#Macron will in a speech today present ambitious plans for the French 🇪🇺 presidency starting 1 Jan that go far beyond the remit of what a presidency is supposed to do, which is only agenda-setting.
Europhiles may like it when its Macron, but they didn't when it was Janša(🧵1/10)
Though they're often referred to as the "rotating EU presidency" these 6-month stints are actually just the presidency of the Council of the EU, the upper house of the EU legislature in which ministers take votes on legislative proposals. (🧵2/10) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidenc…
In French the word 'president' is often used when in English we might say 'chairperson' (hence the confusion over the role of the President of the European Parliament, who is more like a Speaker of the House in the UK). 🧵 (3/10)
The job of the presidency is to set the agenda for ministers' meetings in those 6 months, and choose which legislation *already proposed by Commission* should be prioritised.
So for instance, the energy minister from presidency country chairs meetings of the 27 energy ministers.
Many in Brussels have long felt that the rotating presidency is an outdated relic that only causes confusion for citizens and the rest of the world.
There was a proposal to scrap it entirely when the EU constitution (which became the Lisbon Treaty) was being developed. (🧵5/10)
In the end, they scrapped it only for the European Council, the configuration of prime ministers and presidents.
European Council got a full-time person president in 2009, replacing the country president. But for Council of Ministers, the rotating country presidency remained.
So technically the PM or president of the country that holds the rotating presidency shouldn't have any leadership role in the European Council (which sets general EU direction) any more.
Yet they are usually invited onto podium with Commission & Council presidents after summits
But during the Slovenian presidency, the antics of Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša became so intolerable that this practice was altered.
EU leadership (rightly) pointed out that he has no formal role in the presidency and he was ignored. (🧵8/10)
But can you imagine them ignoring Macron? Impossible.
This is how broken the whole rotating presidency system is. People are happy for Macron to pretend to be 'president of the EU' for 6 months, but we're told to ignore PMs of smaller countries when they have the presidency.
It also creates the false impression, both among citizens and third country diplomats, that France is 'in charge of' the EU next year.
That is absolutely not the case. But Macron's speech today might give that impression.
Something to bear in mind. (🧵10/10)
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After considering closing bars/restaurants (nightclubs already closed), gyms, theatres, Christmas markets & home gatherings, the government has decided only to close schools.
Press conference starting now:
Important for EU bubble folks: private indoor events will be prohibited form 6 December *except in homes*.
My reading of this is that it wouldn't allow for in-person conferences. But let's see what they say at the press conference.
“The situation is no longer tenable’” says Belgian PM @AlexanderDeCroo.
“This Autumn’s wave has been much more severe than we had anticipated. The infections are among the highest in Europe.”
Stumbled upon this fascinating essay about origins of the French term "Anglo-Saxon" (meaning chiefly 🇬🇧🇺🇸 but also 🇦🇺🇳🇿🇮🇪🇨🇦).
It was invented under Napoleon III at same time the term "Latin America" was coined to justify French intervention in Mexico. aeon.co/essays/the-ang…
Anglo-Saxon is a term that confuses English-speakers.
In the UK it simply means the Germanic tribes who established England and in the US it's associated with the ethnic term WASP (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant), meaning the historically privileged American ethnicity/religion.
For the French, "Anglo-Saxon" is an economic & cultural model usually set up as a bogeyman associated with capitalism or multiculturalism (its origin had racial meaning also).
"The Anglo-Saxon is a mirror on Frenchness; it is France’s alter-ego and often its most feared enemy."
I really don't understand conservatives in 🇺🇸&🇬🇧 who demand a crackdown on illegal immigration but also refuse to even consider any national ID system or population register because that would be 'big government'.
You cannot have well-controlled immigration and small government.
This is the point 🇫🇷 are making by saying 🇬🇧 is making itself "attractive" to migrants crossing the channel.
The "attraction" is the lack of a national ID system and population register in UK which makes it easier to live/work illegally than in continental Europe, which has IDs.
In 🇺🇸, Republicans in Arizona enacted controversial "papers please" law which mandated police to ask for legality proof from anyone suspected of being an ilelgal immigrant (aka, non-white).
You cannot ask that if there isn't a requirement for *everyone* to carry a national ID.
Migrants caught in the middle of a disastrous low in Anglo-French relations.
UK politicians blaming French for lack of border vigilance. French politicians blaming British for extensive black market labour conditions that act as a pull across the channel. politico.eu/article/france…
"Everyone knows there are more than 1.2 million illegal immigrants in Great Britain, and that British employers use this labor force to make things that the British manufacture and consume," says French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin.
This is a point European politicians have long made privately, but never so publicly before.
They say it's easier to work as an undocumented worker in UK than in continental Europe, which is why people try to cross the channel even after they've already snuck into EU/Schengen.