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Spain takes up the EU Presidency under new leadership structure
New Delhi: With the start of the New Year, Spain has taken the reins of the European Union presidency, the first for the EU under its new leadership structure which involves its first full-time president and a new foreign policy supremo. Spain on Friday assumed the rotating presidency of the European Union, the first under a new leadership structure for the bloc which includes its first full-time president and a new foreign policy supremo. The positions, occupied by Belgium's Herman Van Rompuy and Britain's Catherine Ashton, were created under the Lisbon Treaty which came into effect on December 1, during the final weeks of Sweden's six-month term at the helm of the EU. The treaty aims to streamline decision-making in the 27-nation bloc but critics argue the new system is no less complex and multi-layered than the previous one, with too much scope for overlapping roles. Spain has set as the priorities for its presidency of the EU a smooth implementation of the treaty and tackling the continent's economic woes. In a message posted on the official web site of the Spanish presidency of the EU, Spain's Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero (pictured) said the main challenge will be to provide Europe with an economy that is "more productive, innovative and more sustainable". Zapatero added that he was "convinced" that the Lisbon Treaty will make Europe "more efficient and dynamic" and contribute to "make Europeans more united". One of the aims of the EU's new leadership structure is to give Europe a greater voice on the world stage in talks with major powers like China and the United States. Under the Lisbon Treaty, Rompuy, Ashton and Jose Manuel Barroso, the European Commission president, are intended to be the EU's public face. But Spain will still chair important EU ministerial meetings on the economy, the environment and energy during the presidency as well as host several summits, including one between the bloc and the United States in May which President Barack Obama is expected to attend. Jerzy Buzek, president of the European Parliament, said: "The coming six months are extremely important for the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty. The Spanish presidency will shape the new model of co-operation between EU institutions and member states under the Lisbon Treaty."
During the Spanish presidency the EU needs to agree on a replacement for the bloc's long-term growth strategy known as the Lisbon Agenda which was supposed to make it the world's most competitive economy by 2010.
A new 10-year growth strategy -- dubbed the "2020 strategy" -- is likely to be adopted in March during a summit of EU leaders. The unemployment rate in the entire EU rose to 9.3 percent in October, representing 22.5 million people, from 7.3 percent during the same time last year, according to EU statistic agency Eurostat. The jobless rate in individual member states varies from lows of 3.7 percent in the Netherlands and 4.7 percent in Austria to highs of 20.9 percent in Latvia and 19.3 percent in Spain. As fireworks greeted the New Year, Spain raised the level of its anti-terrorist alert, fearing a spectacular attack by armed Basque group ETA during its EU presidency.
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D.S.Rajput
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Karl Gotthardt - albertacowpoke
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at 06:05 on January 1st, 2010
The bigger and more cumbersome the EU gets, the more administration and treaties they throw in to try and make it work.
How can they expect to make one standard for everything and everyone across the board in disparate nations with completely different cultures, histories, beliefs, diets and ambitions?
Every time a new country enters the EU the differences between the haves and the have nots in Europe increases, more money is needed to run it all, more money is wasted and we all have to pay higher taxes with no visible benefits, while we watch our own living standards and infrastructures fail, our schools, housing and health services stretched beyond the limit.
We have no control over our own borders, our laws can and are dismantled by EU directives and decisions taken in the European courts.
It is so bureaucraticly top heavy now that the cost of paying for all the staff is huge, the EU claim the total cost represents just 6% of the budget, but when you look at the salary for the 27 commisioners alone - 75 million euros, not including family and subsistence allowances - you start to get an idea of the staggering sums involved.
The claim that the amount of admin cost is comparable with many of the member states individual costs is questionable, and just serves to bring in the question, why the hell are we paying twice for admin, our own, and the EU?