Who are the
“constructeurs” and exponents of Europeism
Europeism is a
product of the elites. It is a product of the people
who do not want to go to work from 8am until 5pm during the week and to
have a normal job. It is a product of the people who want to steer,
command, patronize, and “legislate” others. On the one hand, they
include politicians and to them related bureaucrats and on the other
hand, public intellectuals (operating in the public space and in the
media) who are attached to politicians. It is a large group of people in
the public sphere (representing the proverbial deadweight) that “very
pragmatically” maximizes the effects which result from its position and
that:
-
wants to ensure that its privileged status and with it connected
benefits will be long-lasting;
- wants to isolate itself from the reach of the
electorate, from
public opinion and from standard democratic mechanisms;
- wants – through the
complexity and untransparency of the
communitarian law decision-making procedures and through the distance
from the individual citizen – to detach itself from any consequences of
its decision-making and from the costs (in the broadest sense of the
word) they – by their activity – produce to the citizens of the
individual member countries.
What is Europeism?
In recent years, both in my country and abroad, I have often spoken
and written about Europeism, which I consider to be the dominant
ideology of the contemporary Europe. In spite of the existing
pluralism of opinions in many particular things, this ideology more or
less determines all the important current events in Europe through its
exceptional strength, its general acceptance and its dangerous
simplicity. It determines, predestinates and guides people, even though
many delude themselves that they are completely immune to the influence
of any ideology.
When writing the last three sentences, I was long searching for
suitable words which would clarify or specify this opinion of mine. I
wanted to suggest that even the nominal (i.e. formal) freedom of speech
which exists as a result of final dismantling the European totalitarian
regimes of the Communist and Nazi type is not sufficient for a truly
open dialogue about many issues, including the fundamental dialogue
about Europe.
I cannot make a statement which I would gladly make, that consistent
elimination of authoritarianism in the field of ideas has taken place.
The arrogant authoritativeness of Europeanism, which makes itself
felt every day, is one of the firmly rooted characteristics of the
contemporary stage of European development. And I consider this
arrogant authoritativeness, together with intolerant (and in many
respects freedom suppressing) political correctness, in their synergy as
a destructive combination.
Due to this, we are at an important crossroad, and this is not thanks
to the results of the last year referendums on the European
constitution in France and the Netherlands, as various people think or
try to suggest to us. These referendums were only the proverbial tip of
the iceberg of under the surface hidden, more general and profound
problems. Let’s try, through this text, to contribute to the
clarification of what these problems are about and why it is so.
We must search in the world of ideas. Even if it is the gradual
evolution, emerging from the natural spontaneity of activities of
millions of people, which in the long term dominates the human society
and not constructivism, a dictate of the chosen ones, “the ideas
matter”. Thoughts, ideas or ideologies – much more than momentary
interests – influence where we are going and particularly where we are
heading. That is why ideas, visions, and the ambitious projects based on
them, are so important. The course of events in Europe in the last
half-a-century is the best evidence of this. I pose myself a question
which ideas, which visions and which ideologies had caused this course
of events.
Europe of the last fifty years can not be described by dominance of
some – in encyclopedias well described, historically well-known – “isms”
because each one of them is partial and expresses only one component of
our multidimensional reality. The thinking in Europe is based on a
wider, more general and evidently heterogeneous doctrine. I call it
Europeism. It has a number of important features.
Europeism as a conglomerate of ideas
In my speeches and also in my written work, I repeatedly stress –
perhaps even more after my participation at a very inspiring conference
of the New Europe group in January 2001 in London (see A. Rankin, ‘What’s
Wrong with the European Ideal?’, New Europe, London, 2000, who
spoke of Europeism and regarded it as an ideology of a quasi-religious
type) – that Europeism is “a conglomerate of ideas”. It is a highly
heterogeneous structure, but its individual parts are not isolated. They
have their own, very important internal interrelationships (each
one of its parts influences and strengthens the others). I also say that
Europeism is a doctrine which hardly anyone advocates explicitly and,
due to this, it is insufficiently specified or systematically formulated
(de facto only some of its critics talk about it seriously). It is
unfortunately not possible to simply refer to any clearly defined
sources, from which it could be “read”. Rather paradoxically, it could
be said that the text of the European constitution was a certain
“summary” expression of Europeism but it is not a good source either,
because this text did its best to suppress many of the important
features and manifestations of Europeism, or to make them intentionally
unclear.
