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European Integration in the De Gaulle Era (1958-1969): Challenges and Triumphs

Explore the tumultuous decade under De Gaulle's leadership in European integration, including UK's rejections, Fouchet plan, and De Gaulle's resignation. Understand the limits of the spill-over method and Jean Monnet's method for change. Examine the Common Agricultural Policy, intergovernmental methods, and the evolving European institutions. Delve into the key findings of the initiation of the integration process post-1958.

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European Integration in the De Gaulle Era (1958-1969): Challenges and Triumphs

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  1. History and Theory of European Integration Marina V. Larionova JEAN MONNET European Module

  2. Lecture 3 The Decade of De Gaulle (1958-1969) • British applications and rejections • Veto of the UK accession • Fouchet plan for a political community • Elysee Treaty • Merger Treaty • De Gaulle’s resignation • The Limits of Spill Over method JEAN MONNET European Module

  3. Readings for the lecture • Dinan Desmond (1999) Ever Closer Union. An Introduction to European Integration. Second edition. The European Union Series. Palgrave. Chapter 2 and Chapter 12; • Monnet J. A Ferment of Change. (1962). The European Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C – G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998; • Monnet J. Europe Needs Britain (1961). The Pro-European Reader. Leonard D. and Leonard M.(eds.), Palgrave, 2002; • Gaulle Charle de. A Concert of European States (1965). The European Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C – G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998; JEAN MONNET European Module

  4. De Gaulle’s contentions contribution to the European integration • Foundations of the Common Agricultural Policy Implementation of the EEC Treaty provisions for Common Agricultural Policy as a condition for the customs union and common external tariff enforcement • Keeping the UK out of the EEC • The triumph of intergovernmental method in EEC construction JEAN MONNET European Module

  5. Jean Monnet’s method for introducing change in Europe: Inherent features 1. The profound change is being made possible essentially by the new method of common action which is the core of the European community. This method has become a permanent dialogue between a single European body, responsible for expressing the view of the general interest of the Community, and the national governments, expressing the national views. 2. To agree on the objectives and to negotiate afterwards. An overall settlement is unlikely to be reached by haggling over the details. Details fall into place and specific problems are more easily solved when they are looked at in the framework of a general agreement. JEAN MONNET European Module

  6. Jean Monnet’s method for introducing change in Europe: Inherent features 3. The system is not federal, because there is no central government; the nations take their decisions together in the Council of Ministers. On the other hand, the independent European body proposes policies, and the common element is further underlined by the European Parliament and the European Court of Justice. 4. Trust in the wisdom and strength of the existing institutions is needed to discuss the problems as common problems, using the machinery of the community, which has been devised for that specific purpose. JEAN MONNET European Module

  7. Jean Monnet’s method for introducing change in Europe inherent features 5.  Common rules applied by joint institutions give each a responsibility for effective working of the Community as a whole.  6. European unity is not a blueprint, it is not a theory, it is a process of bringing people and nations together to find a way out of conflicts,… to adapt themselves jointly to changing circumstances.  7.  The new institutional method ispermanently modifying relations between nations and men. Human nature does not change, but when nations and men accept the same rules and the same institutions to make sure that they are applied, their behavior towards each other changes. This is the process of civilization itself. JEAN MONNET European Module

  8. The EC four years of harmony between the governments of the member states and the EC institutions • Commission portfolios – external relations, economic and financial affairs, the internal market, competition, social affairs, agriculture, transport, overseas territories; • Progress in elimination tariff barriers, success of commercial and external relations policy; • Economic growth in Western Europe / increased trade activity; • EC emerging international identity / GATT and Yaounde Convention; • Competition, social affairs, transport, agriculture policies impasse; JEAN MONNET European Module

  9. Treaty establishing the European Economic Community Article 6 • The Common market shall be progressively established during a transitional period of twelve years. This transitional period shall be divided into three stages of four years each; the length of each stage may be altered in accordance with the provisions set out below. JEAN MONNET European Module

