PRESIDENT CHIRAC set out yesterday to persuade disgruntled French citizens to put aside their distaste for Europe and his own Government and vote oui to the EU constitution in a referendum
Published:
4 March 2005 y., Friday
PRESIDENT CHIRAC set out yesterday to persuade disgruntled French citizens to put aside their distaste for Europe and his own Government and vote oui to the EU constitution in a referendum.
The President and Jean-Pierre Raffarin, his Prime Minister, used a solemn parliamentary session at the Château de Versailles and a Franco-Polish summit to open a campaign to head off a possible political rout and death for the European treaty.
As both houses of parliament approved changes in the French Constitution to accommodate the European version, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, chief architect of the EU treaty, issued a warning. “If France votes ‘no’, it is probable that Britain will vote ‘no’ as well. From that moment, let us be clear, the constitution is dead,” the former President said.
Meeting President Kwasniewski of Poland in Arras, M Chirac said the EU treaty “will give the Union more democracy and efficiency and enable it better to exercise its role on the international stage, while bringing it closer to its citizens”. Opinion polls show that almost 60 per cent of decided voters want to ratify the treaty, but the “yes” margin is shrinking. M Chirac is expected this week to set a date in May for the vote.
The President is worried that many will vote “no” simply to punish him and the Establishment. A protest vote against President Mitterrand almost scuppered the EU’s Maastricht treaty in a 1992 referendum.
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