Home

Brown in Lisbon to 'thrash out a deal'

Brown will be praying for good fortune in Lisbon. Brown will be praying for good fortune in Lisbon.

Thursday, 18, Oct 2007 12:00

Prime minister Gordon Brown will be in Lisbon today to "thrash out a deal" on the controversial EU reform treaty.

It is hoped the meeting will see EU leaders agree on the final text for the amending treaty, which was originally agreed upon at a summit in Brussels in June 2007.

A spokesperson for the prime minister said yesterday: "Mr Brown has made it clear that he will veto any treaty document that does not contain the UK's 'red lines' - a series of opt-outs and protocols allowing the UK to maintain control of key areas such as policing, security and social policy."

In July, Mr Brown explained the red lines were an opt-out on the Charter of Rights and an opt-in for the justice and home affairs sections of the amending treaty.

He also said the treaty should maintain the intergovernmental basis for European foreign affairs and security work, that social security provisions have an emergency break (to limit costs) and national security issues should be a matter for member states.

However, calls for a referendum on the treaty were reiterated today by the Conservatives, as shadow foreign secretary William Hague said the prime minister "cannot walk away" from calling a poll on the treaty.

Mr Hague said: "Gordon Brown cannot walk away from his manifesto promise of a referendum. He has absolutely no democratic mandate to agree to this treaty. It is not just his decision – the final say must belong to the British people.

"Every argument Gordon Brown has put forward against a referendum has been shredded. He is making a major miscalculation if he thinks he can treat the British people as fools. They can see through his cynical spin about red lines. As it is, he can't even convince his own side."

The debate over the impact of the EU reform treaty continued this morning, with a London barrister specialising in European law arguing on BBC Radio 4's Today programme the red lines may be at risk if amendments were made in future.

Martin Howe QC warned the treaty had widespread implications for the future power of the EU and EC

Mr Howe said: "[The treaty] actually abolishes the current European Community and the European Union and it creates a new body which succeeds to the power of the old, with extra powers.

"This new body will have complete powers in the area of justice and home affairs, which at the moment are conducted inter-governmentally.

"The first problem is that if the United Kingdom decides to opt-in to a measure that is under discussion, it looks as if it cannot then withdraw its opt-in to that."

However, the prime minister has maintained the treaty does not involve fundamental change that would require a referendum, and the foreign secretary David Miliband told the European Scrutiny Committee this week that the "the charter does not create new rights, it records existing rights".


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

Our new look

We hope you find our new design easier on the eye and to navigate than the old design. Read more about the new site

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Opinion Formers

BNTL Freeway

BNTL is an organisation seeking to promote healthy drug-free life styles and to inform on the effect of alcohol and drugs on individuals and communities.

Opinion Former Comment

Chamber of Shipping: Extension of UK agreement on “high risk” zone in the Gulf of Aden

The United Kingdom Warlike Operations Area Committee (WOAC) has agreed that the “high risk” zone agreement in respect of the Gulf of Aden should continue in force.

Related News

Huhne announces his intention to run

Chris Huhne is the first candidate to announce his intention to run for the Liberal Democrat leadership, following the resignation of Menzies Campbell on Monday night.

Chris Huhne launches his candidacy, saying he will fight to hand power back to individuals.

Latest Headlines

Welfare reform opposition reaches fever pitch

Opposition to the government's welfare reform programme is reaching fever pitch today, with critics mobilising against the plans before the Queen's Speech.

Welfare reform opposition reaches fever pitch

Legislation

Citizenship and immigration (draft) bill

The bill takes forward the recommendations of the Goldsmith review.

Issue briefs

Written constitution

What is a written constitution? A written constitution is a formal document defining the nature of the constitutional settlement, the rules that govern the political system and the rights of citizens and governments in a codified form.

Speakers Corner