The European Union (EU) was created by the Maastricht Treaty on November 1st 1993. It is a political and economic union between European countries which makes its own policies concerning the members’ economies, societies, laws and to some extent security. To some, the EU is an overblown bureaucracy which drains money and compromises the power of sovereign states. For others, the EU is the best way to meet challenges smaller nations might struggle with – such as economic growth or negotiations with larger nations – and worth surrendering some sovereignty to achieve.
Despite many years of integration,
opposition remains strong, but states have acted pragmatically, at
times, to create the union.The European Union was not created in one go by the Maastricht Treaty but was the result of gradual integration since 1945,
an evolution when one level of union has been seen to work, giving
confidence and impetus for a next level. In this way, the EU can be said
to have been formed by the demands of its member nationsThe end of the Second World War
left Europe divided between the communist, Soviet-dominated, eastern
bloc, and the largely democratic western nations. There were fears over
what direction a rebuilt Germany would take, and in the west thoughts of
a federal European union re-emerged, hoping to bind Germany into
pan-European democratic institutions to the extent that it, and any
other allied European nation, both wouldn’t be able to start a new war,
and would resist the expansion of the communist east.Europe’s post-war nations
weren’t just after peace, they were also after solutions to economic
problems, such as raw materials being in one country and the industry to
process them in another. War had left Europe exhausted, with industry
greatly damaged and their defenses possibly unable to stop Russia.In order to solve this six neighboring
countries agreed in The Treaty of Paris to form an area of free trade
for several key resources including coal, steel and iron ore,
chosen for their key role in industry and the military. This body was
called the European Coal and Steel Community and involved Germany,
Belgium, France, Holland, Italy, and Luxembourg. It began on 23 July
1952 and ended on 23 July 2002, replaced by further unions.France
had suggested the ECSC to control Germany and to rebuild industry;
Germany wanted to become an equal player in Europe again and rebuild its
reputation, as did Italy; the Benelux nations hoped for growth and
didn’t want to be left behind. France, afraid Britain would try and
quash the plan, didn’t include them in initial discussions, and Britain
stayed out, wary of giving up any power and content with the economic
potential offered by the Commonwealth .Also
created, in order to manage the ECSC, were a group of ‘supranational’
(a level of governance above the nation state) bodies: a Council of
Ministers, a Common Assembly, a High Authority and a Court of Justice,
all to legislate, develop ideas and resolve disputes. It was from these
key bodies that the later EU would emerge, a process which some of the
ECSC’s creators had envisaged, as they explicitly stated the creation of
a federal Europe as their long term goal.A false step was
taken in the mid-1950s when a proposed ‘European Defence Community’
among the ESSC’s six states was drawn up: it called for a joint army to
be controlled by a new supranational Defence Minister. The initiative
had to be rejected after France’s National Assembly voted it down.However,
the success of the ECSC led to the member nations signing two new
treaties in 1957, both called the treaty of Rome. This created two new
bodies: the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) which was to pool
knowledge of atomic energy, and the European Economic Community. This
EEC created a common market among the member nations, with no tariffs
or impediments to the flow of labor and goods. It aimed to continue
economic growth and avoid the protectionist policies of pre-war Europe.By 1970 trade within the common market
had increased fivefold. There was also the Common Agricultural Policy
(CAP) to boost member’s farming and an end to monopolies. The CAP, which
wasn’t based on a common market, but on government subsidies to support
local farmers, has become one of most controversial EU policies.Like
the ECSC, the EEC created several supranational bodies: a Council of
Ministers to make decisions, a Common Assembly (called the European
Parliament from 1962) to give advice, a court which could overrule
member states and a commission to put the policy into effect. The 1965
Brussels Treaty merged the commissions of the EEC, ECSC and Euratom to
create a joint and permanent civil service.In
the late 1960s, a power struggle established the need for unanimous
agreements on key decisions, effectively giving member states a veto. It
has been argued that this slowed union by two decades. Over the 70s and
80s, the membership of the EEC expanded, allowing Denmark, Ireland and
the UK in 1973, Greece in 1981 and Portugal and Spain in 1986. Britain
had changed its mind after seeing its economic growth lag behind the
EEC, and after America indicated it would support Britain as a rival
voice in the EEC to France and Germany. However, Britain’s first two
applications were vetoed by France. Ireland and Denmark, heavily
dependent upon the UK economy, followed it in to keep pace and attempt
to develop themselves away from Britain. Norway applied at the same
time, but withdrew after a referendum said ‘no’. Meanwhile, member
states began to see European integration as a way to balance the
influence of both Russia and now America.On June
23rd, 2016 the United Kingdom voted to leave the EU, and become the
first member state to use a previously untouched release clause.As of the end of the middle of 2016, there are twenty-seven countries in the European Union.
Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden.Dates of Joining
1957: Belgium, France, West Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands
1973: Denmark, Ireland, United Kingdom
1981: Greece
1986: Portugal, Spain
1995: Austria, Finland, and Sweden
2004: Czech Republic, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovak Republic, Slovenia.
2007: Bulgaria, Romania
2013: Croatia
Dates of Leaving
2016: United Kingdom
The development of the union was slowed in the 70s, frustrating federalists who sometimes refer to it as a ‘dark age’ in development. Attempts to create an Economic and Monetary Union were drawn up, but derailed by the declining international economy. However, impetus had returned by the 80s, partly as the result of fears that Reagan’s US was both moving away from Europe, and preventing EEC members from forming links with Communist countries in an attempt to slowly bring them back into the democratic fold.
The remit of the EEC thus developed, and foreign policy became an area for consultation and group action. Other funds and bodies were created including the European Monetary System in 1979 and methods of giving grants to underdeveloped areas. In 1987 the Single European Act (SEA) evolved the EEC’s role a step further. Now European Parliament members were given the ability to vote on legislation and issues, with the number of votes dependant on each member’s population. Bottlenecks in the common market were also targeted.On February 7th 1992 European integration moved a step further when the Treaty on European Union, (better known as the Maastricht Treaty) was signed. This came into force on 1 November 1993 and changed the EEC into the newly named European Union. The change was to broaden the work of the supranational bodies, based around three “pillars”: the European Communities, giving more power to the European parliament; a common security/foreign policy; involvement in the domestic affairs of member nations on “justice and home affairs”. In practice, and to pass the mandatory unanimous vote, these were all compromises away from the unified ideal. The EU also set out guidelines for the creation of a single currency, although when this was introduced in 1999 three nations opted out and one failed to meet the required targets.
Currency and economic reform were now being driven largely by the fact that the US and Japanese economies were growing faster than Europe’s, especially after expanding quickly into the new developments in electronics. There were objections from poorer member nations, who wanted more money from the union, and from larger nations, who wanted to pay less; a compromise was eventually reached. One planned side effect of the closer economic union and the creation of a single market was the greater co-operation in social policy which would have to occur as a result.
The Maastricht Treaty also formalised the concept of EU citizenship, allowing any individual from an EU nation to run for office in their government, which was also changed to promote decision making. Perhaps most controversially, the EU’s entrance into domestic and legal matters – which produced the Human Rights Act and over-rode many member states’ local laws – produced rules relating to free movement within the EU’s borders, leading to paranoia about mass migrations from poorer EU nations to richer ones. More areas of members’ government were affected than ever before, and the bureaucracy expanded. Although the Maastricht Treaty came into effect, it faced heavy opposition, and was only narrowly passed in France and forced a vote in the UK.
