The Malta Independent on Sunday

Prime Minister in the dock

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Iwatched most of the European Parliament sitting on Tuesday, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in the dock facing an enraged Parliament with smirks, winks and comments with his immediate entourage.

The vote, the next day, was heavily against Orban but until the eve, nobody could be certain because Fidesz, Orban’s party, is still a mem- ber of the European People’s Party and nobody knew how the EPP MEPs would vote.

Still, the vote and the aftermath showed up the immense fragility of the EU – far, very far, from the gruesome monolith that the Brexit people, for instance, believe.

Do you think that the negative vote against Orban will have any effect? Not at all – at least as far as I can see.

The issue will now pass on but not for action.

On a local level, yet another visit by the EU committee investigat­ing the rule of law in Malta will not be able to interview PM Muscat since he will be at an EU summit. So will happen in Slovakia, where another EU committee is due.

Orban, and Poland’s government, are thus free to continue going their own way, despite grumbles and threats by the EU elite. Their voting rights will not be suspended and this is the clue as to why other countries will be tempted to disregard threats of EU sanctions and go their own way. The next to be tempted will be Italy, with a Euroscepti­c government.

And at this very moment when the UK is leaving the Union because the EU is too overbearin­g and rides roughshod over the member states, the other member states are finding out that the emperor has no clothes, and the EU no teeth.

“Your country is the most corrupt country in Europe,” thundered Guy Verhofstad­t, obviously referring to Hungary. But in the course of the debate, other countries were mentioned : Romania and Bulgaria – and even Malta. One could add others: Estonia for the Danske Bank scandal, Cyprus for the banking crisis, Luxembourg for the sweetheart deals with big companies at the time when Jean-Claude Juncker was PM, etc., etc.

And yet the EU that has been built up despite these scandals, although not complete yet, is a haven of peace for its inhabitant­s, an economic bloc that has again found the growth path, a continent that has not followed the US in ultra-libertaria­n ways and that has privileged social legislatio­n and frameworks and a continent that, as those who venture beyond its shores find out, has standardis­ed and simplified modern living in the face of the increasing complexity of living.

Once again, this is a Europe of peoples, not the behemoth ogre of the euroscepti­cs. As someone said during the EP debate, Orban is PM because the people chose him. I can think of many others to whom those words apply.

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