The critique of Europeanism, of course, exists in a number of
publications – systematically, for example, in the English monthly “The
European Journal”, with many unexpected ideas and provocatively in the
book by John Laughland “The Tainted Source; Undemocratic
Origins of the European Idea”, more easily in the book by a thorough
and attentive American observer of Europe John Gillingham “European
Integration 1950-2003: Superstate or New Market Economy?” (Cambridge
University Press, 2003), in the extensive and in many respects
revolutionary book of Christopher Booker and Richard North “The
Great Deception – The Secret History of the European Union”,
the Czech edition of which was published in May 2006, but even in
these publications there is no explicit polemic with Europeism as such.
The interrelationships between various components of Europeism have
been recently interestingly shown by John O’Sullivan in his article “The
EU’s Usual Crisis” (Quadrant, December 2005), although he does not
talk directly about Europeism either. He, however, notes the parallel
existence of three dimensions of Europeist thinking: political
economy, foreign policy and the concept of integration. He makes a
hypothesis that “those who favour the European socio-political model
will tend to support the ‘counterweight’ model of Europe in foreign
policy and supranational model of European integration” (pp 39), and he
tries to show us that there are no accidental connections between these
issues. For him these different ideas “cluster”, although he adds that
they are “tendencies, rather than absolutely firm relationships”
(ibid.).
This is approximately how I would describe it as well. I also see
internal interconnections in this “conglomerate of ideas” and the
enormous strength of their synergy which stems from that. Due to this,
Europeism brings together people with very different worldviews and it
brings them together in many particular things. These people do not
otherwise agree with each other too much but to stand against Europeism
(they mistakenly – intentionally or unintentionally – say against
Europe!) would by a blasphemy for all of them. This immensely weakens
any possibility of their criticism of Europeism. I am afraid that – in
the today’s Czech political setting, for example – the Social, Christian
and Civic democrats, and perhaps even Communists more or less accept
the ideology of Europeism, although none of them could ever admit their
“friendship” in public.
Europeism as today’s European metaideology is, for all of its
advocates, somehow “before the brackets”. It can accommodate the
agreeing or disagreeing with the war in Iraq, wishing for higher or
lower taxes, reconciling or not reconciling with the massive wiretapping
of the citizens, wishing or not wishing to trade with China, supporting
or not supporting “the registered partnership” and many other things.
Certain “clustering” exists, however, in all these attitudes which are
seemingly unrelated to each other. And such clustering is the defining
feature of this metaideology.
The basic structure of Europeism
I would not wish to attempt at any vertical hierarchization (as
regards significance), but it is possible to structure Europeism
horizontally in the following way:
1. Political-economic (or social) dimension
One of the key parts of Europeism which is currently shared by both
the European politically correct right and left (although less so in the
Anglo-Saxon than in the “continental” or German-French Europe) is the model
of the so called social-market economy. Although, it is evidently
an unproductive, overregulated, demotivating and excessively
redistributing paternalistic system, the Europeists base their position
on it stubbornly. They refuse “markets without adjectives”, they do not
want the “free market”. They do not like the word capitalism. They are
defending all types of government interventions under the slogan – and
this is a nice term suggested by O’Sullivan – “civilized corrections of
market anarchy” (pp. 38).
Let’s notice the use of the not unimportant word “anarchy”. Europeism
does not regard market as imperfect – like everything human – but yet
the best, the fairest and the most democratic mechanism of human
interactions. The advocates of Europeism do not accept the fundamental
teaching of Adam Smith, nor the ideas of the economists and
representatives of other social sciences who followed him. The basic
paradigm of Europeism is the mirror opposite – market is primarily
anarchy and government is here to correct this anarchy.
It is a sad intellectual defect and a dangerous personality fault of
the Europeists that they do not realize that in overwhelming majority of
cases government failure is much bigger and much more dangerous than
market failure, and that government is not a neutral entity maximizing
the well-being of its citizens, but an instrument for advocacy of very
narrow private interests (of different interest groups and also of very
utilitaristically-behaving politicians and bureaucrats who satisfy
mainly their own interests). The Europeists do not realize that
government regulation is a weapon in the hands of influential,
well-organised (and therefore vocal) interest groups, not a promoter of
interests of an anonymous, not organized and hence almost defenseless
citizen.
