Merkel to push for constitution in bid to save Europe's soul

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Jan 18, 2007, 8:03:28 PM1/18/07
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*Perilous Times and The Revived Roman Empire

Merkel to push for constitution in bid to save Europe's soul*


· German chancellor makes reviving treaty her priority
· Public to be excluded from debate on future of Europe

Ian Traynor Brussels
Thursday January 18, 2007
The Guardian


The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, yesterday called for the
resurrection of the EU constitution, saying she was on a quest to find
Europe's soul.

Outlining ambitious policy aims to the European parliament in
Strasbourg, Mrs Merkel sought to counter widespread scepticism about the
chances of breathing life into the project and made clear it would be
the centrepiece of her campaign during the six months of Germany's EU
presidency.

"We must give Europe a soul. We have to find the soul of Europe," she said.

As early as next week, senior German officials are to sound out EU
member states about how to revise and repackage the draft constitution,
which suffered a blow in 2005 when voters in France and the Netherlands
rejected it.

In an unusual move aimed at building pressure for a revival of the
constitution, the two-thirds of EU countries which support it will also
meet in Spain next week to come up with a common strategy.

"Failure would be a historic failure," Mrs Merkel told the European
parliament.

She rejected MEPs' calls for debate on the constitution to be open to
the public, saying it had already taken place. The crucial German-led
consultations, leading to the unveiling of a "constitution roadmap" in
June, would be confidential.

Germany is the most powerful EU country supporting a Europe treaty. But
Mrs Merkel faces formidable opposition in Britain, France, Poland,
Denmark and the Netherlands. Her aim is to reach a consensus on what can
be salvaged from the draft that was rejected, and to retain as much as
possible of the original.

The new president of the European parliament, Hans-Gert Pöttering, who
is a member of Mrs Merkel's Christian Democratic party, promised to
support Berlin's aim, as did Jose Manuel Barroso, head of the European
commission. "We need the settlement to clear the clouds of doubt which
hang over parts of Europe," he said.

Seeking to counter the mood of drift and gloom that has characterised
the EU since the French and Dutch referendum shocks, Mrs Merkel said the
EU was a success story. But she said urgent decisions were needed to
avoid paralysis.

"Using the current rules, the EU can neither be further enlarged, nor is
it capable of taking the necessary decisions," she said. "It is in the
interests of Europe, the member states and the public to bring this
process to a good ending by the next European parliament elections in
the spring of 2009 ... A lumbering, bureaucratic, divided Europe is
unable to cope with the tasks it faces in foreign and security policy,
on climate change and energy, in cutting bureaucracy or in enlargement."

There are high expectations of the German presidency, but some fear Mrs
Merkel may have bitten off more than she can chew.

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