Tag: hungary referendu

  • The EU, between Brexit and refugee quotas

    The EU, between Brexit and refugee quotas

    Having become unavoidable after this summer’s
    referendum, when Britons decided to leave the European Union, the split between
    London and Brussels has already entered the procedural stage. British Prime
    Minister Theresa May has confirmed she plans to start the process of
    Britain’s withdrawal from the Union in six-months’ time that is in the spring
    of 2017. Theresa May has also said that Britain will do its best to open a new
    chapter in its relationship with Brussels as an independent, sovereign UK.
    Almost immediately after the announcement, the European Commission put former
    French prime minister and EU commissioner Michel Barnier, seen by the Brexit
    supporters as a notorious anti-British, in charge of the EU’s Brexit
    negotiations. For the time being, in spite of the European Commission’s
    intention to make the split from Britain official as soon as possible, Barnier
    has to wait.




    For the UK
    to leave the EU it has to invoke an agreement called Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, forged in 2009, which gives the two sides two years to
    agree the terms of the split. According
    to commentators, the new partnership between Brussels and London might take
    Norway or Switzerland as a model, two countries that are in a de facto
    symbiosis with the EU, without being among its members.




    In the meantime, however, as a confirmation of what the
    media dubbed as one of the most severe crisis in the EU history, Hungarians
    overwhelmingly supported the government in a referendum on Sunday called to
    oppose any mandatory European Union quotas for accepting relocated asylum seekers.
    The good news for Brussels is, though, that the referendum failed due to low
    turnout. Nevertheless, 98 percent of those who cast valid ballots backed the
    government. The Radio Romania correspondent in Budapest quoted Hungarian PM
    Viktor Orban as saying that nine out of ten participants in the ballot voted in
    favour of Hungary’s right to take its own decisions in the matter. Although
    some political analysts see the low voter turnout as a lesson taught to their
    increasingly authoritarian prime minister, the Hungarians, Viktor Orban says,
    must be proud to be the first in Europe to have a say on the matter. Orban went
    on to say that in the following days he would present Parliament with a bill
    for the revision of the Constitution, in keeping with the Hungarian citizens’
    will, and that Brussels officials would have no choice but to take the
    referendum into account.