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16 November 2014

Don’t let truck drivers become the victims of the asylum crisis

The European asylum system stands on the point of collapse. Italy has now joined Greece in the list of EU member states which, according to the European Court of Human Rights, treats asylum seekers so badly that no further requests for asylum may be transferred there. That sort of news can be found in the media, along with tales of the terrible situation in relation to shipwrecks in the Mediterranean, through which thousands of migrants per year are drowning. Less well-known is the fact that our truck drivers are driving through the Channel Tunnel with increasing anxiety: it’s hard to prevent asylum seekers from riding in the trailer as stowaways, and the police offer no assistance, rather seeing the drivers as lawbreakers. This is completely back-to-front, and adds one more to the long list of reasons why the European asylum system must be immediately reformed.

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9 November 2014

‘Luxleaks’ could lead to Brussels action on tax policy

Desperate needs lead to desperate deeds, as a cornered rat will demonstrate. This applies also to European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker.

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2 November 2014

European Commission funds wrongheaded flower campaign

The European Commission is once again funding a campaign, this time to promote flowers. Apart from the question of whether it’s really necessary for the campaign to be financed from our taxes, it’s also a pretty wrongheaded campaign, one at which many people take offence. Instead of imposing additional taxes on countries like the Netherlands, the Commission would be better cutting its own spending, beginning with support for this stupid flower campaign.

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26 October 2014

Euro-MPs’ moneygrubbing can simply continue

At the moment there’s a great deal to be done about the Dutch financial contribution to the European Union. A setback which amounts to more than €640 million, that’s no mean thing. Even if you could be sure that the money would immediately do some good, you’d still want an explanation. However, the waste of money as funds are pumped back and forth between Brussels and The Hague will go on, while this week in Strasbourg it turned out that MEPs will be able to carry on moneygrubbing undisturbed. Only for the abolition of the monthly back and forth travelling circus between Brussels and Strasbourg was there a majority, but when it came to the proposal relating to parliamentary expenses, most MEPs wouldn’t hear of it.

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19 October 2014

Unrest in the Eurozone

Do you remember? During the campaign for the European elections the SP advocated devising a Plan B for the euro. The structural problems have never been resolved and probably never can be. We predicted at the time that the least sign of adverse weather would plunge the Eurozone into a storm of difficulties. This week one piece of bad news has followed another. The financial markets are again becoming ‘nervous’ and Greece is once more paying 9% interest on new loans. Yet any discussion of a Plan B remains taboo. In my view that’s irresponsible policy. It’s playing with fire.

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12 October 2014

Rid the world of poverty, starting with Europe

15th October is the International Day against Poverty. In the European Parliament we will spend the whole afternoon in conversation with representatives of organisations fighting poverty and with people who are themselves in a situation without prospects. The central question will be: can we combat poverty via the European Union? My answer is that at the end of the day you can best tackle poverty on the national and local level, but the EU could at least ensure that European measures don’t contribute to poverty.

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5 October 2014

For Timmermans, things are getting tense

Dutch candidate-Commissioner Frans Timmermans (photo: Roel Wijnants / CC BY-NC 2.0)

Tuesday the hearing takes place of Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans, who has been nominated for the European Commission. It’s the last of the series of such hearings, although there could still be supplementary sessions with candidates who haven’t done so well the first time around. Things could be tense for the Dutch candidate: to date he has done everything by the book, and he is well-known on the international stage. Nevertheless, being from the centre-left Dutch Labour Party, he could fall foul of the row between centre-left and centre right, a victim of the political establishment’s scheming. In my role as a Member of the European Parliament I don’t go along with such things. If Timmermans adopts socially progressive policies and puts a distance between himself and the corporate lobby, I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt.

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28 September 2014

Behind the scenes in Brussels

During the next two weeks the European Parliament will be holding hearings for each of the candidates for the European Commission. In the media you’ll be hearing mostly about the candidates who face difficulties, such as the Spaniard Miguel Arias Cañete, who is to take responsibility for climate and energy policy, but who was until recently himself up to his ears in oil, at least as far as his share portfolio is concerned. What you won’t hear about so readily is what goes on in the back rooms. Business conducted there is just as important for the future.

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21 September 2014

Juncker’s new team

Beginning on 19th September, Euro-MPs will be getting the measure of the European Commission team proposed by newly-appointed Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker. I doubt that there’s much chance that all candidate-Commissioners will make it over the finishing line; there are too many unsavoury stories about at least two of them. We’ll be reading a great deal about these in the next few days and weeks. But whatever else happens, the Juncker team, possibly with a few substitutes for the rejected nominees, will prove to be just as voracious as its predecessors. A different Europe requires more than the changing of the guard at the Commission.

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14 September 2014

Why have a Brussels statute book?

It hasn’t received much media attention but this spring the Commission revealed its plans for the development of a European statute book. In practice this concerns private law, trade law, consumer law and criminal law. If it’s left to the Commission, these statute books will in time make large parts of national law redundant. What you will have then, as a matter of course, is ‘federal’ administration of justice. I’m curious to know whether Minister of Foreign Affairs Frans Timmermans sees this as something ‘big’ where Europe should be big or whether he will reject the plans as an unnecessary smash-and-grab on the member states.

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