Before even the final official results were released today,
the Irish Justice Minister Dermot Ahern accepted that the electorate of the Irish Republic
had rejected the European Union reform treaty (the Lisbon Treaty as it is
known). The "No" vote had won in the great majority of Ireland’s 43
electoral constituencies. The pro-treaty "Yes" vote was ahead in only a small
number, and none of these were outside the capital, Dublin.
This comes as a slap in the face for the Irish government and the new Prime
Minister, Brian Cowen. It also puts a spanner in the works for the top
officials of the European Union and their clearly anti-working class policies
and outlook.
So far, fourteen member states have ratified the Lisbon Treaty in their
national parliaments and if the "yes" vote had got a majority in Ireland it
would have been due to come into force on January 1 of next year. The result
now places huge doubts over the future of the Treaty that was designed to
achieve greater European integration. How concerned the bourgeois of Europe and beyond are is seen by the fact as soon as the
first report of the "No" victory started coming out the Euro fell to its lowest
level against the dollar in over a month.
What is amazing is that the three main political parties in the Republic all
campaigned strongly for a "Yes" vote. Farmers groups, big business and many
trade unions also backed the "Yes" campaign. Even the Pope intervened, calling
on the Irish electorate to back the "Yes"!
What this vote reflects is a changing mood in Ireland. Until not so long ago the
Republic was described as a Celtic Tiger, i.e. a newly developing boom economy.
Those days are long gone. (See Gerry Ruddy’s article, Ireland: It’s the Economy!) House prices have fallen, according to some
figures, by 8.9% over the past year, while mortgage rates have been rising.
Between 2002 and 2006 the economy was growing by an average 5% annually. The
latest forecasts are that early this year this had slown to around 2%, but it
could slow further as the Irish economy is heavily dependent on exports both to
the USA
and the rest of the European Union. The latest figure for inflation is that it
now stands at 4.3% and is rising.
Ireland initially attracted investment on the basis
that it provided relatively cheap labour while being a part of the EU from
where multinational corporations could easily export to the rest of Europe. Foreign investment was attracted also by
loosening corporate taxation. In fact Ireland has had some of the lowest
taxes on corporations in the EU.
Recently, however, the French
government announced that its incoming EU president would seek a harmonising of
business taxes. What this means is that as the world economy slides into
recession every capitalist power is looking at its own interests and cannot
tolerate any "unfair" trading conditions. This contradiction is already being
felt within the European Union itself, where each country is looking to its own
interests.
The Irish government regarded the
French announcement as "untimely", by which it meant that such statements
should have waited until after the June 12 referendum. Other officials in the
EU had in fact behaved differently. In recent months there has been very little
talk about concrete policy-making. In March the EU held its latest summit.
Commentators made the point that it was their least eventful meeting in recent
times, as hardly any concrete proposals were actually discussed. Why raise real
proposals when people are about to vote? Let them vote first, and then
tell them what you have in store for them!
However, on June 19 the next summit
will be held. At that gathering all the issues that had been kept on hold will
be on the table, from climate change to biofeuls, from rising food prices to
CO2 emissions and also on the controversial issue of the role of the new
European president envisaged by the Lisbon Treaty. There are also plans
to increase the EU’s defence budget as well as proposals to review how they
allocate the budget. The overall defence spending is expected to reach 134
billion euros ($211billion) next year. Ireland is a "neutral" country and
spending on defence was one of the issues that contributed to the defeat in the
2001 referendum on the Nice Treaty. There are also plans to cut subsidies on
agriculture, something which would affect Ireland seriously. Again these
plans were put on the back burner as they waited for the Irish referendum to
take place.
It seems a world summit may be called in Geneva this month, where there will be a lot
of talk about cutting agricultural subsidies. EU officials pushed for such a
summit to be postponed until after the Irish referendum. Again, why
upset Irish farmers by announcing what you are really going to do!
