European elections / Europe 2040: ‘And now for something completely different’

European elections / Europe 2040: ‘And now for something completely different’

(A handbook for the actors of the European campaign)

In the case of the EU (a phase in the construction of Europe which came into being on 7 February 1992 in Maastricht), the upcoming elections will seal the vision it has held for 27 years. And this is not an anticipation! We reiterate that the crisis of the euro, the migrant crisis and Brexit, to name only the most obvious of crises, have already put paid to the technocratic edifice that has become so disconnected from the citizens, the world and the future and has crushed the continent for at least a decade. Whether there is a final exit or not, the signal sent by the British two years ago is proof of that.

Tell me who you are and I will tell you what your election will look like 

In one way or another, the 2019 European elections will ‘expose’ the extent of the damage and hence constitute the starting point for the next chapter in the European multisecular adventure, namely…

Disunited European nations

This is the most serious area of damage in our Maastrichtian Europe: while its mission was to continue the rapprochement, the opposite has occurred. The famous Erasmus programme, conceived in the 1980s to create the conditions for the emergence of a European citizenship (added to and not replacing national citizenship), has become an international tourist agency allowing English-speaking students to spend a year in the Philippines or Australia. As for the first Erasmus generations (de facto more European because, initially, the programme was promoting European student exchange within Europe), when they became adults, they couldn’t see any openings for them to put forward a common political project. Thus, in the severe, yet shared, crisis that the Europeans have been going through since 2009, the only people Europeans were able to turn to were the national leaders. To national leaders, national solutions… The shared European crisis has resulted in citizens being locked into national visions in which other nations seemed to be impediments to implementing their own solutions. Today, the European nations no longer love each other. They are so divided that even within countries, they don’t get along anymore (Catalans, Bretons, Bavarians, southern Italians against northern Italians, Hungarian minorities in Romania, the Scots, the Roma, Muslims, women against men…).

These profound divisions in European society will mean that the electoral campaign will speak a lot about Europe, which will be new and beneficial, but still within a national framework, resulting in competition between national solutions at the European level, where the extreme right will paradoxically come up with the solutions that are most ‘common’: closing of European borders, population control etc… The truly trans-European proposals, like those of DIEM25, will be rendered inaudible by a media system grounded at the national level. As for the national-trans-European solutions advocated by Emmanuel Macron, they will be perceived predominantly as French by the other Europeans. That said, we repeat that this election will be the most European and the most democratic in the history of the EU: for the first time, Europe will be central and we will see the early beginnings of large trans-European movements... Read more / geab.eu


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