In summary, Europeism is – in its political-economic dimension –
based on:
- the explicit refusal of liberal doctrine of the functioning of the
economy (and of society) and
- the belief in the government capacity to be “a productive” factor
even in the activities which go above its minimal (classic liberal)
concept.
Europeism doesn’t want to learn a lesson from the tragic episode of
communism and other, not less evil variants of centrally administered
society and economy (different types of fascist or authoritarian
regimes). Nor does it learn any lesson from the experience with the
European “civilized corrections of market anarchy”. It interprets it as
extraordinary success.
This European social model is accepted by both SPD and CDU in
Germany. It is even considered a part of the cultural identity in France
(with the exception of a few liberals). Scandinavia almost competes
about authorship of this model. In Austria, it is viewed as the
desirable counterpart of the American “wild capitalism”. The British
Conservatives have long stood out of this stream but I am not sure
whether this will continue under the new leadership which is politically
much more correct than the previous ones. The question is whether the
“new” ODS (Civic Democratic Party) is not becoming softer in this
respect as well.
2. The model of the integration process
For half a century there has been an ongoing dispute in Europe
between the advocates of the liberalization model of European
integration – which was based primarily on intergovernmental
cooperation of individual European countries (which kept significant
majority of parameters of their political, social and economic systems
in their own hands) and on the removal of all unnecessary barriers to
human activities existing on the borders of states – and the
advocates of the harmonization (or homogenization) integration model
which is based on unification from above, orchestrated by the
EU-authorities, with the ambition to level-out all aspects of life for
all Europeans and to do it in a supranational entity, which will
determine an overwhelming majority of systemic parameters for the entire
integrated Europe through its supranational bodies.
The first of these models has been mostly based on the assumption
that the removal of these barriers will lead to a desirable competition
between states, as well as to the consequent liberalization within
individual countries. Liberalization should not come as a dictate of a
wise central authority, endowed with unhuman qualities, but on the
self-interests of individual countries which would try to make the
conditions they offer not worse than those offered by other member
countries. This should be a spontaneous activity, not a project
organized from above. The second of these models wanted and wants the
opposite. It essentially did not wish for the best system (the least
regulated one) to win, but it wished for the general acceptance of the
most regulated system (regulated by the advocates of this approach).
In the initial phase of European integration (approximately until the
beginning of the era of Jacques Delors in the mid-80s) the first model
prevailed, although Jean Monnet wanted something conceptually different
from the very beginning. In the current phase it is, however, the second
model that has evidently prevailed. Europeism fully identifies with it.
It is embodied in the European constitution and now – after the
referendums in France and the Netherlands – by the everyday “creeping”
shift of Europe towards further and further harmonization and
homogenization of people and the conditions of their life, which goes on
silently ahead.
The integration problem has, of course, many partial aspects. One of
them is the question who or what is the basic entity (or building
block) of European integration. Is it the man (the individual man or
woman) or the state?
The building of a supranational entity, which is an evident and
undisguised ambition of Europeism and of Europeists, weakens the states
and strengthens the direct relationship of the individual towards the
EU. The weakening of the state creates a vacuum. The European Union is
not a state. It is merely a “set of supranational authorities”, whereas
the state is an entity which is fundamentally, by its very nature, more
than a set of authorities. It is possible to like or not to like the
country you live in. It is possible, for example, to cheer for it or not
to cheer for it at the Olympics in Torino. It is possible to defend it
with a gun in the hand. It is (usually) possible to speak its language.
It is possible to worship it and hate it. It is not possible, however,
to have such relationship towards a set of supranational authorities
(which J. Delors wanted to provide with his proverbial “soul” of the
EU).
Related to this is the conscious and even intentional strengthening
of the role of regions vis-à-vis the states, leading to regionalization
of Europe and to the Europeists’ looking forward to their living in the
nirvana of postgovernmental society. The Europeists proclaim that the
idea of a nation state is long dead. Therefore they give up the basic
concept of the original intergovernmental European integration – the
unanimity principle – and are defending the move to the majority voting
as the elementary rule of decision-making in the EU.
