Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2011-03-23-Speech-3-241-000"
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"en.20110323.21.3-241-000"2
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"Mr President, I wish to thank the rapporteur, Mr Schwab, and the shadow socialist rapporteur, Mrs Gebhardt. I wish to thank them and, at the same time, to praise them, because they demonstrated a great deal of persistence and a great deal of patience in bringing us to the point that we have reached in the debate today and which, I think, provides a very good working basis for Commissioner Reding, whose words, in my opinion, give us reason to be optimistic.
I personally consider than minimum harmonisation is a very good and, at the same time, a very pragmatic working basis. I come from a State, Greece, which has achieved a very high level of protection for consumer rights. As you will understand, I would not want this high level of consumer protection to be compromised.
I admit that I was very concerned when Mr Schwab spoke – and this was the first I had heard of it – of maximum harmonisation. I remembered something I had read in a magazine: someone tried to make the most beautiful woman using an actress’s eyes, a singer’s nose and another actress’s mouth. The result was monstrous.
I make this analogy in order to demonstrate that we can start with the best intentions and fail to achieve the desired result. That is why I consider that minimum harmonisation is the right working basis."@en1
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