Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2013-05-21-Speech-2-626-000"

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"Mr President, today we are heading towards the end of a parliamentary term and also towards the end of the Parliament’s first term with new powers in the fields of justice and home affairs. There have been successes and failings, and my opinion has not changed: I still believe that we should seek to do less, but to do it better. Good examples of that work include the work on cybercrime and in relation to unaccompanied minors, which is becoming a considerable problem throughout Europe. We should be ambitious but realistic in what we can achieve. I would urge the Commission and Parliament to focus on where we can contribute most and where we can add clarity and protection rather than complication. More compulsion, solidarity and harmonisation is not always better, while with better trust, cooperation and efficiency – and with the Commission ensuring strong implementation and consistency – we will create a system which respects Member States’ legal differences while ensuring effective outcomes. A fully-harmonised criminal system and a European prosecutor is simply not the right solution. It is difficult to reflect on our work under Stockholm so far: over three years without any review or evaluation. We can achieve the best future outcome through good cooperation and communication between institutions. The much-needed review, however, is absent. In this light I would ask the Commission now to assess the Stockholm Programme’s successes and also its failings so that we can move forward together constructively but not blindly."@en1
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