It seems that the lack of scrutiny for Parliament since the Lisbon Treaty came into effect is not restricted to the SWIFT agreement.
Two different agreements on the sharing of passenger-name records (with the US and Australia), and an extradition agreement between the EU and Iceland and Norway have both seen their scrutiny time cut short in January.
Maybe the relevant department took a holiday on 17 December, when the Memorandum was due to be deposited, but that doesn't explain why they failed to do so until 19 and 20 January respectively. While these measures are not as controversial as SWIFT, it would be nice to see the Government adhering on all these proposals to the assurances it made on Parliamentary scrutiny when it was ramming the Lisbon Treaty through.
This is important stuff, as it strikes at the very heart of national democracy and scrutiny in the wake of the Lisbon Treaty (which, on the whole, reduces the role of national parliaments in EU decision making).
A shame so few people are paying attention.
This is important stuff, as it strikes at the very heart of national democracy and scrutiny in the wake of the Lisbon Treaty (which, on the whole, reduces the role of national parliaments in EU decision making).
A shame so few people are paying attention.
The EU has plans to censor the net:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.boingboing.net/2010/03/25/child-abuse-survivor.html
This leaked doc might deserve a post of its own. Under the guise of "protecting the kiddies" (it would do no such thing - the scum use P2P, email or the dark net for their crimes), the Commission could censor the member states' web access.
That. Is. Absolutely. Terrifying.