Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-12-14-Speech-4-081"

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"en.20001214.1.4-081"2
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"Mr President, in the absence of any other results, the horse-trading in Nice has at least clearly shown the intentions of the European Union’s key players. Institutionalising the laws of the jungle, according to which the strong endeavour to destroy the weak, would inevitably lead to the institutional cobbling-together that we saw at Nice. The only thing that reins in the European Union’s four main powers from imposing their joint domination on Europe is the fact that they also see each other as rivals. It is worth noting that apart from the British exception on taxation, or the French exception on cultural products, every major state managed to protect the aspects that its elite considers important. Therefore, in the social field, it was the United Kingdom, whose legislation is the most inadequate of all the large countries, who proposed the British exception. No Member State, however, proposed the social exception to preserve the aspects of its own social legislation that are the least unfavourable to workers or to oppose the privatisation of public services. This proves the point that workers and the working classes can expect nothing better from the European Union than from their own national state, in other words, equality to a lower common denominator, weaker social protection, the destruction of public services and a drop in their standard of living. I therefore voted against this resolution."@en1

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