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News item | 23-06-2007
The member states of the EU have reached an agreement on a new treaty. According to Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, the document 'does justice to the views held by a large proportion of the population about Europe'.
The European heads of government reached agreement about the content of a new treaty in Brussels on Saturday 23 June 2007.
The new pact will be an amending treaty aimed at concrete improvements. 'We will now have a new treaty, without pretensions but with ambitions,' said Balkenende.
The prime minister spoke after the summit ended of a 'tough fight'. 'There was a lot at stake for the Netherlands and for all the member states. But in the end we worked it out together. The Netherlands and Europe can move on,' he said.
'The Netherlands can move on because the result is really very different to what we had two years ago. Justice has been done to the views of a large section of the Dutch people on Europe.
'And Europe can move on because it is focusing on the things that we really need to solve together. We have agreed ground rules that will make the Union of 27 countries more efficient.'
The summit was a 'success for all of us,' Balkenende said, 'with one winner: the European citizen.'
The prime minister mentioned several points agreed by the EU member states:
The treaty will address important issues like mitigating climate change. The EU's pioneering role on this point is being underscored. But the treaty will not include matters that do not need to be in it. While the rights in the Charter of Fundamental Rights will become binding, for example, they will not be incorporated as a whole in the treaty. The rights of Dutch citizens will now be protected from any infringement by the European Union.
Balkenende also mentioned a number of useful provisions from the Constitutional Treaty that will be maintained:
'With this treaty, the Netherlands and Europe are taking a major step forward,' Balkenende said. 'The government will send this message with conviction. The outcome fullly acknowledges the concerns that the Dutch people expressed through their vote on the referendum.'