EDITORIAL
A hora da comissão Juncker
DIRECÇÃO
EDITORIAL 22/10/2014 – PÚBLICO
Foi auspiciosa a estreia de Juncker. Anunciou mudanças e respondeu em
alemão à sra. Merkel.
Foi aprovada
nesta quarta-feira a nova Comissão Europeia que há-de iniciar o seu mandato a 1
de Novembro e, apesar de ter obtido uma maioria confortável (423 eurodeputados
a favor e 209 contra), ficou aquém da última comissão presidida por Durão
Barroso, apoiada por 488 votos favoráveis. Parece estranho, pois Jean-Claude
Juncker e o novo colégio de comissários estão a entrar agora, portanto com
menos carga de polémicas sobre os ombros, enquanto a equipa presidida por
Barroso já concorria ao segundo mandato e muita contestação pelo meio. Basta
lembrar toda a controvérsia gerada em
torno da intervenção no Iraque. Mas percebe-se esta votação. Por um lado, a
divisão dos socialistas e a diminuição expressiva dos liberais, que perderam 30
deputados; por outro, o avanço dos eurocépticos, à esquerda e à direita que,
por razões diferentes, contestam o modelo, o método e as políticas
comunitárias. Isto fez toda a diferença na geografia tradicional do Parlamento
de Estrasburgo.
Seja por isso, seja
porque a fria realidade dos números — quer dizer, da economia — se está a
impor, a verdade é que os dogmas até agora dominantes no pensamento e na acção
da superstrutura política europeia parecem estar a ceder. Essa mudança ficou
mais clara ontem, com o discurso de Juncker, mais preocupado com o crescimento
e a resolução dos problemas sociais do que com a consolidação orçamental. Draghi está cada vez mais acompanhado na sua
determinação de contrariar as orientações de Berlim. Não vai ser fácil, como ainda
a semana passada provou a chanceler alemã no Bundestag, quando, contra todas
evidências, mostrou a mesma inflexibilidade de sempre quanto ao abrandamento
das políticas de austeridade. Mas, aparentemente, o presidente da Comissão não
se intimidou e, em jeito de resposta, mudou o discurso do francês para o
alemão, para avisar: “A consolidação orçamental, por si só, não traz
crescimento”. O tempo dirá se este discurso é para
ficar.
Juncker tells Cameron: you can’t destroy EU migration
rules
Commission
president warns PM over ‘irresponsibility’ as new poll reveals 56% support in Britain
for remaining in union
Nicholas
Watt, chief political correspondent
The
Guardian, Thursday 23 October 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/23/juncker-tells-cameron-cant-destroy-eu-migration-rules
Jean-Claude
Juncker, the incoming president of the European commission, has rejected out of
hand any attempt by David Cameron to “destroy” the fundamental rules of the EU
on free movement of people.
In an echo
of the remarks by the outgoing president José Manuel Barroso, who warned that
the prime minister is making a “historic mistake” on the EU, Juncker said on
Wednesday that he would not compromise in an “irresponsible way” on rights that
date back to foundation of the EEC.
The
intervention by Juncker, at the European parliament in Strasbourg ,
as MEPs approved the appointment of his new commission team, came as a new poll
showed growing support among UK
voters for continuing membership of the EU.
The Ipsos
Mori poll, commissioned by the pro-EU Business for New Europe group, found that
56% of voters would support UK
membership while 36% would vote to leave if a referendum were held now. The
poll shows support for the EU has risen since the issue returned to centre
stage with the rise of Ukip after the PM suggested in the summer of 2012 that
he would support a referendum on EU membership. In November 2012, five months
after Cameron floated the idea of a referendum and two months before he
formally committed himself to one, Ipsos Mori found 48% of voters would like to
leave the EU while 44% would support membership.
The latest
poll is a mixed blessing for pro-Europeans. It shows that 43% of voters either
broadly support Britain ’s EU
membership terms (29%) or support the idea of the UK joining with other member states
for closer integration (14%). But the poll also found that 51% of voters want Britain to be a
member of an economic community with no political links (34%) or would like to
leave the EU altogether (17%).
Juncker
said he would like to help secure a “fair deal” with Cameron if he were to put
a package of reforms to EU leaders after a general election win. But the
incoming commission president brushed aside recent suggestions from government
sources that restrictions should be imposed on migrants from current EU states.
Speaking at
a press conference at the European parliament, Juncker said: “As far as the
freedom of movement is concerned ... I do think this is a basic principle of
the EU since the very beginning and I am not prepared to change this because if
we are destroying the freedom of movement other freedoms will fall in a later
cause. So I am not ready to compromise in an irresponsible way.”
But Juncker
said that any EU leader was free to table proposals to the European Council –
the body that comprises the leaders of the 28 EU member states. He added: “We
want a fair deal with Britain
and it has to be seen how far reaching the compromises can be.
“I am not
in a situation to tell you exactly what the British government will propose and
so I am not in a position to tell you what the European commission will deliver
as an answer to a British request. But this is not as dramatic a question as it
seems. Believe me, it is not as dramatic as it seems.”
Cameron is
expecting to face questions about his reform plans on the margins on an EU
summit in Brussels today and on Friday which
will formally discuss climate change, economic growth, the Ebola crisis and Ukraine . Herman
Van Rompuy, the outgoing European Council president, has said that he would
like EU leaders to agree to cut the EU’s carbon emissions by 40% below 1990
levels by 2030.
Cameron is
planning to shame fellow EU leaders over their dinner on Thursday night into
stepping up their response to the Ebola crisis by ensuring that the combined
contribution of all 28 EU member states amounts to €1bn and that 2,000 workers
are sent to west Africa.
Alisdair
McIntosh, director of Business for New Europe, said of the new poll: “Many of
the public recognise the important economic benefits of staying within the EU.
Politicians are mistaken if they think people just want to hear ever-louder
Eurosceptic rhetoric, especially at a time of economic and political
uncertainty. This only increases cynicism about the major political parties.
“Politicians
need to lead from the front, not shout from the back. They need to set the
agenda, and reflect the importance of EU membership to business and the
economy. The way to promote prosperity in Britain is to secure realistic
reforms of the EU. The government should fight for the reforms that matter most
– those that will create growth and jobs.”
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