In just a month, Ireland’s 3m voters will decide the fate of the European Union’s Lisbon reform treaty.
Plans for a new president of the European Council, an overhaul of EU foreign policymaking, and an extension of majority voting amongst the 27 member states, which would abolish national vetoes on such sensitive subjects as asylum and immigration, energy and sport, hang on how the Irish vote in a second referendum.

Lehman Brothers 

