I
fear a people that values blind obedience. And history has demonstrated how far
blind obedience can take us on the road to tragedy.
Monday, 18 March 2019
Sunday, 17 March 2019
Responding to Germany and to AKK
AKK,
full name, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, the new leader of the CDU governing
party in Germany, is more concerned with the growing influence of the AfD – Alternative
for Germany, the extreme-right, ultranationalist party – than with European affairs.
That explains, to a very large extent, the way she responded to Emmanuel Macron’s
Renaissance proposals. She was above all writing to her constituency within CDU
and to many of those voters that have decided to move their support to AfD
during the last few years. One of the things she must achieve is to bring that
support back to CDU. Her leadership is a lot about that objective.
All
that is fine. We know that party politics is primarily a domestic matter. However,
AKK’s approach is not a balanced one. Germany is a key player within the EU. As
such, it ought to show leadership and ambition on European matters. That is particularly
needed now, when the European elections are already taking shape in the near
horizon and a new leading team will take over in Brussels and be directing the
institutions for the next five years. Moreover, this is a time of major
political challenges, both within Europe and in the international scene.
Internally, Europe as a project is seriously questioned by a bad mixture of populist
sentiments and national fragilities. Externally, the risks to European
interests are many, complex, simultaneous and compound. They come from some
neighbours – these are always the most dangerous threats. But in the connected
world we live in, the concept of neighbourhood needs to be reassessed. And the
threats also come from unsettling changes of policy at the level of our
traditional allies.
There is thus plenty of room to
be leader about. That should be one of the messages to be sent back to Germany
and to AKK.
Saturday, 16 March 2019
Christchurch, New Zealand
The
terrorist attacks against the people attending religious services in two
Christchurch mosques must be condemned with the strongest words possible. There
is no room for ambiguities. This type of violence is abhorrent to the most fundamental
values the modern societies share. It should have no place in today’s world.
Racism
of any kind, terrorism of any nature, blind killings of innocent people, these
are some of the most heinous crimes one can commit. They must be punished with
the appropriate severity. And the leaders must say and do the right things that
can give comfort to the victims and their families and help to restore the
confidence within the communities.
In
New Zealand, the Prime Minister has been exemplary in the way she has responded
to this very traumatic crisis. Congratulations to PM Jacinda Ardern. And also
our deepest sympathies to all concerned, those directly affected and the people
of New Zealand.
Thursday, 14 March 2019
Good news from Guinea-Bissau
We
don’t write about Guinea-Bissau. T is never in the news. It’s one of those lost
lands, somewhere in the map of Africa. Some better-informed people know the
country is very undeveloped and that poverty has been compounded by serious
political turmoil for over twenty years. And that’s about it.
But
this time, the news coming from Bissau is encouraging. The country went through
general elections this past Sunday. The process was credible enough. And a governing
coalition is taking shape.
I
can only hope that this will bring the much-needed political stability
Guinea-Bissau needs. And I leave here a word of support.
Wednesday, 13 March 2019
Keeping the EU project together
For
those who have not yet understood it – also for those who might have lost sight
of it –, it seems important to remember that the safeguard of the European common
project is a paramount goal and a topmost concern. Anything that might threaten
the unity of the project – and its coherence – will be fought.
That’s
the way leaders have been looking at the Brexit saga, a process that,
notwithstanding the confusion that prevails in the British Parliament, should
be completed as negotiated. And without any significant delay. The departure of
the United Kingdom is regrettable, no doubt. But it has been the choice of the
British people and that choice must be implemented without menacing the
integrity of the EU.
There
is no concession to be made when that integrity is at stake.
Tuesday, 12 March 2019
Brexit, stage two. Next, please!
Theresa
May lost the vote again, for a second time. And I would add, we, the Europeans,
have also been defeated. It is in our common interest, for the British side and
our own, in the EU, to have a properly organised exit and a transition period
that is as smooth as possible. Anything else, specially a no-deal situation,
would be a major shock. It would have an extremely negative impact on both economies
and would bring serious disruptions to a relationship that has many dimensions
and is very deep.
I
am sure that the message that will come out of tomorrow’s vote at Westminster
will be very clear. No deal is not a solution, that will be the outcome of the
vote. Brexit, yes, but with an agreement, that will certainly be the Parliamentarians decision.
It
will become pressing clear in the next weeks that there is a possible deal on the table. That’s
the one that failed to pass today and had already been voted against two months
ago. My guess, as a possible way out, is that Theresa May and the Europeans
leaders will massage the draft deal once more and add a few lines to an extra new
document. Then, Theresa May will bring it back to Westminster for a third round
of votes. And, to our surprise, the House will go for it.
What
I am suggesting is an adaptation of the rule of three, the famous belief that a
trio of events is more humorous, satisfying, or effective than just two.
Monday, 11 March 2019
Macron and the Germans
The
CDU Leader’s response to Emmanuel Macron shows there is a big gap between the
German right-wing vision of Europe’s future and the more centrist proposals
made by the French President. And, in many ways, the CDU’s views, as expressed
by Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, reflect the opinion we can find in the German
streets.
They
also send a clear message to Macron. We can cooperate but we do not belong to
the same political family. And we, Germans, we lead our grouping of parties in
the European institutions.
Macron
must feel a bit alone tonight.
Joint carrier or a smoke screen?
A
joint aircraft carrier, as proposed yesterday by the new CDU party leader,
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer (Germany)? To be funded by the European Commission
or by a joint pot made up of contributions coming from 27 countries? And what
for, that carrier? What are the vision and the strategy, when it comes to the
matter of Europe’s Defence Strategy?
Saturday, 9 March 2019
Brexit: the crazy week ahead
For many of us, Brexit is a baffling oddity. It is like leaving a huge
compound to go and live next door in a minuscule studio flat. A flat that basically
depends on the energy supplied by the big neighbour.
It
is a mad project that could only be fuelled by self-centred, delusional
politicos.
It
was, since day one, such a bizarre idea that most British intellectuals
couldn´t take it seriously. For that reason, they didn´t bother to campaign
against it. They were so much convinced that people would vote the eccentricity
down. They did not take into account the obsessed militancy of the Brexit nuts
and other xenophobes.
Friday, 8 March 2019
Are you a right-winger?
Strange
times in Europe. For instance, no politician wants to be seen as a right-winger.
Today, that was the case of the very retrograde Jacob Rees-Mogg, one of the
leaders of the anti-EU sentiments at Westminster. The honourable gentleman said
that “the Conservative government is not right-wing”. He even considered such appellation
as abusive. An epithet that hurts, it seems.
He
might be joking.
So,
who accepts these days the right-wing label? Only, the Polish Law and Justice
Party? Or, just Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz? Or Matteo Salvini and his crowd?
I
am no longer sure they do.
Interesting,
isn’t it?
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