Top

Brussels ‘recreating Soviet bloc in Europe’

March 22, 2009 by Infowars Ireland 

The outspoken Czech leader has warned of a ‘democratic deficit’

tank_507386a

THE leader of the Czech Republic, which holds the rotating European Union presidency, has warned that a “Europe of states” is in danger of turning into a “state of Europe”, legislating on almost every aspect of people’s lives but lacking in democracy and transparency.

In an interview with The Sunday Times, President Vaclav Klaus drew parallels between Brussels and the failed communist dictatorships of eastern Europe.

“My criticism is based on the sensitivity towards attempts to restrain freedom and democracy, and it does relate to the fact that for most of my life I lived in a political, social and economic system which was not free and was not democratic,” he said.

Klaus also predicted that Gordon Brown’s attempts to produce a European solution to the global economic crisis in time for next month’s G20 summit in London could make the problems worse.

Klaus, 67, an economist by training and a successful finance minister after the fall of communism, said he believed Brown’s plans for more regulatory supervision of the financial system would resolve nothing. Instead, Europe should let business and markets go free.

“The crisis cannot be solved by restraining human initiative and putting further burdens on businesses,” he said. “I propose the exact opposite: deregulation, liberalisation, removing barriers and unnecessary obstructive legislation at the European level.”

A longstanding Eurosceptic and admirer of Margaret Thatcher, Klaus remains scornful of attempts to impose the Lisbon treaty on an unwilling electorate. He said the treaty contained measures to give unelected officials in Brussels “even more power”.

Irish voters who threw out the treaty in a referendum last year “knew what they were doing”, Klaus added, and he was not certain that the second vote which has been called will have a different outcome: “But the pressure will be enormous and not very democratic.”

He talked of a “democratic deficit” in the EU when he addressed the European parliament last month. In his interview, conducted by e-mail, he explained: “I see the democratic deficit in a growing distance between the citizens of the EU member states and the EU political elite, as well as in the shift of decision making from the member states’ capitals to Brussels.”

About 75% of legislation was made in the EU by unelected officials, he said. The Lisbon treaty would give the EU its own legal personality and would abolish important rights of veto: “This certainly is not a solution to the democratic deficit. It makes the democratic deficit even greater.”

Klaus refused to say whether he would agree to sign the treaty, which has yet to be passed by the Czech Senate, if and when it arrives on his desk.

“I don’t wish to foresee . . . what happens after that; let’s wait for the Senate’s decision,” he said. The Czech government’s presidency has smashed any hopes of a cosy EU consensus. Klaus was booed by many MEPs after his speech and a humorous sculpture installed in Brussels portrayed Bulgaria as a lavatory, Romania as a Dracula theme park and France as a country permanently on strike. They were not amused.

Klaus, who helped to lead his country from communism to freedom, warned that the new constitution would stifle debate and democracy. “Not so long ago, in our part of Europe we lived in a political system that permitted no alternatives and therefore also no parliamentary opposition,” he said.

“It was through this experience that we learnt the bitter lesson that with no opposition and tolerance to differing points of view, there is no freedom.”

Klaus revels in speaking his mind on controversial subjects, always prepared to confront politically correct orthodoxies. He is a leading critic of the green movement and also of measures to fight global warming. Freedom and prosperity, he said, were much more endangered than the climate.

He firmly refuses to fly the blue and gold European flag over his official residence in Prague, pointing out that “the European Union is not a state and legally it does not have a flag”.

In a pointed reference to his country’s Soviet-dominated past, he said: “We have lived through the times when it was compulsory on some days to fly another state flag next to ours. I am very glad that these times are over.”

www.timesonline.co.uk

Related posts:

  1. Klaus: Lisbon treaty is transitory praguemonitor.com Prague, Oct 22 (CTK) – The Lisbon Treaty...
  2. Ireland “not alone on Lisbon” – Libertas Ireland is “not on its own with regard to the...
  3. Klaus Won’t Sign the Lisbon Treaty Wall Street Journal The Czech president will hold out...
  4. A fair referendum on Lisbon Treaty in Czech Republic? Yes, please! www.teameurope.info Václav Klaus, the Czech President, who is the...
  5. Czechs being bullied by Euro-Federalists Brussels, Sept 3 (CTK) – German MEP Jo Leinen...
  6. EU afraid of Klaus delaying Lisbon Treaty signing praguemonitor.com Brussels/Paris, Sept 24 (CTK) – There are fears...
  7. Vaclav Klaus says he will not drop objections to EU treaty sg.news.yahoo.com BARVIKHA, Russia (AFP) – – Czech President Vaclav...
  8. EU adds pressure on Czech president Times of Malta European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso...
  9. Germans seek to oust Czech president Vaclav Klaus over EU treaty www.timesonline.co.uk Revelling in the fuss he was causing, Vaclav...
  10. EU paving the way for ‘European empire’ www.presstv.ir European Union leaders have cleared a major obstacle...

Comments

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!





Bottom