Even before French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrives in Dublin on Monday, his visit is fraught with difficulties. Comments in advance of his trip suggesting that Ireland should have another referendum on the Lisbon treaty quickly are exactly what pro-Europeans in Ireland did not want to hear. They suggest that the president of the European Council shares in an emerging European view of the Irish No vote that is neither accurate nor helpful and that, if left unchallenged, has the potential to steer the European Union into an even great imbroglio that the one in which it already finds itself. Three assumptions being made about the Irish vote are particularly problematic.
The first is the notion that the result of the Irish referendum is essentially an Irish problem, rather than a European one. Not so. Ireland is the only country whose constitution requires a popular vote on the treaty. So, EU leaders would do well to pay close attention to what Ireland’s voters are telling them. Of course, the Irish electorate is only a tiny proportion of Europe’s population, but so far, ours is the only expression of popular will on the Lisbon treaty. As I pointed out to my fellow leaders within the party of European Socialists at our pre-summit meeting in Brussels, a significant number of European countries would find themselves in the same position as Ireland, if they were to hold plebiscites on the treaty.

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