it though that it is never followed by the revolutionary idea that a member as important as germany should perhaps also have to say something other than “Yeah, what France said!” There are frequent calls for Merkel and Germany to “take responsibility” and “lead”... but if we do, theres always an outcry that a german diktat is on the way.

What most europeans want is a Germany that leads exactly where those europeans want to go. To have a “leader” who decides nothing but takes over all responsibility for the decisions that others make. Saying “I’m also for the same thing that Belgium just said and willing to pay for it” is not leadership at all.

Kimi | Germany | 22 May 11, 22 May 11 EST
#8

I may be mistaken, but between the lines of mr Torrablanca’s article the message I seem to get is ‘the people are stupid, they should not be allowed to vote, and much better to put all matters in the hands of unelected politicians’. Perhaps mr Torrablanca would be kind enough to explain.

Now, there seems to be a myth perpetuated by some that the EU and the Euro are somehow sacrosanct and there has to be ‘more integration’ at all times regardless of what the peoples think. The heart of the problem is this, the political elites see the EU as an end in and of itself and not a means to an end. I have sometimes referred to it as the ‘integration ueber alles’ mentality.

We need to recognize that neither the EU, nor the Euro are actually needed in order to have trade, or friendship, or economic cooperation, or holidays, or even peace. None of these things actually need an EU or a Euro. The issue here is not that ‘xenophobes’ and ‘neonazis’ are undermining the EU, no the issue is that the political elites over the last decade or so have made it very clear indeed that no matter what the peoples want, political integration continues unabated.

This is the major issue, because the peoples are not in favor of political integration at all, and do not see it as necessary (and indeed it isn’t as I already pointed out). Also, the peoples increasingly are sick of having laws imposed upon them by a combination of a Soviet style Politburo (Commission) and national government ministers who go ‘through Brussels’ so they can bypass the national parliaments.

Abe Lincoln once said, you can fool all people some of the time and even fool some people all of the time, but you cannot fool all people all of the time.

There are many myths that exist as for why there even is an EU, but all of those can be dismissed out of hand. For peace, we have (had) NATO, and of course the Cold war where neither the USA nor the Soviet Union would have allowed war in Europe if we had wanted to have one. For prosperity we have trade.

For none of these things, the EU is actually necessary, it exists only to help national government increasingly bypass their national parliaments (doing so in cooperation with the Commission). And the peoples have caught on to this, that their votes no longer matter, that even if they vote ‘no’ to a treaty it gets imposed anyway. With the Constitution and Lisbon Treaty, the elites took off the mask and openly showed the ugly contempt for democracy they have.

The peoples, and in this case the lower middle classes and lower classes (incomewise) see hordes of immigrants coming in competing with them for increasingly scarce jobs. Yes, the elites don’t have this problem because those usually live in all-white sections of towns and cities, far away from the problems the EU is creating with its ‘markets/investors/bankers/corporations ueber alles’ mentality. The peoples have seen that the EU is backing the bankers, and not the peoples.

Furthermore, implementing a ‘fiscal transfer union’ to ‘save the euro’ would mean countries like Netherlands and Germany having to pay far more than even today, and it would endanger our pensions (pensions are fiscal, after all) because we saved a lot, and the likes of Romania saved almost nothing. Sooner or later the EU will demand that we show ‘solidarity’ and hand some of it over.

Bismarck once addressed this attitude, having been confronted with the EU-types of his day ‘I always find the word Europe on the lips of those who want something for themselves but are afraid of asking it in their own name’. Its easy to use the word ‘solidarity’ when you are the one who would benefit. The Germans and Dutch would have to pay much more into the EU with a fiscal transfer system, which means we would be better off without the Euro, because frankly speaking: we do NOT want to pay more.

In short, the people are tired of being told to pay more in the name of ‘solidarity’  and seeing their national parliamentary democracies hollowed out and being told that opposing this ‘ever-more-centralizing-of-power’ means they are bigots or xenophobes. Time to realize that it is the pro-EU crowd who are responsible for the discord, endlessly pushing policies the people don’t want (mass immigration, save the bankers and push all bank debt upon the people and of course the open contempt for democracy etc…).

