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Nationalism and European Unity. The Origin of European Unity. Europe was 'united' at several times in the past, mainly in classical times Roman Empire Christendom
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The Origin of European Unity • Europe was 'united' at several times in the past, mainly in classical times • Roman Empire • Christendom • Successors like Charlemagne, Habsburgs claim title of Holy Roman Emperor - just as various rulers in the Islamic world claimed to be Caliph • 'Europe' replaces Christendom as key idea, c 1300-1350
Warfare and the European Idea • Desire to limit warfare within states was always key to the European Idea • George Podebrad (Hussite king of Bohemia) scheme for a compact against the Turks (1458-71). Main European Institutions: • Assembly • Court of Justice • International arbitration • Army • Confederal budget
French Ideals of Europe, c. 1600 • Sully's 'Grand Design': • Peace in Europe • Joint army • Alliance against Turks and Tsar • Trade promotion • Representational central body • French as lingua franca • France viewed as leader • A federal plan which respected national distinctiveness • Sought revival of Imperial and Papal authority as sources of legitimacy
Enlightenment Europeanism • Penn, Diderot, Paine, St Simon and others • Were cosmopolitan liberals • Europeanism and cosmopolitanism linked • Favoured Europeanism as a ticket to peace, prosperity and Enlightenment • St Simon claims in 1821 that Europeanism as a sentiment already took precedence over nationalism • St Simon sees Anglo-French hub as motor of Europe • End to Papal and Roman dreams; harmony among peoples rather than rulers
The Evolution of the European Idea • Napoleon speaks of one European fatherland • After Napoleonic Wars, St Simon's ideas influential and popular. Influenced Lemonnier's Les Etats-Unis d'Europe (1872) • Revival of interest in St Simon after WWI • Most schemes were federal, though some post-WWI radicals rejected the nation outright
Europeanism pre-1939 • Briand envisions 'union for economic, political [and] social cooperation' • Took care not to infringe state sovereignty • Met a cool reception from most politicians and opposition from many newspapers, especially on the French right • Paneuropean ideas taken up by non-Communist resistance movements during WWII • Kalergi influences Churchill's 'United States of Europe' speech of 1946
Post-WWII • Favourable climate due to war • But this time, improved communications and a more cosmopolitan temper converted the dream into a reality • Christian Democratic parties in Europe with their Catholic links, romanticise the Papal past and favour union, as do many socialists • Humanitarian, pacifist and religious themes blend with economic rationality of free traders
Council of Europe • Not EC • 10 original members, 1949 • Developed European Convention on Human Rights (1950) • Elements: • The Secretariat • The Committee of Ministers • The Parliamentary Assembly The European Court of Human Rights • The Commissioner for Human Rights • European Commission for Democracy through Law, better known as the Venice Commission.
Council of Europe's Cultural 'Nationalism' • Developed European flag with 12 golden stars (1955) • Established 5 May 1949 as Europe Day (1964) • Anthem based on Beethoven's Ode to Joy (1972) • Has 46 members today: distinct from EU, but complementary
European Community • Council of Europe, 1949, a forerunner • European Coal & Steel Community, 1952 • European Economic Community, 1957 • Euratom • Further aspects added after 1957 • Expansion from original 'Six' to present 25
EU structure • Degree of centralisation varies by function: • A Federation (i.e. 'State') in monetary affairs, agricultural, trade and environmental policy. Also in legal-social aspects and citizenship • A Confederation in social and economic policy, consumer protection, internal affairs • An International Organisation in foreign affairs
Qualified Majority Voting (QMV) • Since Nice Treaty (2000), an increasing number of decisions taken by QMV rather than unanimity • QMV threshold set to fall from 71% to 62% • Means that nations no longer have a veto on integration. A step favouring integration rather than nationalism (intergovernmentalism) • Council of Ministers
Shift from Unanimity to QMV • 27 new provisions are passing in whole or in part from unanimity to a qualified majority, including: • judicial cooperation in civil matters • industrial policy • measures to facilitate the free movement of citizens • economic, financial and technical cooperation with third countries • the appointment of members of certain institutions • the move to qualified majority voting was not accepted for social and tax policy.
