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

UK nationalist leader hit with eggs

Outside the UK Houses of Parliament was a fallout of the British National Party winning two seats in European Parliament elections last weekend. more »

Rally after attacks on Indians

Uproar in the streets of Suburban Sydney. It's a response to the alleged attack of an Indian man. Recent attacks on Indians has split opinion. more »

EP elections - political leaders give their reaction

Among the reactions of political leaders in the European Parliament the triumphant mood of the centre-right EPP contrasted with bitter disappointment in the Socialist camp. more »

North Korea ups the stakes

North Korea is already facing new U.N. sanctions for last month's nuclear test. Now it is raising the stakes in a growing confrontation with Washington by sentencing two U.S. journalists to 12 years hard labor for “grave crimes.” more »

After the elections - now what happens?

The 736 newly elected Members of the European Parliament will meet for the first time on 14 July in Strasbourg. more »

China quarantines New Orleans mayor

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin has been quarantined in Shanghai after a passenger on the same flight exhibited flu-like symptoms. more »

Photographs emerge of alleged spies

Photographs have emerged of a former U.S. State Department official and his wife who were arrested on Friday on charges of spying for the Cuban government for nearly 30 years. more »

EP elections - slight decline in turnout

Provisional turnout figures for the election are set at 42.94%, according to the TNS Polling agency. more »

Centre-right clear winners in European elections

Voters across Europe have delivered gains for the centre-right with the Socialists losing ground. Results suggest that the centre-right European People's Party will retain their position as the largest group in the European Parliament. more »

Statement of President Barroso on the outcome of the European Parliament elections

Throughout the European Union, millions of people have used their democratic vote to elect members of the European Parliament. more »