Making the institutions work better and more effectively together: Priorities for the New Commission
Wednesday 08 October 2014The priorities of the European Union in the field of
institutions are circumscribed by the premise that any new treaty
negotiation would, at present, be a fruitless exercise, probably
dangerous and condemned to failure. In the present state of public
opinion, nobody believes that a substantial European treaty could
be unanimously ratified, irrespective of its merits. Preoccupations
lie elsewhere, in growth and unemployment, and a treaty negotiation
on institutions would seem provocative to many. Doubts about the
future participation of the United Kingdom in the European
enterprise merely increase the risks of any treaty negotiation.
We have to accept that, as of now, institutional treaty change
cannot be a priority. This does not exclude that treaty change may
become possible and desirable at a later time, in a period of
economic growth and greater self-confidence in public opinion. In a
best-case
hypothesis, such a window of opportunity might open towards
the end of the present legislature. Meanwhile, attention must
concentrate on adapting institutions to make them work better and
work more effectively together. Therein lie the priorities.