This link has been bookmarked by 1 people . It was first bookmarked on 17 Jun 2008, by Prof. Dr Wolfgang Schumann.
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17 Jun 08
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As EU foreign ministers try to breathe life back into the Lisbon Treaty, the charter of institutional reforms rejected by Irish voters last week, Dublin is likely to be offered stronger guarantees in the sensitive areas of taxation, defence and family policies.
According to the Financial Times, "explanatory protocols" should explicitly state that the document does not affect Ireland's ability to set its own tax rates, the country's neutrality status or its abortion policy.
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Another solution being floated involves a legal assurance that Ireland will never lose its seat at the European Commission table, the Irish Times reports. The Lisbon Treaty enables EU leaders to put the reduction of the size of the commission on ice.
Either scenario is expected to be agreed at the first top-level meeting of EU leaders under the French EU presidency in October.
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Irish No will not put brakes on EU enlargement
Aside from the size of the next European Commission - now capped by the current EU rules - a question mark hangs over the 27-nation bloc's capacity to absorb new members.
The Nice Treaty is tailored to no more than 27 member states.
When asked about the prospects of EU hopefuls' accession to the EU, Mr Rupel excluded any changes to the process.
"The outcome of the Irish referendum in no way changes enlargement policy...The EU unanimously decided to invited the countries of the Western Balkans to take membership so there is no doubt about that," the minister said, but added: "How we will carry that out that is another question."
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