Skip to main content
ad info

 
Middle East Asia-pacific Africa Europe Americas
CNN.com    world > europe world map
CNN.com EUROPE:
Editions|myCNN|Video|Audio|News Brief|Free E-mail|Feedback  
 

Search


Search tips
WORLD
TOP STORIES

India tends to quake survivors

Sharon: Peace talks election ploy

Anti-Mugabe newspaper bombed

UAE quiz attempted hijacker

Garcia in Peru re-election bid

Thousands in Ethiopian protest rally

(MORE)

TOP STORIES

India tends to quake survivors

Arafat blasts Israel at Davos

Yugoslavia seeks U.N. help on rebels

Anti-Mugabe newspaper bombed

(MORE)

 MARKETS    1613 GMT, 12/28
5217.4
-25.00
5160.1
+42.97
4624.58
+33.42

 
SPORTS

(MORE)

 All Scoreboards
WEATHER
European Forecast

 Or choose another Region:
EUROPE

TECHNOLOGY

ENTERTAINMENT

  IN OTHER NEWS

U.S.

HEALTH

TRAVEL



(MORE HEADLINES)
*
EDITIONS:
CNN.com U.S.:

LOCAL LANGUAGES:


MULTIMEDIA:

CNN WEB SITES:

CNN NETWORKS:
CNN International

TIME INC. SITES:

SITE INFO:

WEB SERVICES:

Exhausted leaders finally strike deal: The EU is ready for enlargement


In this story:

Some threatened walkouts

Summit came close to breakdown

Germans did not press claim for more votes

Treaty may yet face more problems

RELATED STORIES, SITES icon



NICE, France -- Dog-tired Nice summit leaders who had been up most of the night finally agreed a deal at 4:30 a.m. on Monday to refashion EU institutions to prepare for the bloc's expansion to 28 or more countries.

A weary President Jacques Chirac of France, the summit host, said that it was a "decent result." Because of the complexity of the problems involved, he claimed, Nice would go down in history as one of the "great summits."

  ALSO
 

 REFERENCE
EU Summit - Nice, France
  •  Analysis: Wider lessons
  •  What was decided
  •  Jargon glossary
  •  New vote weights
  •  EU enlargement map
  •  History of EU growth
  •  What kind of Europe?
  •  France's EU presidency
  •  In-depth: Changing face of Europe
 

 Key comments from the Nice summit:

"The negotiations are like a house of cards. Twitching away any parts can bring the whole thing down." - French European Affairs Minister Pierre Moscovici

"I think we are going to scale down our ambitions and then in the great European tradition call it a success." - Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg Prime Minister

"We are not bluffing." - British Foreign Affairs Minister Robin Cook on refusing to end the UK veto on tax matters

"If it's a fundamental principle, the length of the grass doesn't matter." - UK Prime Minister's spokesman Alastair Campbell on why he wouldn't accept changes on the tax veto in five years time

"Unless we were goldfish swimming about in a bowl in front of you, I don't know how we could be more transparent." - French Foreign Affairs Minister Hubert Vedrine on Press complaints of secrecy

"We can't reveal the secrets of the confessional." - Moscovici on why they wouldn't say what had been negotiated between French President Jacques Chirac and the 14 other leaders in bilateral meetings

"We have to come away from Nice able to look the candidates for membership in the eye" - Chris Patten, EU Foreign Affairs Commissioner


Goran Persson, Prime Minister of Sweden, said: "It is a big day for Europe. We are ready for enlargement."

Battles involving the smaller countries, who feared their voting clout in the EU was being diminished in favour of big countries like France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom, had kept the 15 leaders struggling through the early hours.

Some threatened walkouts

Some countries at times threatened to walk out of the talks and wreck the summit as they rejected a constant stream of new negotiating proposals from the French, the summit hosts as current holders of the rotating EU presidency.

The last country to hold out was Belgium, which had been objecting to the Netherlands, with five million more inhabitants, having one vote more. But several of the smaller countries including Portugal, Finland, Austria and Sweden had battled long and hard on the plans to re-weight national votes in the Council of Ministers.

In the end the leaders settled for the Big Four countries, France, Germany, Italy and the UK having 29 weighted votes each. Spain got 27 and the Netherlands 13.

Greece, Belgium and Portugal were allotted 12 each, with 10 apiece for Sweden and Austria. Denmark, Finland and Ireland were on 7, with Luxembourg on 4.

Going into the fifth day made the Nice summit the longest ever session attended by EU leaders. The meeting was tasked with solving the problems which EU leaders failed to crack in Amsterdam three years ago.

Summit came close to breakdown

To avoid a paralysis of decision-making when the EU expands the leaders needed to agree plans to adjust national voting weights, trim the size of the European Commission , the EU executive, and to scrap national vetoes in many more policy areas.

At times it came close to breakdown as countries ignored appeals to "think European" and battled to protect their national interests. Diplomats reckoned the summit had in the end achieved about 60 per cent of its the ambitious aims but the Commission reforms will be delayed several years.

More than 30 policy areas will move to qualified majority voting with an end to national vetoes. But those vetoes will still apply in some key areas including tax and social security, on which the United Kingdom Prime Minister Tony Blair refused to budge.

The European Parliament has been expanded way beyond the target ceiling as affronted nations were given consolation prizes or more members.

Germans did not press claim for more votes

The European Commission, the EU executive, will from 2005 consist of one commissioner from each member state.(There could be 21 EU countries by then and currently France, Germany, Italy, the UK and Spain have two).

But only when the Union reaches 27 states will there be a slimming down, with countries from then on rotating in their membership.

The Commission President will though have new "hire and fire" powers to conduct reshuffles among his team of national commissioners.

On the weighting of national votes, Germany agreed not to press a claim for for extra votes to reflect its 20 million larger population but wins greater representation in the European Parliament.

Treaty may yet face more problems

Germany and Italy also have their way in the setting up of a new Inter Governmental Conference in 2004 to define relations between the EU institutions and the member states.

The negotiations were fractious. Small countries complained of bullying and partiality from the French Presidency and President Chirac clashed sharply with Commission President Romano Prodi.

Even though a deal has finally been agreed in Nice the treaty may yet face further problems. Elmar Brok, the European Parliament monitor on EU reform, said that it would be very difficult to get the Parliament to agree the treaty as it must for it to become law.



RELATED STORIES:
Agreement at marathon summit paves way for EU expansion
December 10, 2000
Deadlocked EU talks force extension of Nice summit
December 9, 2000
EU aspirants: View from the street
December 8, 2000
Protesters target EU summit
December 6, 2000

RELATED SITE:
European Union

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.

 Search   

Back to the top  © 2001 Cable News Network. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.