Further Enlargements
In 1995 Sweden, Austria and Finland joined, while in 1999 the Treaty of Amsterdam came into effect, bringing employment, working and living conditions and other social and legal issues into the EU remit. However, by then Europe was facing great changes caused by the collapse of the Soviet dominated east and the emergence of economically weakened, but newly democratic, eastern nations. The 2001 Treaty of Nice tried to prepare for this, and a number of states entered into special agreements where they initially joined parts of the EU system, such as the free trade zones. There were discussions over streamlining voting and modifying the CAP, especially as Eastern Europe had a much higher percentage of the population involved in agriculture than the west, but in the end financial worries prevented change,While there was opposition, ten nations joined in 2004 (Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia) and two in 2007 (Bulgaria and Romania). By this time there had been agreements to apply majority voting to more issues, but national vetoes remained on tax, security and other issues. Worries over international crime – where criminals had formed effective cross border organisations – were now acting as an impetus.The EU’s level of integration is already unmatched in the modern world, but there are people who want to move it closer still (and many people who don’t). The Convention on the Future of Europe was created in 2002 to create an EU constitution, and the draft, signed in 2004, aimed to install a permanent EU president, a Foreign Minister and a Charter of Rights. It would have also allowed the EU to make many more decisions instead of the heads’ of the individual nation states. It was rejected in 2005, when France and the Netherlands failed to ratify it (and before other EU members got the chance to vote).
An amended work, the Lisbon Treaty, still aimed to install an EU president and Foreign Minister, as well as expand the EU’s legal powers, but only through developing the existing bodies. This was signed in 2007 but was initially rejected, this time by voters in Ireland. However, in 2009 Irish voters passed the treaty, many concerned of the economic effects of saying no. By the winter 2009 all 27 EU states had ratified the process, and it took effect. Herman Van Rompuy, at that time Belgium Prime Minister, became the first ‘President of the European Council’, and Britain’s Baroness Ashton ‘High Representative for Foreign Affairs’.
There remained many political opposition parties – and politicians in the ruling parties – which opposed the treaty, and the EU remains a divisive issue in the politics of all member nations.
About the European Union:
The European Union is an international organization made up of 28 European countries.
The European Union is an international organization made up of 28 European countries.
It governs common economic, social and security policies of its member states.
According to the EU website,
the objectives of the EU are to establish European citizenship, ensure
freedom, justice and security, promote economic and social progress, and
assert Europe's role in the world.
Membership is open to any country with a democratic government, a good human rights record, and sound economic policies.
The member states delegate sovereignty to the EU institutions to represent the interests of the European Union as a whole.
Decisions and procedures stem from treaties ratified by the member states.
The capital of the European Union is Brussels, Belgium.
The
EU is run by five main bodies: European Parliament, Council of the
Union, European Commission, Court of Justice, and the Court of Auditors.
An estimated 510.1 million people lived within the European Union in 2016.
The United States is the EU's main trading partner.
The
Treaty of Lisbon amends the Treaty on European Union to explicitly
recognize for the first time the member states' right to withdraw from
the union. (Article 50, amended TEU)
- Any member state may decide to withdraw from the Union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.
- A member state which decides to withdraw shall notify the European Council of its intention. In the light of the guidelines provided by the European Council, the Union shall negotiate and conclude an agreement with that State, setting out the arrangements for its withdrawal, taking account of the framework for its future relationship with the Union.
- Any member state may decide to withdraw from the Union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.
- A member state which decides to withdraw shall notify the European Council of its intention. In the light of the guidelines provided by the European Council, the Union shall negotiate and conclude an agreement with that State, setting out the arrangements for its withdrawal, taking account of the framework for its future relationship with the Union.
Timeline:
1957 - The European Economic Community (EEC) is created. The member countries are Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and West Germany. The group aims to remove trade barriers and form a common market.
1957 - The European Economic Community (EEC) is created. The member countries are Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and West Germany. The group aims to remove trade barriers and form a common market.
1973 - Denmark, Ireland, and the United Kingdom become member countries.
1981 - Greece becomes a member.
1985 - Spain and Portugal become members.