We are told that the EU promotes democracy. One of the excuses that are used
by some EU member countries to reject Turkish membership is that Turkey is not
fully democratic, at least according to bourgeois democratic standards. But
this is a bit like the pot calling the kettle black. Of the 27 member
countries, Ireland
was the only country to have organised a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty, and
that is because its Constitution requires it to do so. All the others have
avoided referendums like the plague. Maybe in Ireland one day they will call a
referendum to change the Irish constitution!
In 2005 both the French and Dutch electorate rejected a previous attempt at
establishing a European constitution. The present Lisbon Treaty is in fact a
rehashed version of the previously rejected draft constitution. In Ireland the
electorate already voted down the Nice treaty in 2001, but then the government
called a second referendum in October 2002 in which they managed to get a "Yes"
vote. The bourgeois just keep on organising elections until they get the
desired result.
Some cynics have stated that this vote doesn’t count, as they’ll simply call
another referendum in a few months’ time. This time, however, it seems the
Irish government would find it difficult to justify a re-run. As The Economist
reported (May 8th 2008):
"Ruairi Quinn, a former finance minister, heads the main pro-Lisbon
campaign. He says that it would be ‘virtually impossible’ to make the Irish
vote again on a tweaked version of the treaty. Lisbon is already ‘the inside-out version of
the constitutional treaty.’ Or, as Eurocrats put it: Lisbon is already Plan B."
Thus a small nation of 4.2 million (with an electorate of just over 3
million) may decide the fate of the latest attempt to achieve some kind of
EU-wide Constitution. Had the citizens of other EU countries (almost 500
million of them) been allowed to vote most likely many of them would have voted
in a similar manner.
What the vote reveals is an instinctive mistrust of the European Union
bureaucracy and what it stands for. We should not forget that the European
Union has been used as an excuse, in all countries that make it up, for
draconian anti-working policies over a period of decades. Let us not forget the
Maastricht Treaty with its stringent conditions on public spending, which were
used to justify cuts in pensions, social welfare and so on. Everything was done
with the excuse that "this is necessary if we want to be a part of Europe".
So long as the economy was booming workers could, to a degree, tolerate
these attacks on their living standards. After all, there were jobs. Yes, jobs
with worsening conditions and longer hours, but there was an outlet. Now
unemployment is growing, inflation is on the up and workers across Europe are feeling the pinch. And Ireland is no
exception.
In this vote we see a rejection of the policies of the present three-party
Irish coalition government. Before the previous Prime Minister, Bertie Ahern,
resigned there was concern that the electorate might use the referendum to cast
a vote of no confidence in him. With Ahern gone they though this problem had
been removed. They ignore the fact that working people in Ireland can see
that the new Prime Minister stands for the same things. It is against policy
that the electorate has voted, not individuals.
The vote was also a rejection of the big business interests that lie behind
the European Union. It is also an indication that things are going to be
different in Ireland
from now on. The level of strikes has gone up, with some very militant
struggles in the recent period. The Trade Union leaders campaigned for a "Yes"
vote but failed to convince the workers. In the coming period they will also
fail to hold back the tide of militancy.
This was not just one little referendum in a small corner of Europe. It is the tip of an iceberg of a much bigger
picture, one of growing instability across Europe and one of growing
polarisation between the classes, where the workers and the capitalists are
moving in opposite directions.
See also:
- Ireland: It’s the Economy! by Gerry Ruddy (June 13, 2008)
- Ireland: ten years on from the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement by Gerry Ruddy (April 30, 2008)
- Ireland – An Overview 1967-2007 by Gerry Ruddy (August 10, 2007)
- Ireland: Republicanism and Revolution by Alan Woods
See also on the 2005 consitution:
- European Union faces deepest crisis in its history by Maarten Vanheuverswyn (June 20, 2005)
- Dutch people say “no” in EU referendum by Erik De Bruyn (June 3, 2005)
- The referendum in France: Workers say "no" to capitalist Europe by Greg Oxley (May 30, 2005)
- No to the European Constitution! Yes to a Socialist Europe! by Jérôme Métellus (January 20, 2005)