Hungarian MEP: EP plan to change treaties would ‘destroy’ members’ sovereignty
Adoption of a recent proposal by the European Parliament’s constitutional committee (AFCO) aimed at amending the European Union’s treaties would “destroy the sovereignty of member states”, Kinga Gál, head of the EP group of Hungary’s ruling Fidesz, said in a statement on Thursday.
The proposal would not strengthen but weaken the EU at a time when “it would be crucial to make the EU more efficient in tackling hardships caused by war, terrorism, and migration”, she insisted.
The proposal is a “serious attack against nation states”, Gál said. The EU should seek common responses to shared challenges rather than “remove members’ sovereignty and steer European integration towards centralisation,” the MEP said.
Under the proposal, the EP would “seriously interfere with national competencies, curbing their sovereignty through establishing transnational lists, European constituencies, and an European election authority,” Gál said. The proposal is also aimed at removing the unanimous vote in the European Council, she added. “We firmly reject those proposals,” Gál said.
Rather than “humiliating member states and violating the principle of a loyal cooperation Europe’s strength, competitiveness and its due place in the world” should be regained, the MEP said.
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Shocking: Forint in free fall, historic lows against the American dollar, GBP, CHF, PLN!
Snow covered Hungary this morning! – PHOTOS, VIDEOS
Grandiose railway development plan announced concerning the Great Hungarian Plains
Hope for a little boy battling the incurable disorder DMD: Dusán’s family seeks support for experimental treatment
Tourists and immigrants revitalise Budapest’s iconic region as 1/5th of shops change
Gaming mouse pads: a crucial accessory for precision and comfort
1 Comment
Nobody is forcing you to be a member of a club and be bound by their pesky rules. You can always leave? Perhaps our Politicians should re-read the Schengen Treaty, Maastricht Treaty, Amsterdam Treaty, Nice Treaty and Lisbon Treaty. It is illuminating.
Re being ever so Sovereign: ask the Brits, unchained! Things going swimmingly since they left?