Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Sweden Takes Over EU Presidency



Itaque, quae pacis sunt, sectemur et quae aedificationis sunt in invicem. (Romans 14:19)

Sweden on Wednesday assumed the six-month rotating Presidency of the European Union, promising to combat climate change as well as the rising joblessness in the wake of the global economic crisis, according to The Local.

Brussels can now relax when Sweden is officially handed the European Union Presidency.

The past months have been marked by a rudderless feeling as the domestically strife-ridden Czechs failed to stamp their authority on the bloc, and member states freely bickered over how to tackle the devastating economic crisis.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told reporters on the eve of the Swedish Presidency: "The financial crisis and climate change, with the preparation of the Copenhagen conference, will be our main priorities.

Stockholm wants to get the EU to sign up to a new UN global warming treaty to be negotiated in Copenhagen in December and which would replace the Kyoto Protocol on cutting carbon emissions that expires in 2012.

Reinfeldt said: "We need a global answer to this global problem".

I hope PM Reinfeldt knows what he does on this one.

The greenies want us to starve to death in the dark while breathing dirty air.

But Reinfeldt and his centre-right government, which takes the reins after a turbulent Czech Presidency, have their work cut out for them for the next six months as the 27-member bloc finds itself in a period of limbo.

A new European parliament has just been elected and is in the process of settling in, a new Commission will be installed - and it is not yet certain who the next President will be - and the bloc's institutional framework may be altered depending on the outcome of a referendum in Ireland on the Lisbon Treaty in October.

Sweden, which like the Czech Republic not is a member of the eurozone, nonetheless aims to restore confidence in the financial markets by establishing "a European body to supervise stability".

Reinfeldt said: "We need to work in a more coordinated and cross-border way for supervision".

Sweden also plans to "lay the foundations for a new growth and employment strategy" to help the millions of unemployed Europeans, according to its work program.

There is no time to lose if we don't want our children to experience drastically worse living conditions than we do.

Other priorities include EU enlargement, of which Sweden is a fierce advocate, improving European judicial cooperation, and developing a strategy to improve the Baltic Sea's marine environment and the region's growth potential.

Reinfeldt's government will host the European Commission for a meeting in Stockholm on Wednesday that will formally open the Swedish Presidency.

That will be followed by festivities at Stockholm's Skansen open air museum attended by the Swedish government, the Commission, Sweden's King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia, and the public.

Good luck with the EU Presidency!

"Alter alterius onera portate et sic adimplebitis legem Christi, Galatians 6:2.