  10. The key general findings of the analysis (1958) • The initiation of the integration process does not require absolute majority support, nor need it rest on identical aims on the part of the key participants. • Acceptance of a federal scheme is facilitated if the participating state units are already fragmented ideologically and socially. • Acceptance of the integration scheme is facilitated if the participating groups, political, industrial, labor, have a tradition of consultations and shared values. • Integration process is facilitated by existence of an external threat, real or imagined. JEAN MONNET European Module

  11. The key general findings of the analysis (1958) • The central institution once established will affect political integration process if it acquires the capacity to raise positive expectations. • Group pressure will spill over into the federal sphere and add to the integrative impulse. • National governments may attempt to sidestep, or sabotage the decisions of the federal authority, however, in the long run they tend to defer to federal decisions. JEAN MONNET European Module

  12. The key general findings of the analysis (1958) • The major interest groups determine their support or opposition to the central institutions policies on the basis of a calculated advantage. • The process of community formation will succeed if the crucial expectations, ideologies and behavior patterns of the key interest groups can be refocused on a new set of central symbols and institutions. • The “spill over” is not automatic and requires a measure of political activism. JEAN MONNET European Module

  13. De Gaulle’s Aims: • Recovery of France, both economic and spiritual; • Reestablishment of the country as a great power invested with world responsibility for political stability and social order; • Regaining the country’s independence • Reclaiming France leading international role • Rejuvenation of industry and agricultural sector JEAN MONNET European Module

  14. Challenges:Internal pressures • Colonial wars (Algerian crisis) • Collapse of the Fourth republic • 1958 – De Gaulle negotiates a new constitutional regime • 1958 September – referendum endorsing Presidential republic • Fifth republic – strong Presidency / exclusive responsibility for foreign and defense policy / greater legitimacy of the executive power • 1958 December – De Gaulle elected President of France JEAN MONNET European Module

  15. Challenges:Internal pressures • The need for financial and monetary reform • 1958 - Devaluation of the frank / cutting on the government expenditure / tax increase • The need to stimulate the business sector facing fierce international competition • The imperative of industrial competitiveness • The priority of agricultural modernization JEAN MONNET European Module

  16. EEC instrumental to • Modernization of the agricultural sector • Industrial modernization • Enhancing Europe competitiveness • Franco-German reconciliation De Gaulle-Adenauer accord JEAN MONNET European Module

  17. EC Common Agricultural Policy (Stresa conference, July 1958) • Guarantee of high agricultural prices based on financial solidarity of the member states exercised through the price support and intervention mechanism • Provision of a European Community wide Market for agricultural goods based on the community preferences and the free movement of goods principles • Subsidization of surplus produce export outside the EC through export refunds • Protection of internal agricultural market through a system of import levies based on the community preference principle JEAN MONNET European Module

  18. De Gaulle’s Quid pro Quo Industrial policy on tariffs and quotas versus Agricultural policy on tariffs and quotas Stage 1.May 1960 – January 1962 Lowering internal customs barriers Establishing external tariffs Timetable for decisions to be taken on agricultural policy Financial levy liability on imports of foodstuff from the third countries JEAN MONNET European Module

  19. 1962 January 13 –14 Council Resolution “France and common sense prevailed” “Agriculture admitted into the Common Market” Aim – 50 % reduction in customs duties for agricultural goods by the end of the second stage JEAN MONNET European Module

  20. External pressures • Europe desolated and divided by the Iron Curtain • Cold War tearing apart both European continent and the World • International Institutions polarized by two opposing camps • Germany - divided, but reindustrialized and rearmed, hence EC perceived as an institutional framework embedding Franco-German reconciliation JEAN MONNET European Module

  21. External pressures • European free trade area perceived as Britain’s efforts to undermine European integration eroding the common external tariff • Free trade area (European Free Trade Association) versus Common market (European Economic Community) • The UK special position - application to join “provided that their special relationship with the Commonwealth and their associates in the free trade area, as well as their special interests in agriculture are respected” JEAN MONNET European Module