As I already mentioned, another important aspect of the Europeist
model is the effort to introduce – as far as the legislation and
institutional framework is concerned – a noncompetitive and therefore
harmonized system within which the individual parts of Europe would
not compete with each other because only one single system would prevail
in them. Virtually everything – tax rates, social security benefits,
regulation methods, various kinds of “standards” (environmental,
hygienic, veterinary, labour, fire, safety, etc.) – would be harmonized or homogenized under the wise
guidance of the supervisor of this “unity”, which is the EU-bureaucracy
and the EU-politicians.
The problem is that this, from-above organized harmonization can only
be done upwards. The economists understand it because they are familiar
with the term „downward rigidity“. All kinds of things cannot go
downwards because the deeply rooted vested interests do not allow for
any movement in this direction. We should know that it basically means
the
increase of the costs and the decrease of the competitiveness. Some
European countries already have to face these high costs and to them
related lower degree of competitiveness. The harmonization policy is
nothing else but an attempt of these countries to
export their
high costs and their lowered degree of competitiveness
to other EU
countries; to the countries which are – for various historic reasons
– at a different level of economic development, have different
priorities, customs and traditions, as well as different ambitions. (As a
side-note, I must mention that if the European Union as a whole does
not succeed in exporting these “costs” outside the EU, it will be
necessary to intensify European protectionism and further increase the
discrimination against the less developed countries. (More about this
can be found in my recent speech in India “Dubious Attitudes of Western
Countries Vis-à-Vis the Developing World“ (
www.klaus.cz/clanky/936)
Europeism is a powerful supranational tendency, strongly and
mercilessly standing against the intergovernmental principle.
3. Views on freedom, democracy and society
The Europeists are also characterized by their clear stances in the
disputes about parliamentary democracy or civil society (a programme
which is conceptually different from “the society of free citizens”) and
in the disputes about democracy or post-democracy. They do not prefer
standard democratic processes. They give preference to the pragmatic
decision-making efficiency (by simplifying the decision-making
procedures, which can be undoubtedly slow and costly). They prefer
collectivity to the individuals (as well collective to the individual
rights), social partnership (different kinds of syndicalism or
corporatism), and the classical democracy to corporatism. It is also
entirely obvious on which side the Europeists stand in the disputes
about the importance of various post-democratic “isms”, such as
multiculturalism, feminism, ecologism, homosexualism, NGOism, etc.
It can be also said that the Europeists want, in their
decision-making at the supranational level, to get rid of politics
(because they dream about creating an apolitical society) and to
introduce the system of decision-making which would be easy and
uncontrollable. That is why they advocate post-democracy and graciously
smile at the obsolete and old-fashioned advocates of the good old
democracy and the good old “political” politics. Since they are (and
like to be) far from the citizens, since they do not see the citizens
and do not reach them directly, they need various collectivities, groups
and groupings with which they can deal on a large scale (either to
follow them blindly or suppress them and complicate their life). That is
why they like the corporativist concept of social partnerships, that is
why they want big business and big trade unions, that is why they want
Galbraith’s countervailing powers (at macro level, not the market,
functioning at micro level). Since they do not want to be under the
citizens’ strict control, it is convenient for them to deal with various
NGOs, which – at least that is what they hope for – give them an
otherwise missing legitimacy and “the voice of people”, even if it is a
very strange kind of people.
Europeism is also a priori succumbing to everything new, would-be
progressive, non-traditional, non-conservative. That is why Europeism
likes feminism, homosexualism, multiculturalism and other similar
positions, which destroy the age-long European cultural and civilization
foundations. The Europeists know well, even though shortsightedly, that
all this is helping them –without thinking out the consequences – to
accomplish their goals. The long term consequences are not much of an
interest to them.
Europeism is essentially an illiberal view, if we use the word
liberal in its original European (not American) sense.
