“The absolute priority”

Robert Schuman
© The European Commission

Jean Monnet
© The European Commission
The most recent enlargement of the European Union is another step towards the reunification of the continent. But the task is not yet complete. The situation in some of the successor countries to the former Yugoslavia has not yet been stabilised, which justifies the continued activity of the International Criminal Tribunal (ICTY) and a major EU presence on the ground (Kosovo, Bosnia) to prepare for their integration.

European Parliament building in Strasbourg,
named after the European feminist Louise Weiss.
Sessions are held here for MEPs, a total of 785 since 2007.
To adapt the institutions to this enlargement, France and Germany gained the agreement of their partners in June 2007 to obtain a new treaty, modifying the existing treaties, which will be ratified in 2008. It will establish a stable presidency for the European Council and a High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy; it will extend the use of qualified majority voting and increase the powers of the European Parliament; it will also involve national parliaments more closely in Union decisions.
Once the institutional questions are settled, there arises the issue of the future of the European project for 2020-2030. France wishes a consultation to be launched into the future of the Union and its place in the world. France considers that the Union must more effectively respond to the concerns of its citizens, particularly in the fields of immigration, the environment and security. That is the prime challenge for the French Presidency in the second half of 2008.
Source : France 2008, La Documentation française