  22. De Gaulle’s Principles for the Concert of European States • Independence of the nation • Reclaiming what was due to the country • Preserving the national identity • Shaking off the Atlantic supremacy over the Old World • Rejecting the doctrine of supranationalism • Intergovernmental cooperation on political and security affairs • Germany - the heart of the problem and the keystone of the European edifice • Germany - an integral part of the organized system of cooperation for the whole continent • Systemic rapprochement, not a fusion of peoples • “Setting up of a concert of European states which in developing all sorts of ties between them would increase their interdependence and solidarity” • Emergence of a strong, politically and military independent Europe JEAN MONNET European Module

  23. De Gaulle’s European Security Community initiativeSeptember 1960 – Fouchet Committee • Logic - Intergovernmental • Approach - a Confederation of member states • Aims - Common foreign and defense policy, cooperation on cultural, educational and research issues • Institutional framework – heads of states or ministerial council, political commission based in Paris and an assembly of national parliamentary representatives • Results – collapse of the Fouchet plan in April 1962 • Reciprocity of Adenauer - De Gaulle support policies (CAP/ESC) • Achievements - signing the Franco-German Treaty of Friendship and Reconciliation in January 1963 to become a driving force of European integration later on JEAN MONNET European Module

  24. De Gaulle’sManifestation of Nationalism • National interests neglected in ECSC (French relinquishment of coke in Ruhr) • National interests neglected in EURATOM (15 years history of the Atomic Energy Commissariat) • National interests neglected in EEC (agricultural versus industrial regulations) • The doctrine of supranationalism “national self effacement” by the leading school of thought inside France and support for Europe seen as “edifice in which technocrats forming an executive and parliamentarians assuming legislative powers would have the authority to decide the fate of the French people” JEAN MONNET European Module

  25. De Gaulle’sManifestation of Nationalism • Atlantic alliance intentions to prevent France from becoming its own master • Ludwig Erhard’s Atlanticist position stalling the development of the Elyssee Treaty • Walter Hallstein’s ambitions for Germany to regain its respectability and preponderant influence • The UK (Harold Macmillan) desire to undermine the project of the six dissolving Common Market in the Free Trade Area ( “Having failed to prevent the birth of the Community from without, they planned to paralyze it from within”) • Veto of the UK membership application following the intergovernmental bargaining process (August 1961 – January 1963) JEAN MONNET European Module

  26. The Empty Chair crisis and Luxembourg Compromise1965 July – 1966 January in view of the initial financial regulation expiry date in July 1965 the Commission’s proposals to: • introduce the EC “own resources” funded from agricultural levies, customs duties and up to 1 percent of the national VAT revenue; • enhance the EP and EC budgetary powers; • introduce a system of funding CAP from the EC “own resources”; • introduce majority voting principle into the deliberations of the Council of Ministers JEAN MONNET European Module

  27. The Empty Chair crisis and Luxembourg Compromise1965 July – 1966 January • Walter Hallstein announcement of the proposals to the EP in Strasbourg • French counter proposal to continue funding CAP from the national contributions as of 1 July • The Council of Ministers’ meeting on June 28 stalemate and withdrawal of the French representatives • De Gaulle’s attack on the qualified majority voting and insistence on the principle of unanimity • The Council meeting on October 25-26 with the French chair empty • December 1965 Presidential election in France – De Gaulle’s narrow margin victory over the candidate of Europe, Francois Mitterrand • The Council of Ministers meeting on January 28-29, 1966 JEAN MONNET European Module

  28. January 28-29, 1996Luxembourg Compromise Financial regulation for CAP EC own resources EP budgetary powers Majority voting JEAN MONNET European Module

  29. Outcomes • Agreement to disagree: • If one member state considered that a vital national interest was at stake, the Council would endeavor to reach within a reasonable period, solutions that could be adopted unanimously. • The French delegation special position that when very important interests were at issue, discussions must be continued until unanimous agreement is reached JEAN MONNET European Module

  30. Outcomes • Presumption within the Council in favor of unanimity / “Transformation of the community spirit into a more cost-benefit attitude of the member-states” • Demonstration of the community dependency on the political environment • Shaped the political environment for the next decade • Intergovernmentalism prevails JEAN MONNET European Module

  31. Objections to the Luxembourg Compromise • The Commission excluded from the meeting was not party to the agreement • The Court of Justice ruled that Resolutions and Declaration of political will by the Council can not prevail against the Treaty rules JEAN MONNET European Module