4. Understanding of foreign policy and international relations
The Europeists do not like “domestic policy” (which implies being
under much stricter democratic control) and therefore promote the –
democracy lacking – decision-making at supranational level. They like a
big, world-wide, geopolitical thinking and this is also why they are
establishing one international or supranational organization after the
other. Sixty years ago, in his famous text “The Intellectuals and
Socialism” (The University of Chicago Law Review, 1949), Friedrich von
Hayek wrote very convincingly about people of this kind striving for a
position (usually well paid) in these organizations. The effort to
emancipate politics and politicians from democratic “accountability” is
one of the primary objectives of the Europeists. They are not alone in
this, but I am certain that never in history had the people with this
type of thinking reached such success as through the creation of the EU.
That is why Europeism promotes the slogan: “less of the nation
state, more of internationalism”, that is why the Europeists
purposefully associate the nation state with nationalism, that is why
they promote multiculturalism and de-assimilation principle, that is why
they strive for denationalization of citizenship, that is why
all-European political parties are being founded and supported. That is
why they expect the birth of European identity and of European “people”;
that is why they want to build some kind of “brotherhood of Europe”.
That is why the Europeists advocate abstract universalism of rights.
That is why it is strived for a homogenized, “decaffeinated” world (with
no flavour, aroma, and smell). That is why the impression is being
created that what is at stake in Europe now is a sort of reunification
(after the fashion of German Wiedervereinigung which had, however, its
justification in this one country, forcefully divided half a century
ago). That is why they suggest that something like “collective psyche of
Europe” exists.
Europe was not much of a political entity in its past, but rather a
frame of reference for a spiritual and cultural life, and I consider
these Europeist’s ambitions (and arguments) merely a screen, using nice
words in order to hide very down-to-earth interests. These are the
interests to get rid of the state as an unsubstitutable guarantor of
democracy, as a basic political unit of a democratic system (in contrast
to Reichs, empires, unions, leagues of countries), as the only
meaningfully organizable arena of political life, as the biggest
possible, but at the same time also the smallest reasonable, base of
political representation and representativeness. Europeism is an
attempt to create the Huxleyian brave new world in which there will be
“rosy hours”, but not freedom and democracy.
Moreover, O’Sullivan suggests that – unlike intergovernmentalism –
Europeist’s supranationalism „tends to manufacture rivalry by its very
workings even when no one intends them” (pp 40) and that
supranationalism brings rivalry towards the USA, in other words
antiamericanism, to life. Instead of Atlanticism or transatlantic
alliance, it leads to the opposite tendencies. The “continental”
thinking also leads to the acceptance of another false idea – that the
conflict between the West and Islam is a fore-picture of the unavoidably
forthcoming clash of civilizations. Supranationalism incites to all
this by its very nature. The existence of the powerful United States can
not be taken as a reason for European unification.
5. Broader philosophical stance of Europeism
In its general “Weltanschaung” Europeism maintains not a modest
evolutionary belief in spontaneous order but a radically constructivist
position. The legendary dictum of Mises and Hayek, that the world is
(and should be) a result of “human action”, not of “human design”, is
the exact opposite of the Europeists views. The Europeists do not
believe in spontaneous, unregulated and uncontrolled human activity.
They trust the chosen ones (not the elected ones), they trust themselves
or those who are chosen by themselves. They believe in a vertically
structured and hierarchized human society (in the Huxleyian Alpha-Pluses
and in Epsilons serving them). They want to mastermind, plan, regulate,
administer the others, because some (they themselves) do know and
others don not. They do not want to rely on spontaneity of human
behavior and on the outcomes resulting from this spontaneity because
they think that racionalistic human design is always better than an
unplanned result of interactions between free citizens, constructed and
commanded by nobody. Even though we thought that after the collapse of
communism all this was a matter of the past, it is not so. It is around
us again. Europeism is a new utopism and, I add, it is an extremely
naive and romantic utopism.
Who are the “constructeurs” and exponents of Europeism
Europeism is a product of the elites. It is a product of the people
who do not want to go to work from 8am until 5pm during the week and to
have a normal job. It is a product of the people who want to steer,
command, patronize, and “legislate” others. On the one hand, they
include politicians and to them related bureaucrats and on the other
hand, public intellectuals (operating in the public space and in the
media) who are attached to politicians. It is a large group of people in
the public sphere (representing the proverbial deadweight) that “very
pragmatically” maximizes the effects which result from its position and
that:
- wants to ensure that its privileged status and with it connected
benefits will be long-lasting;
- wants to isolate itself from the reach of the electorate, from
public opinion and from standard democratic mechanisms;
- wants – through the complexity and untransparency of the
communitarian law decision-making procedures and through the distance
from the individual citizen – to detach itself from any consequences of
its decision-making and from the costs (in the broadest sense of the
word) they – by their activity – produce to the citizens of the
individual member countries.