EU Citizenship vs National • Freedom to move and take up residence anywhere in the Union; • The right to vote and stand in local government and European Parliament elections in the country of residence • Clearly gives foreigners important rights within nation-states
Balance between Nation and EU • Always a balance between nation-state interests and pan-European interest • Battle goes on between and within institutions • Balance between Euro-idealism and proponents of national interest ('intergovernmentalism') • Sometimes interests of small nations dovetail with that of integrationists (they have more clout to gain from being part of Europe )
European Court of Justice • A more direct proponent of integration than even the Commission • One judge per state, but decisions based on simple majority • Judges and the 8 appointed advocates-general may often be Euro-idealists or activist in their philosophy • Van Gend en Loos case (1963) gives individuals rights under EU law against their nation-states • Costa v. ENEL case (1964): where national and EU law conflict, latter is supreme
ECJ Positive and Negative Integration • Promotes 'negative integration': barriers to intra-EU activity declared invalid • Promotes 'positive integration': EC legal regimes constructed to replace national ones • Negative Integration: 1974 case declared rules which hinder intra-EC trade illegal; 1979 Cassis de Dijon
ECJ Positive Integration • Examples: • Gender Equality: Art. 119 of EEC Treaty: 'equal pay for equal work' • EU as 'Social Community', despite opposition from UK • Opens up a flood of litigation from women
Impact of Expansion • Expansion to 25 will dilute integration • Harder for a common foreign policy and common action • More poor countries will put strain on EU budget - unlikely that wealthy countries will contribute more (EU budget around 1.5% of EU GDP) • Turkey and E Europe: Unclear where limits lie: will this not dilute identity of EU (ie. No longer between Tsar and Sultan) • Possible 'Two-Speed' Europe
Problems with European Cultural or Civilizational Identity • Exclusive or Partial Items: • Christianity (Catholic, Prot, Orthodox, non-Christian) • Greco-Roman Inheritance (Islam?) • Reformation/Enlightenment (Islam, Catholicism?) • Caucasian ‘race’ (US, non-white Europeans?) • Geography (but what about EU expansion) • ‘Others’ (but if Turks and Russians come in, where are the traditional enemies?)
Pro-European Nations • Certain states embrace integrationist sentiments more than others • France, Germany and other original members (especially the 'Six') are most pro-Europe among western European countries • Much has to do with national identities of these states as opposed to mere national interest • Europe also a route to prominence on the world stage for certain nations • Less well-off nations tend to be pro-Europe for economic reasons (S & E Europe + Ireland)
France: Gaullist pro-Europeanism • Seeks to reclaim French cultural predominance of 18th-19th c • Seeks to challenge Anglo-Saxon hegemony of 19th-20th c • Sees Anglo-Saxon west as ‘other’ • De Gaulle positions France at the heart of a Europe that includes Russia and is flanked by Anglo-Saxon West and Chinese East • 1963 crisis over UK entry into EEC which De Gaulle seeks to block UK entry
German pro-European Idealism • Nazi period discredits nationalism • Cosmopolitan as opposed to Gaullist spirit • Desire for influence and self-respect without nationalism • Less anti-Anglo-Saxon due to post-WWII (witness different attitudes toward English as language) • More truly cosmopolitan than French pro-Europeanism
Smaller Nations: Benelux • History of neutrality and fear of larger nations • History of pooling sovereignty in alliances • Only chance of agency is through a larger unit • Identity is less significant in absence of larger blocks • Belgium and Luxembourg lack clear linguistic or religious markers of nationhood unlike say Germany or France
Euroskepticism – On the Rise? • Smith: elites identify more easily because Europeanism may be a proxy of class/education • Smith: without European education and media, little resonance among masses – esp less mobile • Evidence shows that Euro-skepticism and anti-immigration sentiment strongly linked and tied to less well-educated population segments • Rise in support for European integration peaks, 1988
Conclusion • Idea of Europe is at least 1000 years old • Many aspects of the European Union challenge national sovereignty • But the EU also reinforces national identity • Particular nations tend to favour European unity due to their own historical experience and economic interests • Trend towards integration appears to have stalled due to expansion and the rise of Euro-skepticism in western Europe