June 14, 1985 - Five of the 10 member states sign the Schengen Agreement,
which eventually opens borders of agreeing member states, doing away
with border controls. As of 2016, 26 countries belong to the Schengen
Area.
February 7, 1992 - The Treaty on the European Union is signed in Maastricht (Netherlands) by leaders of the member states.
November 1, 1993 - The Maastricht Treaty enters into force.
1993 - The
EC members at the time (Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Greece, Spain,
UK, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Denmark, Ireland, and Portugal) extend
their cooperation into the areas of justice and home affairs and a
common foreign and security policy.
January 1, 1995 - Austria, Finland, and Sweden join the EU.
April 30, 2004 - A
ceremony is held in Dublin, Ireland, marking the expansion of the EU
from 15 to 25 members. The new members are Poland, the Czech Republic,
Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, and
Slovenia.
June 2004 - The member countries approve the text of the EU Constitution. It is signed by all the members in October 2004.
May 29, 2005 - The
people of France (and its territories) vote against the European Union
constitution in a referendum. (No = 54.87%/Yes = 45.13%)
June 1, 2005 - The
Netherlands votes against the constitution in a referendum. All 27
members of the EU must pass the constitution for it to take effect.
Either a national parliament can approve it or in some countries, the
citizens vote on a referendum.
June 23, 2007 - European
Union leaders in Brussels agree on an outline of a treaty that would
replace the EU constitution rejected by French and Dutch voters two
years ago.
June 19, 2008 - The European Union decides to lift diplomatic sanctions imposed on Cuba.
November 19, 2009 - Herman
Van Rompuy, the Belgian Prime Minister, becomes the first president of
the European Council under the Treaty of Lisbon. Catherine Ashton of the
UK will be the first foreign minister.
December 1, 2009 -
The Treaty of Lisbon comes into force, having been ratified by all
European Union member states. It amends the Maastricht Treaty of 1992
and the Rome Treaty of 1957.
October 12, 2012 - Is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for contributing to the advancement of peace, democracy and human rights in Europe.
June 25, 2013 - The European Union agrees to a new round of membership negotiations with Turkey.
July 1, 2013 - Croatia joins the EU as its 28th member.
April 1, 2014 - The European Union launches military operations to restore stability to the Central African Republic.
March 2015 - Iceland withdraws its request to be considered as a candidate for membership.
March 18, 2016 - The EU and Turkey reach an agreement on how to deal with a flood of Syrian refugees.
The agreement stipulates that all migrants entering Greece from Turkey
will be returned to Turkey. For every Syrian returned to Turkey from
Greece, another Syrian will be resettled to the EU.
June 23, 2016 - The UK votes to leave the European Union. It will take at least two years to sort out the exit.
March 16, 2017 - Britain's exit from the European Union moves another step closer after the legislation enabling the country's departure is given royal assent by Queen Elizabeth II. The Queen's signature means that British Prime Minister Theresa May
is now able to move forward and trigger Article 50, allowing formal
talks to begin between Downing Street and the EU's 27 member states on
the terms of the divorce, nicknamed "Brexit."
Presidencies of the Council of the European Union until 2020:
Malta: January-June 2017
United Kingdom: July-December 2017
Estonia: January-June 2018
Bulgaria: July-December 2018
Austria: January-June 2019
Romania: July-December 2019
Finland: January-June 2020
Malta: January-June 2017
United Kingdom: July-December 2017
Estonia: January-June 2018
Bulgaria: July-December 2018
Austria: January-June 2019
Romania: July-December 2019
Finland: January-June 2020
Current Members:
(Founding members in bold)
Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Netherlands
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
United Kingdom - voted to leave June 24, 2016.
(Founding members in bold)
Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Netherlands
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
United Kingdom - voted to leave June 24, 2016.
Candidate Countries:
Albania
Macedonia
Montenegro
Serbia
Turkey
Albania
Macedonia
Montenegro
Serbia
Turkey
Applicant Countries:
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Kosovo
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Kosovo
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