Lisbon 2 – Why I’m voting yes.

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Politics

[I originally wrote this blog on Tuesday the 29th of September, but for some reason couldn't get it to post.]

This advertisement appeared in today’s Irish Times, and presumably in the other national papers as well.

I’ll be voting yes to the treaty. That doesn’t change the fact that I think Michael O’Leary, the head of Ryanair, is a despicable human being. As with so much of what he says, this ad will only have the effect of making the people who already agree with him laugh.

A friend, who is supporting the no side of the campaign, responded to my posting this picture on Twitter by remarking that a yes vote will have the effect of endorsing by proxy those who support it, including our present incompetent government and O’Leary. Though this makes little sense – we can (and, as usual, probably won’t) express our dissatisfaction in the next general election – even if it were true then the same could be said of the no side. As much of the no side is currently made up of one almost-equally-obnoxious businessman (Declan Ganley) with strong anti-European sentiments, a far-right Christian “values” group called Cóir and a political party (Sinn Féin) which until recently supported terrorism and had its own private army, I think I’d rather throw my lot in with the yes side, even before it comes to reasons for actually supporting the treaty.

As to why I support the treaty, much of its work is in sorting out legislative processes which are messy or don’t adequately do the job any more. This is valuable, but there are three important points which would have won me to it easily.

The first is that it contains a provision for dealing with global warming. It’s obvious to anyone who’s looked at the data that climate change is one of the most important, if not the most important, issues facing the world at the moment. While I’m aware that resolutions are one thing while action is another, a resolution is still better than none. I think that the governments of the world are finally starting to react to what scientists have been telling them for decades, and I would very much like for Europe to be a leader in dealing with the problem. (Admittedly, our overall record is still pretty good compared with places like the US and China, but urgent action is nonetheless required.)

The second is the aim to reduce poverty, with the lofty (and sadly probably inachievable) goal attached of eradicating it entirely. The treaty provides legal groundwork for humanitarian aid outside the EU.

Lastly, the Citizen’s Initiative is a beautiful aspect of the treaty, which allows the citizens of Europe to bring matters directly to the table of the European Commission (the body which proposes legislation), if they can provide a petition with a million signatures from across the Union – a small figure given the overall population. While the EU’s power to influence laws is limited by each of the countries within it, this should give a much stronger voice to minorities all across Europe.

I’m also vaguely curious as to why I’ve heard so little about the Irish commissioner this time around. Last time we voted on this treaty, one of the major (and few factual) bones of contention for the no side was that Ireland wouldn’t be represented in the European Commission 100% of the time. The treaty has now been modified so that the Commission will be represented by all member states all of the time. But where the no side – last year alive with the chant of “keep our commissioner!” has unterstandably shut the hell up about it, I’m more than a little surprised that the yes side hasn’t taken up the same rallying call.

Oh well. The referendum is tomorrow We shall see how things progress.

One Response

  1. So I was thinking about the likelihood of a lot protest votes on later on today. We discussed this several times over the last few weeks on the train. Here you have mentioned it again at the top of your blog. But we have both contradicted ourselves. At least 50% of the reason why I am voting yes is because the no side is represented by terror apologists, the catholic far-right and Declan Ganley. This in a sense is as invalid a reason for voting for the treaty as protest voting against it is.

    But I don’t want to be too hard on Ganley. Unlike most of Sinn Fein, Ganley has at least completed a second level education. And unlike the catholic far-right he possesses at least one ounce of sanity. He is also not a socialist. In fact when you compare his political ideology to that of his partners in crime, he is a one man centre-right party. Just like most of the big parties in Europe. His agenda is what worries me.

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