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Blog Dennis de Jong

11 May 2014

Work together in the style of the Eurovision Song Contest

Around 6.7 million Dutch people watched the Eurovision Song Contest, in stark contrast to the 350.000 viewers attracted by the first televised May Day debate between the leading candidates from each list for the European elections. Actually, this is extremely symbolic: you might not bother with the contest if you don’t like such events or simply don’t want to watch, which is fine. But the European Union is different. You can’t say no to European rules and laws if the majority decides otherwise. Hence the aversion: cooperation is distorted into a movement towards a superstate. Give me the song contest any day. No to this European Union, yes to cooperation to mutual advantage.

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4 May 2014

Rotterdam detention centre, 4th May – a mournful commemoration

This evening I am taking part in the monthly wake at the centre for the detention of foreigners – people awaiting a decision on their asylum applications, or awaiting deportation after being refused asylum. It is profoundly sad that, on the eve of the official Remembrance Day when the Dutch people remember our war dead, we must also grieve for asylum seekers who have committed suicide in the Netherlands as a result of the harsh policy of the Dutch government. If we are to respect European and international law, we must put an end as quickly as possible to the locking up of foreigners as a means of putting pressure on them to leave. One would hope that by next year no wake will be needed.

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27 April 2014

European elections and the fight for clarity

Election campaigns are always characterised by ‘framing’. Parties offer the voter a choice that best suits them. For example, the liberal Europhiles of D66 and the hard right anti-EU PVV seek each other out to make the election a duel between ‘forward with the EU’ and ‘out of the EU’. And the SP? We have nothing to do with this artificial divide. We have a unique position: not ‘out’ but ‘thorough change’ – no superstate, but honest cooperation. This is radical, but also realistic – which is why we are in the heat of battle a difficult opponent, both for the establishment as for those outside it.

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13 April 2014

The commercialisation of the Dutch state

Last year SP Member of Parliament Harry van Bommel put a number of questions on the matter to the government, yet this year too I received an invitation to a party that the Dutch Embassy in Brussels is organising on the occasion of our national day (Queen’s Day last year, now, following the Queen’s abdication, King’s Day, 30th April). In itself all very nice, except that it came with a card which informed us that five multinationals had covered some of the costs. That might be suitable for the King’s line of work, as he sees himself also as a commercial traveller, but I find it scandalous in relation to diplomacy, which ought to be independent of any corporate interest.

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6 April 2014

A European Commissioner for small businesses?

During last Monday’s annual debate on the State of the Union, the VVD (the larger of the two governing coalition parties) proposed that one of the twenty-eight European Commissioners be given responsibility for the EU’s policies on “SMEs” (the Euro-jargon term for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises). An empty pre-election gesture. This week I joined other MEPs in proposing that in the future as much as possible of the legislation upon which the European Parliament has reached agreement should be subject to one more test to assess its consequences for SMEs. That’s no election rhetoric, but a serious attempt to prevent big business having the only say. This crowns five years on the part of the SP in the European Parliament of consistently considering the interests of small businesses.

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30 March 2014

The Commission wants to know your opinion

The Commission has opened a website on which we can all give our opinion of the treaty – the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) which European Commissioner for Trade Karel de Gucht is currently negotiating with the US. In particular, consultations will focus on the way in which corporate investments will be protected. I’ve taken a look at the site: on each question you get a long screed explaining how good all of the proposals are, and only then can you react. To call this manipulation is to put it mildly. De Gucht thinks that he can keep things cool until after the elections then get back down to it afterwards. The SP is completely opposed to this treaty, consultations or no consultations.

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23 March 2014

The House of European History?

The SP believes that it’s important that people can learn about history. Though it’s true that it never repeats itself in quite the same way, without any knowledge of history it’s difficult to fathom what’s going on in our own times. Despite this, I have systematically voted against the House of European History. Not only because establishing such a facility should not be one of the European Parliament’s core tasks, but above all because it threatens to become one big propaganda machine. A slanted account of history is something we don’t need. It would be a complete waste of money.

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16 March 2014

Most Americans express dissatisfaction over free trade

The United States, Mexico and Canada have twenty years’ experience of a free trade agreement like the one which the European Union now wants to conclude with the US. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has had primarily negative consequences, despite all of the fine promises made during negotiations. US citizens would like to see it got rid of as quickly as possible. Once bitten, twice shy, but Obama can’t be stopped. He wants to see NAFTA-style accords not only with Europe, but also with Japan, Australia and others. For whom, actually?

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2 March 2014

Were there representatives of Europe’s peoples working in Strasbourg this week?

Many Euro-MPs complain of the gap between the people and the European Parliament. Too little interest is taken in the EP; or there’s a shortage of quality information. On the basis of the latter argument we are blessed with all of those money-wasting communication programmes designed to send messages to the citizenry. But couldn’t it also be that the people have no time for the EP simply because most of the decisions taken there are ones to which most of them are opposed? This week various votes were held in which most representatives from the Netherlands voted directly against what the vast majority of the Dutch populations wants. In that sense you might ask yourself whether these MEPs are really people’s representatives at all.

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23 February 2014

Small savers are safe – and that’s how it must remain

The number of emails that I get from people who are worried about their savings keeps growing. The International Monetary Fund and the European Commission might have their eyes on their money, might use it to reduce the debts of the Eurozone countries. Certainly kites have been flown, but I am nevertheless always able to give a reassuring answer: savings up to €100,000 are guaranteed, even in the event of the bank going bust. In theory ‘Super Commissioner’ Olli Rehn could recommend scrapping this rule in the weaker Eurozone countries, but there isn’t much chance of that happening. This does however demonstrate that Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has agreed to give far too much power to Rehn, who must whatever else never get the power to make recommendations regarding the national budget.

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