Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-11-13-Speech-2-035"

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"en.20011113.2.2-035"2
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". – Mr President, on behalf of my outgoing colleagues and myself I would like to assure you that I have never regretted my resignation as much as at this moment. I wish I could resign every time we met in order to listen to this lovely music. So thank you very much for all the nice words. Not least, when I go home to Sweden I shall tell them of these kind words from Denmark. Thank you, Mr. Blak. I realise there is a heavy agenda, but I would like to take this opportunity to say a few words. I shall start with what Mr Kuhne has just said. It seems that a number of issues have been put behind us and there is a feeling – which I also had yesterday in a meeting of the Committee on Budgetary Control – that we are now able to address some major issues for the future. The first is one which underlies the budget surplus problem. It is not so much the revenue I am thinking of, as the under-utilisation and the under-implementation of funds, which, in turn, has a lot to do with our problems in achieving good management and fighting fraud – namely the over-complexity of Union funds and administration and regulations. I have had a long discussion on that with the discharge rapporteur, Mr Bourlanges, and I feel confident that this problem will be addressed now. My personal advice to Parliament is to do everything in its power, together with other institutions, to simplify things. On all the major issues, such as the pre-accession funds, structural funds and export refunds and on the market regulations in agriculture, we have built a mountain of complexity which, if I may for once step into the realm of political judgment, raises the major question of the European citizens' confidence in this Union. I would say that if I had to choose one of the tasks that Mr Kuhne mentioned as being the most important, it would be: simplify, for heaven's sake! I wish you every success in that. I think that this Parliament, together with the Court of Auditors and the other institutions, will in the future manage to increase confidence among European citizens in our great project, which, of course, is the primary goal for all of our institutions. With that, I thank you once again, on behalf of myself and my colleagues, for your kind words and for this most stimulating and interesting exchange of views."@en1
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