  32. Vetoing the accession applications JEAN MONNET European Module

  33. The UK first application for EC membership August 1961 - January 1963 / Conservatives / Reasons for realization of the mistake of self exclusion from the Treaty of Rome and decision to apply/Harold Macmillan/ • Success of the customs union • Failure to dissolve the EC into the EFTA • Fear of economic exclusion • The Commonwealth proving inadequate instrument for promotion of British interests • Kennedy’s endorsement of the UK membership in the EC JEAN MONNET European Module

  34. The case for failure • British position on ensuring its special interests in the EFTA and the Commonwealth • Anglo-American missile accord, December, 1962 • Decision to integrate UK nuclear force into NATO • The lack of trust and use of intergovernmental method of bargaining instead of Monnet’s community method January 15, 1963 De Gaulle’s conference JEAN MONNET European Module

  35. The second application May – December 1967 / Labor / Harold Wilson Increasing need for accession • growing European commercial contacts and slumping economic ties with the Commonwealth Barriers to membership • De Gaulle’s anti Atlantisiam - Anglo-American special relations • De Gaulle’s quest to preserve France’s leadership role in the EC December 1967 De Gaulle’s conference JEAN MONNET European Module

  36. 1968 • May – protests, riots and strikes in France • June – dissolution of the parliament by the prime minister George Pompidou / reelection of the parliament / victory of the Gaullists April 1969 De Gaulle’s resignation JEAN MONNET European Module

  37. De Gaulle’s road towards European unity • United Europe is only achieved through organization of concerted action in every sphere… • Individual States are the only valid elements, “when their national interests are at stake nothing and nobody must be allowed to force their hands, and the cooperation between them is the only road that will lead anywhere. • “although it is perfectly natural for the states of Europe to have specialized bodies available to prepare and whenever necessary to follow up their decisions, these decisions must be their own”. JEAN MONNET European Module

  38. Arguments for Intergovernmental approach • “Common market, a brainchild of technocrats, carrying all the hopes and illusions of a supranational school”. • Fruitless bargaining with the British showed the fledgling Community that good intention are not enough to reconcile the irreconcilable, the Six found that even in the economic sphere alone the adjustment of their respective positions bristled with difficulties which could not be resolved solely on terms of treaties concluded to that end. • “Executives of the common institutions were helpless … when it came to making and enforcing decisions, only governments were in a position to do this, and then only as a result of negotiations carried out in due form between ministers and ambassadors”. • The important measures should be subordinated to the decisions of individual states… • The member states decisions should be the cornerstone of the Institutions and a guarantee of the members’ sovereignty JEAN MONNET European Module

  39. Recommended Readings • Macmillan Harold “Britain’ Place and purpose in the World”. Extract from speech at Conservative party conference, October 1961. Pro-European Reader. 2002. Palgrave. • Kennedy F. John “The US Welcomes European Unity”. Speech at Washington, DC, 17 may 1962. Pro-European Reader. 2002. Palgrave • Jenkins Roy “Let us go in with Hope and Confidence”. Speech at labor party conference, October 1062. Pro-European Reader. 2002. Palgrave • Wilson Harold “We mean business”. Extract from speech to the Council of Europe, Strabourg, 23 January 1967. Pro-European Reader. 2002. Palgrave JEAN MONNET European Module

  40. Lecture 4: The Intergovernmentalist backlash Critiques and contemplations of Neofunctionalism JEAN MONNET European Module

  41. Readings for the lecture • Hoffman S. Obstinate or Obsolete? The Fate of the Nation State and the Case of Western Europe (1966). The European Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C – G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998; • Lindberg L.N. Political Integration: Definitions and Hypotheses (1963). The European Union. Readings on the Theory and Practice of European Integration, Nelsen B.F. and Alexander C – G. Stubb (eds.), Palgrave, 1998; • Rosamond Ben. (2000) Theories of European Integration. The European Union Series. Palgrave; Chapter 4 JEAN MONNET European Module

  42. Thank you! JEAN MONNET European Module

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