MEDIA
RELEASE
9 October 2007
Embargo:
none
Commons
committee: 'Reform treaty' is
really Constitution - DM comment
The
House of Commons European Scrutiny Committee, which has a Labour
majority and chairman, has published its analysis of the EU's so-called
Reform Treaty.
The report has concluded that the treaty is 'substantially equivalent'
to the Constitution that was supposedly laid to rest by overwhelming
'No' votes in France and Holland in 2005.
The
committee found that only superficial articles to do with flags
and anthems had been removed from the original document.
Further,
committee chairman Michael Connarty MP has told the BBC that the
so-called 'red lines' that the government has claimed to have secured
- in order to prevent the EU legislating in areas such as criminal
justice, defence, foreign affairs, tax and social security - are
likely to 'leak like a sieve'.
Ultimately,
the declarations contained in the treaty that Gordon Brown claims
are watertight guarantees of non-interference will be interpreted
by the European Court of Justice. This body has a self-proclaimed
'political mission' to assist ever closer union through its judgements.
It was this court that simply asserted the primacy of EU law
over that of member states, even though there is no article in the
current EU treaty that actually states this.
In
September 2005 the court gave the EU the right to attach criminal
sanctions to its own directives even though this has never been
agreed to by national parliaments and electorates.
This
extraordinary power should have required a treaty change. Many legal
experts have already argued that the declarations and protocols
that provide the basis for the 'red lines' assertion have no definite
legal standing.
Despite
the Scrutiny Committee's conclusive report, foreign secretary David
Miliband has confirmed that the government intends arrogantly whipping
the Bill ratifying the Constitution through Parliament.
DM
campaign director Marc Glendening comments: