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Yanis Varoufakis 欧盟不再为人民服务 民主需要新的开始

(2024-03-04 00:19:00) 下一个

欧盟不再为人民服务——民主需要新的开始

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/feb/05/eu-no-longer-serves-people-europe-diem25

雅尼斯·瓦鲁法基斯 2016 年 2 月 5 日

我们不必在投降或离开欧洲之间做出选择——让我们在公民掌控下重新启动它
英国许多人现在对欧盟的厌恶源于正确的本能,但却导致了错误的答案。 毫无疑问,布鲁塞尔蔑视民主并沉迷于不负责任。 大卫·卡梅伦的空洞妥协对解决这个问题毫无帮助。 但与此同时,在即将举行的公投中投票支持“脱欧”也不是答案。

欧洲共同体在其诞生之初是一项伟大的事业。 它的建设以欧洲世界主义精神、边界消失、共同机构和共同繁荣的精神振兴了民族文化。 尽管存在不同的语言和不同的文化,欧洲开始和平、表面上和谐地团结在一起。 唉,蛇蛋正在新兴联盟的基础上孵化。


正常国家,例如英国,经过几个世纪的演变,成为遏制对立群体和阶级(例如君主制、贵族,后来的商人、工会等)之间社会和经济冲突的政治机制。 这根本不是欧盟及其布鲁塞尔官僚机构的发展方式。

它最初是一个重工业卡特尔(煤炭和钢铁,然后是汽车制造商,后来拉拢农民、高科技产业和其他产业)。 与所有卡特尔一样,其想法是操纵价格,并通过专门建立的、总部位于布鲁塞尔的官僚机构重新分配由此产生的利润。

这个欧洲卡特尔和管理它的官僚害怕民众,鄙视民治政府的理念,就像石油生产国欧佩克或任何公司的管理者一样。 耐心而有条不紊地实施了决策去政治化的过程,其结果是不懈地推动将“民主”从“民主”中剔除,至少就欧盟而言,并将所有政策制定隐藏在“民主”之中。 普遍存在的伪技术官僚宿命论。 各国政治家因默许将欧盟委员会、理事会、Ecofin(欧盟财政部长)、欧元集团(欧元区财政部长)和欧洲央行转变为无政治、无民主的区域而获得了丰厚的回报。 任何反对这一进程的人都会被贴上“非欧洲人”的标签,并被视为一种不和谐的声音。


从一个重要方面来说,这是许多英国人本能地厌恶欧盟的更深层次原因。 他们是对的:政治决策去政治化的代价不仅是欧盟层面民主的失败,而且是整个欧洲糟糕的经济政策。

在欧元区,为了维持其无法执行的财政规则,总部位于布鲁塞尔和法兰克福的“技术官僚”确保共享欧元的经济体依次走下竞争性紧缩的悬崖,导致较弱国家的永久性衰退和对欧元区的低投资。 核心国家。 他们的政策越失败,他们就越专制,他们实施的政策就越不合理。

与此同时,英国等原本明智地留在欧元区之外的欧盟成员国也受到欧洲整体陷入通货紧缩的影响,现在变得疏远,转而在大西洋彼岸或中国寻求灵感和合作伙伴,而中国却只有失望和巨大损失。 主权的主权等待着(正如对 TTIP 和 TISA 贸易协议文件的任何解读所证实的那样)。

如今,从赫尔辛基到里斯本,从都柏林到克里特岛,从莱比锡到阿伯丁,世界各地的欧洲人都对欧盟机构感到失望。 许多人被分裂欧盟的想法所吸引,但他们仍然坚持单一市场。 英国脱欧活动人士向选民承诺,他们可以拥有主权并进入欧洲单一市场。 但这是一个虚假的承诺。

一个真正的单一市场,一个真正公平的竞争环境,需要一个单一的法律框架,相同的行业、劳工和环境保护标准,以及在整个单一管辖范围内以相同决定执行这些标准的法院。 但这还需要一个共同议会来制定在单一市场上实施的法律,以及一个执行法院裁决的行政部门。

卡梅伦的欧盟协议:我们小组的裁决

像英国这样的民族,政治各方都珍视主权国家议会的想法,无法想象这样一个机构的形成。 为了更崇高的事业,他们准备牺牲在诺曼底购买第二套住房或在希腊岛屿定居的便利性,这是正确的。

但还有什么选择呢? 如果既不退进

民族国家的茧或向正在解体的无民主区欧盟投降都是不错的选择,还有第三条路吗?

就在这里。 官方“欧洲”和一些地方精英竭尽全力抵制这种民主浪潮:欧洲人精心策划了一场民主浪潮,试图从不负责任的技术官僚、同谋的政客和不透明的机构手中夺回对自己生活的控制权。

2 月 9 日,我们中的一些人对上述观点深信不疑,齐聚柏林发起一场新运动——DiEM25(欧洲民主运动 2025)。 我们来自包括英国在内的非洲大陆各个地区,因不同的文化、语言、口音、政党背景、意识形态、肤色、性别认同、信仰和美好社会观念而团结在一起。

一个简单而激进的想法是我们的动力:使欧盟民主化,因为我们知道,否则欧盟就会解体,所有人都会付出可怕的代价。 我们的当务之急是决策完全透明(欧洲理事会、欧洲金融共同体和欧元集团会议的直播;贸易谈判的全面披露;欧洲央行会议纪要等)以及紧急重新部署现有的欧盟机构,以寻求真正解决问题的政策 债务、银行业、投资不足、贫困加剧和移民危机。

我们的中期目标是召开一次制宪会议,欧洲人将在会上审议如何在 2025 年之前建立一个成熟的欧洲民主国家,其特点是建立一个尊重民族自决并与国家议会、地区议会和议会分享权力的主权议会。 市议会。

这是乌托邦吗? 当然如此。 但最重要的是,当前的欧盟能够忍受其反民主的傲慢以及因不负责任而导致的严重无能。 或者认为民主可以在跨国“单一”市场和不透明的自由贸易协定中窒息的民族国家的怀抱中复兴。

是的,我们的运动甚至对我们来说也显得乌托邦。 然而,唯一的选择是随着欧盟的解体,可怕的反乌托邦正在我们眼前展开; 戴维·卡梅伦庆祝一些东欧人可能被排除在社会保障福利之外; 野心被重新国有化; 仇外心理激增; 更新更高的围栏被建造起来,以……安全的名义带来不安全感。

The EU no longer serves the people – democracy demands a new beginning

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/feb/05/eu-no-longer-serves-people-europe-diem25

 5 Feb 2016
 
We don't have to choose between surrendering to or leaving Europe – let's relaunch it with the citizens in control

The aversion that many in Britain now feel towards the EU springs from the right instinct but leads to the wrong answer. Undoubtedly, Brussels disdains democracy and luxuriates in unaccountability. David Cameron’s hollow compromise will do precisely nothing to address this. Yet at the same time, a vote for “Brexit” in the forthcoming referendum is not the answer either.

The European Community was, in its early incarnation, a magnificent undertaking. Its construction allowed for the revitalisation of national cultures in the spirit of European cosmopolitanism, disappearing borders, common institutions and shared prosperity. Despite different languages and diverse cultures, Europe began to pull together, in peace and ostensible harmony. Alas, the serpent’s egg was hatching inside the foundations of the emergent union.

 

Normal states, such as Britain, evolved through the centuries as political mechanisms to contain social and economic conflicts between antagonistic groups and classes (eg the monarchy, the barons, later the merchants, the trades unions, etc). This is not at all how the EU, and its Brussels bureaucracy, developed.

It began life as a cartel of heavy industry (coal and steel, then car manufacturers, later co-opting farmers, hi-tech industries and others). Like all cartels, the idea was to manipulate prices and to redistribute the resulting profits through a purpose-built, Brussels-based bureaucracy.

This European cartel and the bureaucrats who administered it feared the demos and despised the idea of government by the people, just like the administrators of oil producers Opec, or indeed any corporation, does. Patiently and methodically, a process of depoliticising decision-making was put in place, the result a relentless drive towards taking the “demos” out of “democracy”, at least as far as the EU was concerned, and cloaking all policy-making in a pervasive pseudo-technocratic fatalism. National politicians were rewarded handsomely for their acquiescence to turning the commission, the CouncilEcofin (EU finance ministers), the Eurogroup (eurozone finance ministers) and the European Central Bank into politics-free, democracy-free, zones. Anyone opposing the process was labelled “un-European” and treated as a jarring dissonance.

