Topic: Ashton

» Notes on European political culture

28

Feb

2010

What can we ask of a treaty?

The New York Times has recently taken to reporting on the failures of the Lisbon Treaty, manifested by the visible growing pains in the new leadership structures of the European Union (here).  To be sure, The Times is hardly alone in noting what seems to be a problem in the implementation of the New Europe. Earlier criticism focusing on the profiles and personalities of Council President Herman van Rompuy and High Representative Lady Ashton have mutated into disparagement over the Lisbon Treaty itself. [ More… ]

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30

Jan

2010

A new diplomacy

In the first weeks of her tenure as High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy all eyes have been on the design and structure Lady Ashton gives to her new post. There are no precedents, no models. Ashton essentially starts from scratch in giving the form to the post of Europe’s Chief Diplomat. The importance of this self-invention is easily overlooked.

Diplomacy in its modern form has, for better or worse, distinctly European airs. Diplomacy is distinctly modern because it is in a way one of the basic properties of the modern state. It plays the role of embodying the a state’s character, interests, qualities, and ambitions and conversing with the embodiment of other states. But it is not simply the role of talking about the interests of one’s state, rather, in a strange metaphysical way, it is that state. [ More… ]

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25

Jan

2010

Monsieur Van Rompuy

The President of the Council of Europe today addressed the Alliance Française, the international interest organisation for global users of the French language. Taking the floor It came 5 days after the International Day of Francophony, Van Rompuy spoke, in eloquent French, on the theme ‘Culture, globalisation and Europe: Google contra Proust?’.

It is clear If anything Von Rompuy speaks the language of Europe: universality versus particularity, universal values, human rights, evoking the European front guard from de Tocqueville to Marx. Latin traditions, Christian seditions, Aristotle, Calvin, Monnet and Benda.

The speech came one week after former French Prime MInister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, special envoy on Francophony to President Nicolas Sarkozy, had insisted that France would be ‘gentle, but firm’ in its insistence that the French language should continue to be one of the three working languages of the European Union (along with German and English), despite the latest enlargement and linguistic watering down. [ More… ]

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