Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-10-02-Speech-2-103"

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"en.20011002.4.2-103"2
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". The two reports on the expiry of the ECSC Treaty state – and deplore the fact – that the Council is asking Parliament to give it discharge regarding activities which it has no means of controlling. In other words, Parliament may vote for what it wants but it will be the Council who decides. That is certainly one way of recognising that Parliament serves only to give the stamp of democracy to decisions which are not democratic. These two reports also state that the so-called social aspect of the ECSC is to be abandoned, precisely when we are envisaging the accession of countries on which the European Union intends to impose the restructuring of their coal and steel sectors so as to make them profitable, profitable, that is, to possible Western investors. In spite of this ‘social aspect’ of the ECSC, the restructuring of coal and steel in Western Europe has resulted in the dismissal of hundreds of thousands of workers, a disaster for many people. Some regions, such as Lorraine, have taken years to recover from the companies that were closed down and the jobs that were lost. We can imagine what it will be like for the workers of Poland, the Czech Republic or Hungary, who will not even have the chance of compensation or early retirement. Rather than using the balance from the liquidation of the ECSC as a research fund, which will in one form or another profit the bosses, the sums released in this way should be used in their entirety to continue to pay the wages of the workers who will be thrown out onto the street as a result of future restructuring programmes. We have therefore voted against these two reports."@en1

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2http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/rdf/Events_and_structure.ttl.gz

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