washingtontimes.com
By David R. Sands
June 2, 2005
Excerpt:
European leaders yesterday scrambled to prevent a political implosion as the Netherlands became the second country in four days to reject an ambitious new constitution for the 25-nation bloc.
Early projections showed that the Dutch "no" camp took more than 60 percent of the vote, despite support for the constitution from figures across the political spectrum. On Sunday, French voters also decisively rejected the accord, designed to streamline the European Union's internal workings and make it a bigger force on the global stage.
Benita Ferrero-Waldner — commissioner for external affairs at the European Commission, the Brussels-based European Union's executive arm — said the Continent's political leaders should avoid "unilateral steps" as they try to chart a course forward.
"It cannot be business as usual for us, as we must respect the will of the people," Mrs. Ferrero-Waldner told editors and reporters at The Washington Times.
Mrs. Ferrero-Waldner and other EU officials pointed to a summit planned for June 16 as the first opportunity for political leaders to analyze the French and Dutch votes and decide whether to push ahead with the constitution.
Some favor continuing the ratification process in the 14 EU states that have not voted. Some favor adopting by decree key portions of the constitution, despite the votes. But constitution opponents argue that the votes have effectively killed the massive effort.
The popular revolt "raises profound questions for all of us about the future direction of Europe," British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said in London.
Ten EU nations have ratified the constitution, but only in one country — Spain — was the question put directly to voters. Britain is one of eight countries that have announced plans to hold a referendum, but the treaty faces a steep uphill climb and many think Prime Minister Tony Blair will opt not to bother with a vote.
Latvia's parliament is expected to approve the treaty today, but even there, officials concede that the French and Dutch votes have transformed the debate.
"This is a huge wake-up call for the whole European project," former Integration Minister Nils Muiznieks told the Associated Press. "It looks like everybody involved in drawing up the EU constitution miscalculated."
Added Czech President Vaclav Klaus, who opposes ratification in his country, "The constitution, in this version, is history."