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Blog Dennis de Jong

11 July 2012

Three years in the European Parliament – does it make sense?

Today on national radio could be heard the first part of a two-part series in which a documentary team followed VVD (centre-right liberals) MEP Hans van Baalen and myself around for a day of the Strasbourg plenary of the European Parliament. The underlying question three years after our election as Euro-MPs is: does it all make sense? My answer to this is positive: apart from the general attention paid to Europe, which has only grown, you can exercise some influence on European legislation. Two examples: we kicked out a Commission proposal to introduce still more competition at airports, a proposal which would undoubtedly have led to a further deterioration in conditions of employment for ground staff. And with 150 amendments I am trying to guarantee employees’ social rights when services are put out to tender.

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1 July 2012

Labour Party leader needs to brush up his economics

01-07-2012 • PvdA (Labour Party) leader Diederik Samson yesterday expressed sharp criticism of the SP plan to combat the crisis not through the current disastrous spending cuts, but via the ECB adopting a more intelligent monetary policy. Setting the money-presses going would not help, argues Samsom. He should read the leading American economist Paul Krugman, who finds the current demolition policy so irresponsible that a few days ago he launched the ‘Manifesto for Economic Sense’. In the space of two days hundreds of economists have signed up to this manifesto, which advocates an active government which will ensure that in time budgetary balance will be achieved, but that the race to the bottom which is the current spiral of austerity must be stopped. A monetary policy in which cash was pumped into the economy would in their view as things stand be completely responsible. A lesson for the PvdA.

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24 June 2012

The EU-budget as motor of our economy?

According to most Euro-MPs the European Union, far more than that of the individual member states, is the motor of our economy. Money spent by Brussels gives more added value. That may be the case for cross-border or important innovative projects, but for the rest it seems to me much handier for money to be spent by national governments, who can judge far better than can Brussels the local, regional and national needs of their economies. Furthermore, this approach would avoid a lot of administrative toing and froing.

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17 June 2012

Festival der Linken, Festival of the Left

This weekend I paid a flying visit to Berlin, but it was well worth the trouble to be able to appear at the Festival der Linken – the Festival of the Left - and so to have the opportunity to express our international solidarity. Throughout Europe people have had enough of neoliberalism. In Greece voters have indicated their support for a change in policy by voting for our sister party Syriza. In the Netherlands, the SP is set to make major gains in the elections on 12th September. Another, more humane Europe is not being forged in Brussels. That’s being done by the people themselves, including during a political festival of this kind where modern left parties meet to build together for a future of fairness and solidarity.

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10 June 2012

Does Europe have a radiant future?

The Dutch centrist party D66 this week published its vision of Europe’s future, which it goes so far as to describe as ‘radiant’. This seems fine, and idealistic. Yet read it more closely and you will see that the vision continues to be based on outmoded neoliberal ideas. The European Union’s goal is first and foremost to become an economic bloc that can compete with other continents. Humanity and certainly the human scale are to be subordinated to this. For the SP this is to put things upside down: we put people at the centre and listen to all of those Dutch people who say that everything is getting rather difficult, that we must ensure that national democracy is not undermined by Brussels and that we keep government for the most part close to home, without interference from Brussels.

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3 June 2012

Brussels’ mania for organisation costs dear

At the moment Brussels is sending out extremely mixed signals. Commissioner Rehn, a.k.a. the Commission’s Budget Tsar, remains strict in relation to countries such as the Netherlands: we shall and must come under the maximum budgetary deficit of 3% by 2013, or there’ll be the devil to pay. At the same time Brussels is saddling national governments with expensive projects and continues to dream up programmes which will cost us all deep in the purse, yet whose added value is far from clear. High time that we in the SP European Parliament team put such inconsistencies on the agenda.

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27 May 2012

A small town in Holland and the European emergency fund

Last week the national Parliament voted in favour of the Netherlands participating in the new EU superfund, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM). Should the Senate do the same, it will be extremely difficult to turn the whole thing around and the Netherlands will be forced to pay out or give guarantees for up to €40 billion. Once again the Europhiles are making a mistake in their thinking. By adopting an accelerated decision-making procedure they sought to avoid ordinary people having the chance to express their views on the ESM via their votes during the coming elections, on the ESM. Such an arrogant attitude guarantees still more scepticism over Europe, as we saw during the SP’s continuing ‘Tour d’Europe’, when it visited the small town of Purmerend, built on land reclaimed from the sea – the ‘polder’ – on Friday. People are extremely concerned about the financial consequences of participation in a fund of this kind, especially at a time where spending cuts are everywhere.

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20 May 2012

The fight for greater openness

Negotiations on the European law governing access to documents at EU institutions – a European Freedom of Information Act - are fully under way. The European Parliament is fighting a lonely battle in regard to these negotiations. Neither the European Commission, nor the member states, which are directly represented in the Council, are willing to reveal too much. You might have expected a different attitude, at least from the Commission, which spends millions on giving out ‘information’. But it is clearly not their intention to aid the critical member of the public. The SP takes people seriously. We don’t see them as a target group whom we must ‘inform’, but as individuals who have the right to honest and comprehensive information. That’s what we will continue to fight for in the EP.

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13 May 2012

What is the EU task force up to in Greece?

Few will disagree that things aren’t going at all well for Greece. In addition to an economic crisis, there is now a political crisis. Hopefully, in new elections the SP’s sister party, Syriza, will emerge from the polling booths as the biggest force and at last a real recovery can be brought about in Greece.

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9 May 2012

The useless manifesto of Daniel Cohn-Bendit

The leader of the Greens in the European Parliament, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, has together with others brought out a manifesto, calling on all young people in Europe to sign up to it. That sounds like a good move from a former activist, but the document in question is full of hollow phrases and empty of social proposals. The EU member states have, according to Cohn-Bendit, made a real mess of things, and only Europe can help young people to move on. This is to stand the world on its head : it is precisely Brussels, with its fetishisism of austerity, which is exacerbating the crisis. Cohn-Bendit completely ignores this question. In my view, his manifesto is fit only for the waste-paper basket.

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