Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2008-01-30-Speech-3-156"

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"en.20080130.19.3-156"2
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"Madam President, the road to the liberalisation of postal services is getting longer, and for that the European Parliament is partly to blame, having extended the European Commission's deadline by two years. The positions taken by national delegations reflect the varying situation on the markets of the 27 countries. Sweden, the United Kingdom and Finland, as front runners of the open market, as well as Germany and the Netherlands, which have gone a long way in that direction, all see the final deadline as a victory for protectionism. Starting from their model of a state-controlled economy, the new Member States consider not only the original proposal of 2009 but also the compromise deadline of 2011 as a threat to jobs in the postal sector. Poland, for example, has some 100 000 people employed by which is incapable of facing open competition in the medium term. Having found allies in public services in western Europe, first and foremost France's they have succeeded in negotiating special conditions that postpone the free market in practice to the end of 2012. In the event, the corporate interest of the postal workers has prevailed over that of the customers, who were sorely tried during the Christmas peak period in December 2007, when the incapability of the postal monopoly was harshly demonstrated. The slow progress made in liberalising this sector of the European market, which began as far back as 1989 with the first draft directive, shows the strength of the corporate interests defending the status quo against an extension of the public interest."@en1

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3http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/rdf/spokenAs.ttl.gz

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