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France Speaks
Sovereignty Oui, EU Constitution Non
by W. James Antle III
Viva La France! Praise for France on conservative
websites has long been in short supply, but praise is certainly due today. President Jacques Chirac acknowledged in
a televised address that the French people have rejected the European Union
Constitution.
Before the results were
announced, the columnist George Will described
what French citizens were faced with: “The European Union, which has a flag no
one salutes and an anthem no one knows, now seeks ratification of a constitution
few have read.”
At this writing, the polls
suggest a similar result is likely in the Netherlands. Some 60 percent of the Dutch have
indicated they will vote “no” in their own referendum on the EU
constitution.
Why are these countries, both
leading participants the European unification project for decades, now dragging
their feet? To be sure, domestic
politics with little relation to the EU play a prominent role. But the opposition also reflects a
natural, patriotic desire to preserve one’s own country in the face of forces
that would obviate its sovereignty.
Under this constitution, member
states would give the EU jurisdiction over foreign policy, national defense,
trade, immigration, energy policy, agriculture and a panoply of other issues
intrinsically related to meaningful self-government. EU institutions are in many cases less
democratic, more bureaucratic and less accountable than the governments
constituted in the individual European states.
Why would countries with long,
proud histories surrender control over their own affairs to bureaucrats in
Brussels with little regard for their sentiments, traditions or customs? What kind of an arrogant political class
would expect its citizenry to contemplate doing so?
The EU constitution contains a
laundry list of “rights” to housing, income and social assistance that impose
obligations on unwitting taxpayers.
Its obliteration of borders concerns Europeans already grappling with the
cultural tensions created by unassimilated mass immigration, especially of
Muslims. While there are arguments for
and against EU membership
for Turkey, the fact that Chirac and other continental leaders advocate its
admission has certainly made these concerns more pronounced.
The movement to gradually erase
the historic nations of Europe and replace it with a vast superstate has
implications for Americans as well – and not just the effect the creation of a
miniature United Nations with guns in Europe will have on U.S. foreign
policy. The ideology that drives
Europeanization could in time threaten our own national sovereignty.
Robert Bartley was often quoted
as saying the nation-state was “finished.”
The late Wall Street Journal
editor objected to the quotation, but there is no question that many on the
right shared the underlying sentiment: that the post-Cold War information
economy would irrevocably bring the people of the world together, making
national boundaries less relevant but also rendering state power less
influential, the latter at least being a good thing.
Yet as globalization has
proceeded, it has not unmistakably led to the retrenchment of the political
class. Instead, some have pushed
for new layers of government to regulate the more interconnected world. Supranational organizations have sprung
up in order to claim new powers.
The Hudson Institute’s John Fonte
has labeled the new ideology that has emerged transnational
progressivism, and the EU is its embodiment. Many of its institutions are informed by
a mindset that is post-democratic, post-national and post-liberal (some have
also argued post-Christian, although the secularization of Europe has predated
the advancement of the EU).
What does this portend for the
United States? Fonte wrote, “[I]t
is entirely possible that modernity… will witness not the final triumph of
liberal democracy, but the emergence of a new transnational hybrid regime that
is post-liberal democratic, and in the American context, post-Constitutional and
post-American.”
Standing in the way of such a
regime is the simple but genuine patriotism throughout Europe, America and the
world. Real nations must be bound
together by shared experiences and values, by the “mystic cords of memory,” not
simply processes, procedures and pieces of paper.
“If you are
trying to boil down citizenship to its philosophically respectable components,”
J.P. Zmirak wrote in
The American Conservative, “and if
ideology is all you are interested in, then it does not really matter where you
were born. Or who your parents
were. Or whom you love. Or the hymns you know by heart, the folk
tales you treasure, the God you worship.”
It does not
matter to ideologues, perhaps. But,
as the vote in France shows, it still matters to some people. Jacques Chirac, Gerhard Schroeder,
Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and Tony Blair
may see a strengthened EU in their countries’ future. It remains to be seen whether the people
who elected them, if allowed to express themselves, will agree with that
verdict.
—(06/03/05)
W. James Antle III is a Boston-bred writer and editor currently living outside of Washington, D.C. His work has appeared in The American Conservative, National Review Online, The American Spectator Online, Tech Central Station, FrontPage Magazine, Capitalism Magazine, VDARE, Brainwash, Enter Stage Right and numerous other print and web publicatications.
You may contact Mr. Antle by email at:
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