Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-07-03-Speech-2-033"

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"Mr President, I can only endorse the conclusions of the final Göteborg document. Moreover, I would like to stress a few points which I feel are extremely important for Europe's growth: pensions and the project for financial sustainability, the new cycle of negotiations on international trade reform, the issues relating to public health and a strict relationship between the use of natural resources and economic growth. On this point, for example with regard to some of the areas related to agriculture, we might have wished for more ambition, partly because the current fear is that some of the situations which have been consolidated within the European Union, specifically those relating to the agricultural sector, will be sacrificed to enlargement matters. With regard to food safety in the context of enlargement too, in our opinion, the tendency is sometimes to subdue rather than aim towards a way of working which will provide guarantees to the consumer. We are still too fresh, if you will pardon the expression, from the crises we have had in recent years – dioxins, mad cow disease – not to see food safety as a priority in the political decisions we have to take over the next few years. Now, on a political note, we feel that, in some areas, the relationship between the Council and the European Parliament has not been what we would have wished it to be, and on extremely important political matters such as the relationship with Russia and the space shield, for example, we have seen alarming acceleration. If we do not have an adequate debate in Strasbourg, we will be in danger of creating a series of points of no return which could cause deep rifts, particularly in a politically sensitive period such as this one, where some countries – such as Italy, Spain and Great Britain – have stable governments but in others – such as France and Germany – things will change every time there is an election. Therefore, some positions might be subject to pressure which is due more to electoral positions than overall European positions. In our opinion, the European Parliament must have the extremely important role of redressing the balance."@en1

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