Sat, Nov 21 2009
Polish president Lech Kaczynski.
Photo: Reuters
However, in a development similar to what happened earlier in Germany and in the Czech Republic, a group of Polish MPs have asked the constitutional court for a ruling on the mutual compatibility of the Lisbon Treaty and the Polish constitution.
Czech president Vaclav Klaus wants a footnote added to the treaty before he will sign it. Details of the footnote are not clear, but already the proposal has been rejected by France.
The Irish referendum produced a psychological victory for the pro-Lisbon Treaty camp, and boosted the hopes of EU candidate states, but potential obstacles remain in the way of the treaty
Prime minister of Czech Republic assures EC president Barroso that his country will ratify the Lisbon Treaty despite steadfast Euroscepticism from president Klaus
More than 67 per cent of voters who took part in Irish referendum on Lisbon Treaty on October 2 2009 voted in favour.
After unofficial indications that Ireland has voted yes to the Lisbon Treaty, eyes turn to Warsaw and Prague, the last two holdouts on the treaty.
German ratification of the Lisbon Treaty was a triumphant overture to Angela Merkel’s election victory – now the next move is up to Irish voters in their October 2 2009 referendum.
Welcomed by the UK government, France and Germany, as well as the US, the naming of Belgium’s Herman van Rompuy as European Council President and Catherine Ashton as foreign policy chief has caused misgivings in some circles, including Turkey which believes that Van Rompuy will oppose Turkish membership of the bloc.
The dinner meeting of EU leaders to decide on the European Council President and the bloc’s new foreign minister and head of secretariat could take a few hours or all night, says host Fredrik Reinfeldt, Sweden’s prime minister.
Russia and the European Union have agreed on an early warning system if another natural gas cutoff looms. Some say that Bulgaria, among other countries hard-hit by the January 2009 crisis, is now better prepared. Not everyone is convinced.
Five Bulgarian films screened at the World Film Festival in Bangkok.
A complicated game, played partly in the dark, and with elements of everything from poker to tug ‘o war – that’s the way Europe’s leaders will come up with its new European Council President, foreign minister and European Commission.
If President Vaclav Klaus won't agree, despite the firm recommendation of his Prime Minister, then there is a traditional Prague remedy for recalcitrant residents of the Hradcany Castle: "defenestration".
(Most spectacularly used in 1618, but most recently used in 1948.)