The Ambiguous French ’No’ to the European Constitution
Mise en ligne :15 juin 2005
par WALLERSTEIN Immanuel

Fernand Braudel Center, Binghamton University. Commentary No. 163, June 15, 2005



On May 29, 2005, the French voted in a referendum not to ratify the proposed European constitution. Three days later, Dutch voters did the same. In both cases, the margin was solid. Since then, the world press has been filled with discussion about the future of Europe as a vision and as an institution. But the consequences of these votes is in fact extremely ambiguous.

Take the French vote. There were three groups which hailed the vote as a victory : the neo-cons in the United States, large segments of the French left (and particularly the alterglobalists), and rightwing Euroskeptics throughout Europe. In the U.S., William Kristol, editor of the leading journal of the neo-cons, the Weekly Standard, ended his editorial on "A New Europe ?" with "Vive la France." The proponents of the "no" on the French left celebrated in the streets of Paris. And rightwing Euroskeptics were delighted at last to win a round in their efforts to derail Europe.

Could they all have been right ? Let us see what they were celebrating. For the U.S. neo-cons, the French "no" (and the Dutch "no") were defeats for arrogant, anti-American European elites, and no doubt particularly for the current prime nemesis of the neo-cons, Jacques Chirac. "This is a moment of hope - for the prospects of a strong pro-American, pro-liberty, more or less free-market and free-trade, socially and morally and reinvigorated Europe," said Kristol.

For French alterglobalists, the "no" vote represented quite the opposite - both a rebuff to Anglosaxon conservative values and a rejection of neoliberalism as a program, as incarnated in the proposed Constitution, and as represented by the members of the European Commission and the bureaucracy in Brussels (and represented for them as well by Chirac’s government in France). And for the rightwing Euroskeptics, the vote represented a blow against this same Commission and this same Brussels bureaucracy, which stood in their eyes for imposing socialism on Europe. There was also a strong xenophobic element in the French "no" (and even more in the Dutch "no") - a rejection of the possible future admission of Turkey into the European Union, and an attack on the policies that had admitted so many Moslem immigrants into Europe.

Obviously, as in all referenda, the "no" vote put together very different groups with very different objectives. What seems to have provided the additional "no" votes to previous referenda in France were an increased percentage of Socialist and Green voters who were angry about the state of the economy and fearful of further "globalization" - a view they expressed by defeating the treaty. And what seems to have provided the additional "no" votes in the Netherlands is an upsurge of fears about Muslim immigrants in their country caused by recent very notable acts of violence.

Whatever the explanation of the votes, what are the consequences ? The "no" votes mean the definitive end of the proposed Constitution, since it required unanimous ratification, and there is zero likelihood that France or the Netherlands will have a second vote to undo the first. This does not, of course, mean the end of institutional Europe. The EU is left with the structure it has. The problem is that the existing structure was considered by most people to be inadequate to the needs of an expanded Europe, and the Constitution was supposed to improve the situation by reducing the need for unanimity in a number of areas, and by creating two central posts (a president and a minister of foreign affairs) to increase political solidity. It may be some time before European governments try again to improve the present institutional structures.

Since one of the main problems that led both to the attempt to write a new Constitution and to the rejection of this very Constitution was the expansion of Europe from 15 to 25 members, further expansion may well be on hold. Bulgaria and Romania were scheduled to join the EU in 2007. The German Christian Democratic Union, presently expected to win the 2006 elections, has already announced that, once in power, they may veto or hold up these adhesions. The chances of Croatia, Macedonia, Ukraine, and of course Turkey to be allowed to join seem even thinner for the moment.

There are those who are quietly happy. One of them is Tony Blair. The French "no" has various positive consequences for him. It saves the United Kingdom from holding its own referendum in 2006 as promised, and therefore a probable public defeat for him. Blair can now contend that he was in favor of the defeated Constitution but that a British referendum is now irrelevant. Furthermore, Blair cannot be unhappy about the rebuff to Chirac (as well as to Schröder in the separate and earlier German regional elections). It is welcome relief from his difficulties at home because of his Iraq policy. Blair may now try to put himself forward now as the leader of Europe.