The Europeists are the politicians who are, due to the supranational
structures, detached from their electorate and who excuse themselves to
their electorate by referring to the supranational obligations and to
the fact that it is impossible to disappoint their colleagues in
Brussels. At the European summits I am always surprised by the peculiar
familiarity of their participants given by the fact that most of them
have known each other for a very long time (the ten new countries are a
change in this respect but even their representatives usually enter the
club very rapidly), that they have similar interests and that they need
each other. That Kunderian “unbearable lightness of being”, given by
living in five-star hotels, by flights in the comfortable special
planes, by meetings in the gorgeous castles (and all this not only for
one President or Prime Minister but for their vast staff), creates their
own world for them; a world which is entirely different from the world
of those on whose behalf they like to speak so much and so often.
Among the Europeists belong also the top bureaucrats (thanks to the
laws of bureaucracy and bureaucratism often also those who are not at
the top), who have a tremendous power over the politicians. They are
preparing very influential background papers which the politician reads
only on the plane or in the course of the meeting. There are so many of
such documents that one has to – whether s/he likes it or not – rely on
the work of these people. The overwhelming majority of proposals and
decisions are predetermined at the meetings of deputy ministers,
departmental directors at the ministries, experts or advisers and
ambassadors without touch of any political decision-maker supported by a
mandate. Moreover, all this is being extremely amplified by the
enormous range of EU-agendas where detail (which is where the problem
usually lies) cannot be concerned at all.
Among the Europeists belong also the intellectual fellow travelers
for whom the world of Europeism is almost ideal. It is in this world
where they gain a great power which they would never be able to gain on
the domestic scene. (See my “Intellectuals and Socialism”,
www.klaus.cz/clanky/2171).
These three groups of people form a very strong coalition of
interests which does not have any adequate counterweight in the
heterogeneous and territorially vast Europe with so many differing
interests. There exists a silent majority, which does think that this is
wrong but it is unable to organize itself and has – unlike the
Europeists – a normal job it has to, and wants to, do (and therefore it
has not enough time to get involved in it). This majority stands on the
defensive. Moreover, the Europeists were successful – as already so many
times in history – in presenting themselves as a human progress and all
others as obscurantism, which is an extremely successful trick. The
consequence is a standard scheme: a vocal, immensely motivated, not
explicitly organized minority, whose members however meet and talk to
each other, against an entirely scattered majority which has conflicting
interests and concerns and which doesn’t see what this is all about.
Besides that, this majority thinks that the entire EUnizing is a small
addition to the normal course of events. Unfortunately, it is not so. It
is a revolutionary turn of the normal course of events.
Conclusion
I proclaimed that it is a revolutionary turn of the normal course
of events. I mean this seriously.
I know, of course, that there is a soft and hard version of Europeism
and that not all the proponents of Europeism subscribe to its hard
version. They do not know, however, that they open the way for it and
that they prepare it.
I know as well that Europeism is not a promising third way (see my
speech in Vancouver at a conference of Mont Pelerin Society, “The Third
Way and Its Fatal Conceits”, published in the book „On the Road to
Democracy“, National Center for Policy Analysis, Dallas, 2005, pp 173 -
178) – because there are only two ways. And Europeism is the second one.
I also know how powerful is the synergy of the opinions and interests
which aim in a similar direction, despite they differ in details.
Václav Klaus, “What is Europeism or What Should not be the Future for
Europe”, CEP (Center for Economics and Politics), Prague, 2006.
http://www.klaus.cz/clanky/1326
3 comentarii :
Tipul arata realitatea exact asa cum este ea:
Europeismul este o doctrina anticapitalista si antidemocratica
Textul trebuie neaparat tradus , tiparit si publicat si raspandit ca sa inteleaga romanii ca au fost mintiti in legatura cu intrarea in UE
Promit să o fac de "Ziua Europei - 9 mai", când voi face o ediţie specială, cuprinzând toată tematica CEE/UE.
Abia astept ! :)
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