Populism is defined as the politics that serves the interests of the ‘common people’ in their struggle versus the elites. The EU, which I consider heir to the raactionary character of the Congress of Vienna, openly identifies itself as opposed to populism, thus elitist.

Marcel | The Netherlands | 25 May 11, 25 May 11 EST
#9

You’ve hit the nail on the head, Marcel in the Netherlands.

Mr. Torreblanca is a neo-liberal ideologue and party apparatchik for the internationalising forces which seek to deny the European peoples their right to democracy.  Since the collapse of neo-liberal economic system in September 2008, these emperors now have no clothes.  His outright dismissal of any other vision for Europe other than the post-war Anglo-Saxon neo-liberal one is breathtaking.

We are in the middle of a confrontation between the forces of liberalism versus the forces of democracy.  The good people of Iceland have shown Europe the path.  Let everyone open their minds and see the current system as the stagnant,exploitative, utopian ideology that it is.  Europeans, keep pushing for genuine democrcacy that is true to our own European traditions and lets rout the ideologues.

Nicholas | Dinegal, Ireland | 25 May 11, 25 May 11 EST
#10

Why is it worrying that the European project is failing? I once was a committed supporter of the so called European dream.

The problem was corrupt corporations, and politicians hi-jacked that dream, at the expense of small business owners.

The “European dream,” became the nightmare for most Europeans, and xenophobia set in. At the end if their was any genuine hope of reviving a love for a common Europe, then it was eroded because of this elite.

Lets be honest, Brussels is either inept, incompetent or corrupt, if they never realized how bad the financial situation was in Greece. Add the bailouts that only benefited the elite corporations, and banks. There is a sense of a European betrayal, rather than a dream.

Let the rotten ship sink.

Mark | Indonesia | 30 May 11, 30 May 11 EST
#11

The fundamental problem with the EU was that it went far beyond the scope of an economic zone. The individuals who were pulling the strings in Brussels sought complete control over the lives of all Europeans. This control was their vision which they were going to impose at any cost and had no basis whatsoever in sane reason. They ignored all economic rules, they ignored culture and nationalism and the results were disastrous. Germany and France are not going to bail out Italy and Spain this summer. By the end of the year the EU will be crushed into rubble and nationalistic governments will replace the Brussels gulag boys.

Andrew | USA/German | 01 Jun 11, 01 Jun 11 EST
#12

This was a thoughtful article bemoaning the EU and hoping for a United States of Europe with shared values in between, but there is a problem in that which the so-called Elites (be they politicians, bureaucrats, bankers or CEOs) have never been able to understand. We unlike the Americans do not have a shared history and culture as one country. Yes the Americans have their melting pot, but they also have a single solid background as a country. In Europe you can travel of a few hours and be met with people whose day to day is entirely different from yours socially, economically and yes culturally. That is one of the reasons along with the undemocratic nature of the EU (the commission in particular) that it has not worked.

There is a large conflict of culture and perceived power between the big powers of Europe and the smaller ones, between the Northern part and the Southern and I could go on. And if an EU was to be saved then it could only happen if it was organized entirely in a different manner. The Commission would need to be removed along with its bureaucracy or at least placed under the direct control of a Parliament. The smaller nations would have to be organized into unions based on culture and location with equal power to the big nations (UK, France, Germany and eventually Turkey and maybe Spain and Poland) so the votes could be divided more equally and all local/semi-national interest would be represented by their culture. There would have to be a lot clearer and probably even Draconian laws against lobbyism (the bane of modern democracy). Then maybe the EU could be saved.

But I fear that the EU will have to fail first because of the natural inertia against any major change and what really will replace it I have no idea.

Michael | Denmark | 01 Jun 11, 01 Jun 11 EST
#13

“Five reasons why Europe is cracking”

We tire this abuse of the name of the European subcontinent.

The title you were looking for was surely “Five reasons why the EU is cracking.”

William | Luxembourg | 05 Jun 11, 05 Jun 11 EST
#14

Another dangerous abuse of vocabulary by the EU Commission is the use of the word “populist” which substitutes “democrat”. They obviously do not like the system of representative democracy, giving it only lip-service in the form of the European Parliament, a fig-leaf to cover the fact that its sole purpose is to discuss the dictates of the unelected Commission, and then implement them.

William | Luxembourg | 05 Jun 11, 05 Jun 11 EST

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