Kristol’s editorial no doubt reflects the mood of the Bush regime. They have been trying for four years to throw a monkey-wrench into a stronger Europe. The rejection of the Constitution and the confusion that it is causing is the first good news they have had in two years on that front. In the long run, Europe will no doubt continue to pull away from U.S. domination but Bush at this point is more concerned with the short run, and in the short run the French "no" is definitely helpful to him.

As for the French alterglobalists, what have they gained ? They have demonstrated an increased strength within the family of all those left of center in France. Indeed, the French Socialist party and the Green party are both in turmoil as a result of the vote. There may be important realignments and it is not at all sure that the French rainbow coalition of the left can reconstitute itself in a way that will enable it to win the 2007 presidential elections, especially if the center-right coalition manages to get its act together better than the center-left coalition.

Have the alterglobalists made a major impact on the struggle against neoliberalism in the world-economy ? They were already doing well due to the rise of protectionist sentiment throughout the countries of the North (North America, western Europe, east Asia). The vote in France is a reflection of this. But will this vote accelerate the movement ? That depends on two things. One is whether the alterglobalists can separate in the popular mind the fight against neoliberalism from the xenophobic, anti-Islamic sentiments that are overtaking much of Europe. And the second is the degree to which the position of the Bush regime continues to erode in the geopolitical arena, and it is therefore unable to capitalize on the setback to European political integration.

Many people in Europe are saying that now is the moment to "start over" in the whole exercise of European unity. The problem from the beginning has been that a more social Europe is not possible unless it is a more federal Europe. But significant segments of the European left (and not only the left in France) have always been afraid that a more federal Europe meant an undermining of the social achievements in their own country. Until the European left is ready to test its strength and fight its fight within a more federal European structure, it is going to go from confused referendum to confused refendum, find itself weakened internally in the struggle to maintain national social achievements, and find Europe unable to play the world geopolitical role vis-à-vis the United States that the European left wishes it to play.

by Immanuel Wallerstein, june 15th, 2005. Article paru sur le site du Fernand Braudel Center

[Copyright by Immanuel Wallerstein. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to download, forward electronically or e-mail to others and to post this text on non-commercial community Internet sites, provided the essay remains intact and the copyright note is displayed. To translate this text, publish it in printed and/or other forms, including commercial Internet sites and excerpts, contact the author at immanuel.wallerstein@yale.edu ; fax : 1-203-432-6976.

These commentaries, published twice monthly, are intended to be reflections on the contemporary world scene, as seen from the perspective not of the immediate headlines but of the long term.]




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검둥개 2005-06-26 15:56   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
에구 오랜만에 제게는 복잡한 글이네요. 발마스님, 좋은 글 올려주셔서 잘 읽고 갑니다. 결국 유럽좌파의 두려움은 그들이 이룩한 사민주의 시스템에 대한 불안이었나요. 어쩌다가 그런데 블레어가 이 기회에 유럽의 지도자로 등극할 기회를 노릴 수 있게 되는지는 ㅠ.ㅠ 정세에 어두운 저로서는 갸우뚱했답니다 :)

balmas 2005-06-26 20:26   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
글쎄요, 이 글은 월러스틴의 관점에서 쓴 글이라는 걸 염두에 두고 읽으시면 될 것
같아요. 유럽 좌파가 두려워하는 것 중 하나는 개별 국민국가가 이룩한 성과(복지국가라고 해도 좋고 사회국가라고 해도 좋고, 또는 사민주의라고 할 수도 있겠죠)가 오히려 유럽의 구성에서 후퇴할지도 모른다는 데 있다는 월러스틴의 지적에는 동의할 수 있습니다. 하지만 이러한 우려를 민족주의적, 곧 보수주의적 반발로 해석해서는 곤란하고, 더욱이 유럽 헌법안에 반대하는 좌파의 문제제기를 거기로 모두 환원시킬 수는 없겠죠. 다른 글들을 좀더 읽어보시면 이 점이 분명해지리라 생각합니다.
블레어에 관한 지적은, 블레어 정부는 유럽 구성에 반대하거나 적어도 매우 소극적인 태도를 보여왔는데, 이제 유럽 구성을 주도해온 프랑스에서 유럽 헌법안이 부결되었으니, 블레어의 정치적 입장이 더 공고해졌다는 의미로 이해할 수 있겠죠. 하지만 이것을 곧바로 블레어가 유럽의 지도자로 등극할 수 있을 것이라는 전망으로 연결시키는 것은 좀 무리라고 봅니다.