Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-03-15-Speech-3-238"
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"en.20000315.7.3-238"2
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".
Mr Bonde
knows what I have said in previous answers: in the specific case of Austria, and I know that that is what is behind his question, we are not working at Community level, but through bilateral relations. The attitude adopted by some Member States towards the Austrian Government related to their negative perception of the new Austrian Government, which does not affect the Community framework. We are not working at Council level here. The European Union has not taken a single discriminatory measure against Austria. These 14 Member States decided of their own free will to make plain to the Austrian authorities their displeasure at the kind of government they had established, and above all at the fact that they had included in the government a party which advocates, or has advocated in the past – it is difficult to distinguish between the past and the present in the Freedom Party’s statements – a certain ideology and a certain way of interpreting European values. However, Mr Bonde, you should not, of course, confuse economic and monetary union with Nazism, they are in fact slightly different. Of course, all parties have every right to oppose economic and monetary union, the Schengen Agreement, or anything else; they can even oppose the European Union itself. As you know, there are parties which are opposed to the European Union, but that does not mean that they should be seen as undemocratic. The fact is, and you know this as well as I do, Mr Bonde, that there are parties which promote ideologies which jeopardise the system itself and which affect the set of values which are the very essence of the European Union, which are ultimately part of the justification for creating the European Union in the first place. It is therefore quite natural, Mr Bonde, that certain governments should feel somewhat uneasy. This uneasiness is only being reflected in bilateral relations. We are not confusing Community matters with bilateral matters."@en1
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