 

This is, in an important respect, the deeper cause of the aversion that many in Britain instinctively harbour for the EU. And they are right: the price of de-politicising political decisions has been not merely the defeat of democracy at EU level but also poor economic policies throughout Europe.

In the eurozone, to maintain their unenforceable fiscal rules, the Brussels and Frankfurt-based “technocracies” ensured that economies sharing the euro were being sequentially marched off the cliff of competitive austerity, resulting in permanent recession in the weaker countries and low investment in the core countries. The more their policies failed, the more authoritarian they became and the more irrational the policies they imposed.

Meanwhile EU member states such as Britain that had had the good sense to stay outside the eurozone were also affected by Europe’s overall slide into deflation and are now alienated, seeking inspiration and partners across the Atlantic, or in China, where only disappointment and great losses of sovereignty await (as any reading of the TTIP and TISA trade deal documents confirm).

Today Europeans everywhere, from Helsinki to Lisbon, from Dublin to Crete, from Leipzig to Aberdeen, are feeling let down by EU institutions. Many are attracted to the idea of tearing up the EU, except that they remain wedded to the single market. Brexit campaigners are promising voters that they can have their sovereignty and access to Europe’s single market. But this is a false promise.

 

A truly single market, a genuinely level playing field, requires a single legal framework, identical industry, labour and environmental protection standards, and courts that will enforce them with the same determination throughout the single jurisdiction. But this then also requires a common parliament that writes the laws to be implemented across the single market as well as an executive that enforces the courts’ decisions.

 

Matthew d’Ancona

 

 

A people such as the British, where all sides of politics cherish the idea of a sovereign national parliament, cannot envisage such an institution coming into being. They are right to be prepared to sacrifice, for a loftier cause, the ease of buying second homes in Normandy or settling on a Greek island.

 

But what is the alternative? If neither the retreat into the cocoon of the nation state nor surrender to the disintegrating democracy-free zone known as the EU are good options, is there a third way?

 

Yes, there is. It is the one that official “Europe”, and some local elites, resist with every sinew of their authoritarian mindset: a surge of democracy, orchestrated by Europeans seeking to regain control over their lives from unaccountable technocrats, complicit politicians and opaque institutions.

 

On 9 February some of us, convinced of the above, are gathering in Berlin to found a new movement – DiEM25 (Democracy in Europe Movement 2025). We come from every part of the continent, including Britain, and are united by different cultures, languages, accents, political party affiliations, ideologies, skin colours, gender identities, faiths and conceptions of the good society.

 

One simple, radical idea is our motivating force: to democratise the EU in the knowledge that it will otherwise disintegrate at a terrible cost to all. Our immediate priority is full transparency in decision-making (live-streaming of European councils, Ecofin and Eurogroup meetings; full disclosure of trade negotiations; ECB minutes, etc) and the urgent redeployment of existing EU institutions in the pursuit of policies that genuinely address the crises of debt, banking, inadequate investment, rising poverty and migration.

 

Our medium-term goal is to convene a constitutional assembly where Europeans will deliberate on how to bring forward, by 2025, a fully fledged European democracy, featuring a sovereign parliament that respects national self-determination and shares power with national parliaments, regional assemblies and municipal councils.

 

Is this utopian? Of course it is. But no more so than the notion that the current EU can survive its anti-democratic hubris, and the gross incompetence fuelled by its unaccountability. Or the idea that democracy can be revived in the bosom of a nation-state asphyxiating within transnational “single” markets and opaque free trade agreements.

 

Yes, our movement seems utopian even to us. However, the only alternative is the terrible dystopia unfolding before our eyes as the EU disintegrates; David Cameron celebrates the potential exclusion of some eastern Europeans from social security benefits; ambition is renationalised; xenophobia surges; and newer and taller fences are built begetting insecurity in the name of … security.

 

 

 

Polly Toynbee

 

 

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