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2007 June

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  • ‘The Europe we want’: Citizens involved in the biggest-ever pan-European debate on Europe’s future deliver their report to EU policy-makers

On 10 may 2007, representatives of the 1,800 citizens who took part in the biggest-ever pan-European debate on the future of Europe handed over their report to EU policy-makers, and called on Europe’s politicians to take their views into account as they prepare to take key decisions on the Union’s future. The report, finalised just weeks before the June summit at which the EU’s leaders will discuss the fate of the Constitutional Treaty, summarises the outcome of the national consultations which have taken place in all 27 EU Member States since February this year. It reveals a surprising degree of consensus on the way forward in some areas, as well as significant differences in others. The report includes:

  1. Calls for the EU to play a stronger role in family and social welfare policies, with citizens suggesting that it should do far more to encourage Member States to pursue active family and social policies in a wide range of areas, including health care and employment, and ensure basic minimum standards;
  2. Widespread support for a pan-European response to immigration and integration issues, and calls for the EU to make greater use of external relations policy tools such as development aid to tackle the root causes of migration, as well as focusing on issues such as border controls;
  3. Calls for the EU to be given stronger powers to develop a common energy policy and ensure that Member States live up to the commitments they have made at European level.

The national consultations debated the three topics chosen by fellow citizens from across the EU who took part in an ‘Agenda Setting Event’ in Brussels last October, and identified the three issues which they regarded as most important. In each case, the citizens were selected at random, taking account of the diversity of the population.

The choice of topics and the outcome of the national consultations suggest that the EU’s citizens are looking to Europe to help provide answers to some of the most pressing problems they face in their everyday lives, and recognise the need for European responses to issues which cannot be dealt with at the national level alone. They also suggest that for citizens, it is the results which matter, not the arguments over who does what.

On 10 May, one citizen from each Member State met European Commission Vice-President Margot Wallström, European Parliament Vice-President Gérard Onesta and Jean-Luc Dehaene MEP, former Vice-Chairman of the Convention on the Future of Europe, to hand over their report.  

European Citizens Consultations