Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2002-10-09-Speech-3-033"
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"en.20021009.4.3-033"2
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"We are delighted to see that negotiations with ten candidate countries will be able to be closed at the end of this year, for entry into the European Union at the beginning of 2004.
This satisfaction is, however, tinged with regret. The accessions will go hand in hand with an inextricable muddle of several hundred derogations and transitional measures, and barely veiled threats from the Commission to the candidates: the possibility of sending a preventive warning letter to States that do not comply quickly enough, and even a summons to appear before the Court of Luxembourg. Welcome to a disciplinary Europe!
If this is what we have come to, we would have been better off, as we suggested, with the accession of these States as early as 1990 to a European political confederation, with variable geometry of common policies, and gradual accession for some States as appropriate. We would not then have been faced with the impossible equation of balancing a monolithic organisation with diversity; we would not now be forced to leave Bulgaria and Romania shamefully by the wayside.
Perhaps, however, this model will once again prove appropriate. We should ask the Convention chaired by Mr Giscard d'Estaing to give it serious thought."@en1
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