The big news in Europe this week is the final ratification of the Lisbon treaty, which provides a new constitutional structure for the European Union. The treaty passed its final hurdle on Tuesday with the signature of Czech president Vaclav Klaus, after the Czech constitutional court had ruled that it was compatible with the country’s constitution.
The treaty will make the EU a bit more like a political actor in its own right: it will have its own president and foreign minister, more decisions will be made by majority vote instead of consensus among the member governments, and European MPs will have more power to supervise the EU’s activities.
How much practical importance any of this will have will only become clear after the treaty has been operating for a while. But some of the political implications of the treaty and its ratification are already clear.
The most striking thing is the absence from the political mainstream on the continent of what we know as euroscepticism. In America, and among circles in Australia that take their cues from the American right, the EU is still a controversial project — it is variously regarded as threatening, impractical, or even a socialist plot. But on the continent, while there is haggling about the details, the basic idea of building European institutions is not seriously disputed.
Klaus is the exception that proves the rule: his euroscepticism put him so far outside the political ballpark that he was obliged to sign the treaty despite his strong personal opposition.
This is part of a more general political difference. The centre-right in Europe has other characteristic positions: it supports action on climate change, it favors engagement with the Arab world, and it broadly accepts the enlightenment consensus against torture, capital punishment and religious fundamentalism. In the US, and increasingly in Australia, the centre-right (if indeed it still deserves the name) has, by contrast, taken stances on these issues that arouse puzzled disbelief in Europe.
(Despite our bad habit of relating all left-right differences to economics, economic policy has not been a major point of contrast — indeed, France and Germany have been more restrained in their stimulus spending than the US and Australia, with no obvious differences in effect.)
The UK, as usual, is the country caught in the middle: its conservative party is substantially eurosceptic, and is influenced by American ideas in some other areas. But Britain’s independence from Europe is largely an illusion — it has gone too far with the EU project to turn back now — and David Cameron’s pandering to his anti-European wing fails to hide the fact that he is much closer to his continental counterparts such as Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy than he is to the American “teabaggers” and their mad followers in Australia.
It’s hard to say why this has happened: why does Europe produce conservative politicians with mainstream views and a correspondingly broad appeal that ours seem to lack? Unfortunately, the difference could well become self-perpetuating, since one of the trademarks of recent US and Australian conservatives is their insularity and resistance to international comparisons.
That means they’re likely to ignore Europe’s lessons just when they need them most.
Interesting observations. I lament the so called “middle” or “centre” in Australia.
Go back a couple of decades (just before Hawke became PM – around that time) and you had from left to right:
Labor / Democrat / Liberal / National
and with the appearance and growth of the Greens:
Green / Labor / Democrat / Liberal / National
The centre in those days was kind of Democrat – you know: economically like the Libs but socially progressive and reasonable on the whole…..
But then… under Hawke and especially Keating, Labor shifted:
Green / / Democrat / Labor / Liberal / National
And then with the demise of the Democrats:
Green / / Labor/ Liberal/ National
And now the so-called centre (shifting centre) is somewhere in the ?Liberal? camp!
But it is not really “centre” at all. It is right. We just don’t have much to fill the gap that has been left behind by movement of Labor and loss of Democrats.
And in the end, for someone with my bias and my lens that I see things through… who wants the middle anyway? Middle is a relative term. More power to the Greens I say.
This certainly does not reflect the situation in Italy. The mainstream ruling political parties of Berlusconi and his allies the Lega Nord (Northern League) would make Pauline Hanson blush! I’m living in northern Italy at the moment and the campaign posters put during the recent EU parliament elections were horrendous. Here are some examples of Lega Nord posters (they get around 20-30% of the vote in northern electorates and are as I say a coalition partner of Berlusconi’s party):
“They had rapid immigration and now they live in a reservation”. Complete with cartoon picture of a native American Chieftain.
“For the defense of radical christianity and for saying no to the Turkish in Europe”
“Enough Burqas”. This one was accompanied by photo of the candidate literally tearing a burqa off a woman he was holding down. That one was really scary, especially the cheesey shit eating grin he was wearing while doing it.
There are also plenty of eastern European mainstream political parties that hold some pretty scary views, so it’s not all rosey and enlightened in Europe.
You might want to look up the meaning of “teabagging”. Unless you meant that, of course. It’s entirely precise, but whether it’s appropriate…
Can anyone please enlighten how the designations “left” and “right” came about? I mean, how come it isn’t the other way around? And furthermore, where to anarchists sit? Maybe the distinctions “left” “right” and “centre” are no longer appropriate – they are two-dimensinal. How can one describe political philosophies that are based on deconstructed versions of “left”, “right”, and “centre”? Maybe it’s time (no pun intended) to do away with two-dimensional views, and replace them with multidimensional perspectives…
Thanks everyone for the feedback. Yes, I was aware of the other meaning of “teabagging”, but the crazies in the US applied it to themselves – evidently without first looking it up on urbandictionary.
Italy is interesting: the right is certainly racist, or at least pandering to racism. But I think the immigration issue is a bit of a special case in Europe – it plays into “national identity” issues in a differen way from anything in the US or Australia. Berlusconi’s government actually isn’t very right wing in other ways – he refused to send troops to Iraq, for example, until the invasion was safely over.
The distinction between left & right supposedly goes back to the French national assembly of the revolutionary period, where the more radical members sat on the left of the chamber. It’s one of those things that’s hopelessly muddled in theory but nonetheless still works in practice. I criticise it myself, but can’t help using it.