Luxembourge back EU constitional treaty

Published: 11 July 2005 y., Monday

Luxembourg has voted yes to the EU Constitution. And the gamble of Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker seems to have paid off. Now with all of the votes counted over 56% of Luxembourg's 230,000 strong electorate has voted yes and under 44 % said no to the charter. Prime Minister Juncker staked his reputation and his job on a yes vote - promising to resign if his people said no to the EU charter. The EU constition cannot go ahead unless it is ratified by all 25 member states, either in a referendum or a parliamentary vote.

Before today 12 EU members had ratified the charter. After the rejections last month by France and the Netherlands, European leaders meeting at an ill-tempered summit in Brussels decided on a long period of reflection on the Treaty. This prompted some countries to suspend their ratification process.

But not so Luxembourg, where Prime Minister Juncker believes that a yes vote could once again revive the charter - however, many diplomats now believe the document is already a dead letter.

Šaltinis: EuroNews
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Occupied Palestinian Territory: Commission boosts humanitarian funding by €7 million

The European Commission is increasing its funding by €7 million to provide relief to the most vulnerable populations in the occupied Palestinian territory. more »

World leaders shifted a great deal of their responsibility to local and regional authorities which have to make Copenhagen a real success

As the COP15 Summit did not reach a legally binding agreement at international level, local and regional leaders will have to step in to make the Copenhagen deal a real success. more »

Copenhagen climax

Barroso says negotiations were toughest he can remember. more »

Carbon Emissions from Transport Sector in Vietnam Remain High

Rapidly increasing emissions of carbon dioxide from the transport sector, particularly in urban areas, is a major challenge to sustainable development in developing countries. more »

Copenhagen: Leaders back to the negotiating table

The heads of state and government who met late yesterday evening to resolve some problems in the climate negotiations continued their meeting on Friday morning. more »

Human Rights: Uganda and Azerbaijan

Two human rights resolutions - on anti-homosexual draft legislation in Uganda and freedom of expression in Azerbaijan - were approved by Parliament on Thursday. more »

Copenhagen: Discussions continue into the night

At this moment, political leaders from the world’s largest countries are sitting in Copenhagen negotiating a global response to the threat of climate change. more »

Negotiations between the EU and Morocco in the agri-food and fisheries sector: signature of agreed minutes

The Moroccan and EU negotiators signed an agreed minute concluding negotiations that have been ongoing for almost four years in view of a future agreement on improving bilateral trade conditions for products from the agri-food and fisheries sector. more »

Belarus: more democratisation needed before sanctions are lifted, say MEPs

MEPs have given their backing to the Council's recent decision to prolong sanctions against certain Belarusian officials whilst suspending the application of travel restrictions until October 2010. more »

New climate offer from African Union

The EU and the African Union (AU) met in Copenhagen. AU chief negotiator, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, informed the meeting about the offer from the African Union that he had presented earlier in the day. more »