The question:
"Hello, my name is Jürg Jensen, from Germany. I have this question: will the Lisbon Treaty, once adopted, reforming the EU institutional bodies, lead to further enlargement and open up the doors for the western Balkans and Turkey?"
The answer:
"Hello, I'm Jean-Michel De Waele, a political science professor at the Free University in Brussels.
"No, I don't think one can say that the new Treaty of Lisbon is going to open the European Union door for Turkey or the Balkans. It may even complicate new enlargements.
"One could say that the debate on enlargement will be more democratic, because the Lisbon Treaty, in spite of all its imperfections, does make the EU more democratic.
"Therefore, the citizens' involvement in debate, through the European Parliament, will, without a doubt, be greater than it has been for other enlargements.
"Enlargements are highly political; they are political decisions. It's not simply technical questions. So: enlargement concerning Turkey or the Balkans will be a decision of the 27 member states and not simply the result of negotiations among technocrats. The Lisbon Treaty isn't going to change that."
What if I'm a British subject who has no desire to be an EU citizen? ....... where do I go to voice my opinion? ....... where? ..... No where! ...... So don't talk to me about democracy ..... just make sure you've polished your rifle.
IridescentEye 2 years ago
Isn't that why you would like increased involvement by the directly elected EU parliament in EU decision-making?
The handful of people you are referring to are probably the EU's 27 national governments and the 27 national parliaments. All of them need to approve any enlargement.
ssolbergj 2 years ago
Jean-Michel De Waele, a political science professor... really. more like a professor of lies. any citizens' involvement so far has been quashed. all decisions made are by a handful of people..
max1000xx 2 years ago