The Lisbon Treaty – an interesting few months!
Now that the national referendum campaign on the Lisbon Treaty has really kicked off, as the Green Party’s Spokesperson on
I suppose the first public opportunity I had as party spokesperson to try to articulate the party’s position on the Lisbon Treaty was when I travelled to
As a member of the Green Party’s Policy Group on
On December 12th in Seanad Éireann, in advance of the Taoiseach travelling to
On January 15th at our weekly Parliamentary Party meeting, the six Green Party TDs and two Senators unanimously agreed that we would publicly declare our support for a Yes vote for the Lisbon Treaty. This fact was widely reported in the national media (for example, here and here
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On
On January 19th the Green Party held its own internal Party Convention on the Lisbon Treaty in the Hilton Hotel in
I believe that because of the active engagement of the Irish Green Party with EU debates over the past decade or two, the levels of awareness and information in relation to the EU are very high amongst party members in comparison with other political parties. I pointed out that we were the only Irish political party that was democratically consulting its party members, and encouraging them to vote on what position the party should take in relation to the Lisbon Treaty. At the end of the afternoon’s debate, 63% of members voted to support the Lisbon Treaty. While that figure did not reach the two-thirds majority required by the Green Party Constitution for any fundamental change in party policy, it did indicate that attitudes amongst party members towards the EU had significantly changed.
The outcome of the party’s EU Convention meant that the party would not now adopt an official campaigning position in relation to the Lisbon Treaty. However, individual members of the party were free to campaign for a Yes or No vote as they saw fit.
Since our own internal Convention, the national campaign on the Lisbon Treaty has really kicked off. I was invited to speak at a Trinity Historical Society debate recently on the motion ‘That the European Social Model is failing us.’ Of course this motion was very relevant to the debate on the Lisbon Treaty, and so I referred to the treaty in arguing that the Social Model had not yet failed us. The debate was a very good one and fortunately the speakers against the motion won the debate!! I was impressed by the strength of commitment to the expressed values of the EU so evident amongst students both listening to, and participating in the debate.
I have also been closely following the debate on the Lisbon Treaty that is playing out in the Letters Pages of our national newspapers every day. I am particularly struck by the way in which the issue of “democracy” and the “democratic deficit” of the EU has become a central theme in the letters published. For this reason I wrote a letter about what I see as some of the challenges facing the EU as a trans-national polity in trying to democratise itself. I was happy that this letter was published in several of the national newspapers.
I look forward to using this blog as a way to keep up to date with the debate on the Lisbon Treaty and to engaging with others in discussing many of the complex political issues that will arise during that debate.