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by Soeren Kern • January 25, 2019
at 5:00 am
- "Populism and
nationalism are increasing in all our countries. For the first
time, a country — Great Britain — is leaving the European Union.
Worldwide, multilateralism is under pressure...." – German
Chancellor Angela Merkel.
- "Converging this
much with Germany is an abandonment of sovereignty — a betrayal.
If we had not alerted the public, this text would have been
signed on the sly. The text provides in particular for the need
to legislate in the event of obstacles to Franco-German
cooperation.... I do not want more convergence with Berlin, be
it in social or security matters, or in closer consultation in
the UN Security Council." – Marine Le Pen, Le Temps.
- "Emmanuel Macron
is calling for a grand debate to involve citizens in the public
life of our country. At the same time, however, the President of
the Republic negotiated a treaty on the sly even though it
concerns conditions essential to the exercise of our national
sovereignty. Neither the French people, nor the Parliament, nor
the Constitutional Council were consulted... For many reasons,
this treaty undermines our national sovereignty." – Nicolas
Dupont-Aignan, leader of the party Debout La France!
(Stand Up, France!).

German
Chancellor Angela Merkel recently said that a new pact between German
and France aims to build a Franco-German "common military
culture" and "contribute to the creation of a European
army." Pictured: Soldiers of the Franco-German brigade, a
military unit founded in 1989, jointly consisting of units from the
French Army and German Army. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor
Angela Merkel have signed a new Franco-German friendship treaty aimed
at reinvigorating the European Union, which has been buffeted by the
European debt crisis, mass migration and Brexit — as well as
innumerable conflicting interests and priorities among its 28 member
states.
France and Germany, the self-appointed guardians of
European integration, have said that the new treaty is a response to
the growing influence of populists in Austria, Britain, France,
Italy, Hungary, Poland and other European countries who are seeking
to slow, and even reverse, European integration by recouping national
sovereignty from the European Union and transferring those powers
back to national capitals.
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