Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2008-03-10-Speech-1-178"
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"en.20080310.21.1-178"2
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"Mr President, Commissioner, this Parliament knows many different types of solidarity. The hardest type of solidarity is military assistance.
The solidarity clause in the Treaty of Lisbon states that Member States will be obliged to deliver military assistance to another Member State which is the victim of a terrorist threat or attack. A harder type of solidarity is unknown in the European Union. The security guarantee clause in the Treaty of Lisbon does not impose an obligation of military assistance. It is therefore a milder type of solidarity than when there is a threat of terrorism.
Jutta Haug, Parliament’s rapporteur for next year’s budget, is proposing that a key principle of the Commission’s budget should be regional solidarity, i.e. a balancing of the Union’s internal development. It would come about best via the Structural Funds.
Under the amending budget before us there is a move to use budget funds to compensate for the damage caused by the floods in the United Kingdom. A billion euros has been reserved in the Solidarity Fund for this purpose. Our group agrees with the mobilisation of these funds to help the United Kingdom.
It is possible that there will be more exceptional natural phenomena like flooding as a result of global warming. The Solidarity Fund offers a sort of small-scale insurance policy against them. The Member States pay a premium into the EU budget and they can therefore acquire help from the others when their turn comes.
Besides the Solidarity Fund, the EU budget contains a Globalisation Fund, which may spend EUR 500 million every year to ease the social problems that result from job transfers. Last year less than EUR 20 million was mobilised for this purpose. It seems the EU shows solidarity towards countries but not its citizens who have fallen on hard times."@en1
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