• Mr Corbett and I hardly share identical views on the European Parliament, the EU or the Lisbon Treaty.

    ECONOMIST: European politics

  • On Friday the 13th (of June), the news came through: The Irish had rejected the EU's Lisbon Treaty.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Europe after Lisbon

  • But when the EU's Lisbon Treaty took effect in December 2009 the European Parliament used its new powers under the treaty to prevent that deal being renewed.

    BBC: Q&A: US data deal with Europe

  • As soon as possible, all 27 EU members must ratify the Lisbon treaty, which creates the new job of a full-time EU president, so that small, incompetent countries like the Czech Republic no longer take turns to speak for Europe.

    ECONOMIST: European politics

  • To euro-types in Brussels, such embarrassing vignettes point to one blindingly obvious conclusion: as soon as possible, all 27 EU members must ratify the Lisbon treaty, which creates the new job of a full-time EU president, so that small, incompetent countries like the Czech Republic no longer take turns to speak for Europe.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • So it is with the citizens' initiative, an idea adopted in the final days of a grandiose convention drawing up what was then called an EU constitution (becoming the Lisbon treaty after many misadventures).

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • But although the Lisbon treaty changed the EU, it is equally important to see what did not change.

    ECONOMIST: Letters

  • The European Parliament's Defence and Scrutiny Committee took evidence on 28 September 2010 on the impact of the Lisbon Treaty on the EU's common security and defence policy.

    BBC: Security and Defence Committee

  • As for national interests, well, the Lisbon Treaty that effectively bars EU member states from adopting independent foreign policies took care of those.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: When rhetoric rules the roost

  • The charter was originally drafted in 2000 however did not become enshrined in EU law until the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty in 2009.

    BBC: Civil Liberties Committee

  • But here comes the Klaus question: if speed is of the essence, should EU governments that want to see the Lisbon Treaty ratified give Mr Klaus what he wants at the October summit?

    ECONOMIST: European politics

  • Firstly because the EU certainly can't afford to put at risk their 5 million jobs liked to our trade, and secondly because the Lisbon treaty also obliges the EU to negotiate Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with a member-state that wishes to withdraw, as well as with states that are not EU members - why did Cameron choose to omit this fact from his speech?

    BBC: David Cameron speech: UK and the EU

  • Mr Faymann's first move was to shift his party's position on Europe by calling for referendums on any future EU treaty, despite the fact that Mr Gusenbauer had just refused to put the Lisbon treaty to a popular vote.

    ECONOMIST: Austria��s government

  • Under the 2009 Lisbon treaty, moreover, the EU has lots more to do.

    ECONOMIST: Much stroppiness lies ahead in the EU budget negotiations

  • The debate on 10 December 2012 focused on changes that result from the 2009 Lisbon Treaty, which gave the EU exclusive competence over foreign investment.

    BBC: Laws on EU trade agreements

  • The EU itself can manage just fine without the Lisbon Treaty.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Europe after Lisbon

  • Co-decision on the EU budget is one of the innovations in the Lisbon Treaty, which took effect last December.

    BBC: Euro MPs adopt amended EU budget for 2011

  • True, the parliament has powers over EU legislation that will be further increased if the Lisbon treaty is ratified, but for the most part its loonier fringes can be safely ignored by their saner colleagues.

    ECONOMIST: The worrying European elections

  • EU's leaders agreed to a new treaty in Lisbon to replace the botched European constitution, which was rejected by voters in France and the Netherlands in 2005.

    ECONOMIST: Politics this week

  • One of his first moves in office was to persuade his European Union peers to remove a clause from the now-frozen Lisbon treaty stating that competition was a key EU objective.

    ECONOMIST: Europe and America

  • But several other EU leaders signalled that there was little appetite for rewriting the Lisbon Treaty, which was only adopted after eight years of tortuous negotiations.

    BBC: UK wins allies in EU budget battle at summit

  • Other EU countries think this was done in a protocol to the Lisbon treaty saying that the charter created no new rights in Britain, and may be reluctant to concede more.

    ECONOMIST: Referenda, ratchets and opt-outs

  • She was instrumental in ensuring passage of the Lisbon treaty, which is supposed to help the EU cope with its expansion to 27 members and creates machinery for an EU foreign policy.

    ECONOMIST: Germany's role in the world

  • The European Parliament could also use the power granted to it under the 2009 Lisbon Treaty to vote down any deal reached by EU governments if its calls for increased funds are ignored.

    BBC: David Cameron and Herman van Rompuy in Downing Street

  • She backed the appointment of relative lightweights for both the EU presidency and the foreign minister's job created by the Lisbon treaty.

    ECONOMIST: Germany's role in the world

  • As the holidays end, there is much chatter about the Lisbon treaty, a proposed set of changes to the EU's rule book that faces a second referendum in Ireland on October 2nd.

    ECONOMIST: Why the atmosphere in Brussels seems so glum

  • Despite the Lisbon treaty's grand foreign-policy aspirations, the EU has not learned to think in geopolitical terms.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne: Europe and America | The

  • Such antics might be little more than a legal curiosity were it not for the fact that the opposition Conservative Party in Britain has said it would, once in office, call a referendum on Lisbon if the treaty has not been ratified by all 27 EU members.

    ECONOMIST: Ireland and the Lisbon Treaty

  • Lisbon's opponents say the treaty differs little from the defunct EU constitution, rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005.

    BBC: Sarkozy attacks federalists in EU

  • Brussels has got around such trifles as negative opinion polls and even lost referendums: witness the unwanted EU constitution, now cross-dressed as the somewhat-less-awful Lisbon treaty.

    ECONOMIST: The worrying European elections

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