Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools
Sections
You are here: Home Breaking news German court ruling on Lisbon pact not a solution: Klaus

German court ruling on Lisbon pact not a solution: Klaus

02 July 2009, 16:11 CET

(PRAGUE) - A decision by Germany's top court to make ratification of the EU's Lisbon Treaty conditional on a new law does not correct the pact's faults, eurosceptic Czech President Vaclav Klaus said Thursday.

In a keenly awaited decision, the Federal Constitutional Court said Tuesday the treaty -- aimed at streamlining decision-making in the 27-nation bloc -- must be put on ice until a law protecting national parliamentary powers is passed.

The court rejected complaints that the treaty would transfer too much power to Brussels and said the reforms were fundamentally in line with the country's laws.

"There are fundamental questions that have not been answered," Klaus said in an opinion piece in the Prague daily Dnes.

"I don't believe it's possible to eliminate the well-known faults of the Treaty of Lisbon by means of an accompanying law," he said. "It would be too easy."

"It's not by chance that they propose resolving the contradictions between the treaty and the constitution by changing the country's legislation and not the treaty," he added.

The treaty -- which aims not only to make the EU run more smoothly but also give the bloc a stronger voice on the world stage -- must be ratified by all 27 member states before it can come into force.

It has been approved by the Czech parliament but Klaus refuses to sign it, along with his conservative Polish counterpart Lech Kacvzynski.

They are awaiting the result of a second referendum in Ireland -- which voted against the treaty last year -- after EU leaders gave Dublin guarantees the treaty would not affect issues such as military neutrality and abortion.

Britain could yet torpedo the treaty if the eurosceptic Conservative wins elections that must be held before June 2010 and holds a referendum on the treaty.

"I am convinced that the debate will go on and we are still a long way from the end," Klaus said.

Text and Picture Copyright 2009 AFP. All other Copyright 2009 EUbusiness Ltd. All rights reserved. This material is intended solely for personal use. Any other reproduction, publication or redistribution of this material without the written agreement of the copyright owner is strictly forbidden and any breach of copyright will be considered actionable.




Document Actions
Newsletters

EUbusiness Week 476
With 41.7m Europeans now using social networking sites, the 1995 Data Protection Directive is in urgent need of a rewrite.

The week's EU diary
This week Euro-MPs in plenary vote on the EU-US interim agreement on transfer of banking data in the interests of fighting terrorism; and on whether to approve or reject the Commission team as a whole. The European Council meets to discuss economic strategy, climate change and Haiti.

Week Ahead

Past newsletters
Search EU texts
Caselex Law

Caselex Law

Caselex is the premium information service for European case law

Free trial for EUbusiness readers
PARTNERS
Partnership
Publish your organisation's press releases, events, job vacancies, product information etc to EUbusiness.com's worldwide audience.
Membership
Partners