Friday, October 19, 2012

Not all European Federalists are Progressive

at 6 comments
king on horse img
Picture credit: Protesilaos Stavrou CC BY-NC-SA

The fact that the Norwegian Nobel Committee oversimplified and effectively distorted reality in order to award the European Union the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize was enough to remind us that there lately are many people who consider themselves European federalists. If we strip away the superficialities of self-admiration and cheerfulness that led many to wave the European banner and to chant paeans in the name of Europe; we shall discern a fundamental worldview which is allegedly inextricably bound up together with the idea of a Federal Europe: that of progress, of change and openness. In fact the identification between federalism and progressivism—or 'open-mindedness' to put it differently—has become such, that any self-centered priest of federalism is ipso facto a prudent, forward-looking and politically audacious individual willing to transcend the rigidities of the old nationalistic order of Europe. While there certainly are a few—fewer than what is commonly understood—federalists who are progressive, it is a lamentable error to consider the two as constituent parts of the same mode of political reasoning. To put it more bluntly, it is in most cases more proximate to reality to recognize that the proposition that federalists are progressive may be prevalent and valid only in fairytales.

The gradualist approach to integration which governments have adopted —and lauded— hitherto is on its own accord a form of timid or tacit conservatism, not progressivism, as it is predicated on the principle of preserving or favoring nation state sovereignty (for much more see here, here and here). Another manifestation of this age-old position is now being propounded on the grounds of some arid cost-benefit calculations which consider banking and fiscal union combined as the remedy to the financial crisis in the Euro area, suggesting that federalism is in effect nothing more than yet another neo-mercantilist edifice which needs to emerge from the now existing hypertrophic mercantile nation states, as their successor. Within this context where ideas are often inwardly perverted to the extent where their form becomes antithetical to their substance; a chorus of ignoramuses have had ample opportunities to expound to the absurdity commonly known by the fashionable motto "more Europe".

Understanding the emptiness of "more Europe" is important in intellectually penetrating and identifying the trends within federalism, for the sake of drawing a clear distinction between federalism and progressivism/open-mindeness. The proposition for "more Europe" is, in my humble opinion, the height of fallacious and muddled aggregative thinking, or more fully the pièce de résistance of cluelessness. What can it possibly mean other than a complete absurdity? For what is Europe? What is this exalted 'being' or 'thing' that the plonky federalists wish to increase in quantity? Is it more red tape and superfluous directives from Brussels? Is it more hypocrisy and euphemisms in political palaver? Is it yet an additional layer of legal, political and economic complexity that renders genuine democracy impossible? Is it the expansion of EU bureaucracy? Is it perhaps the creation of a European army, police, impregnable external borders and other features of a sovereign and mercantile state? Is it all of these together with many others which now characterize the gross inefficiency of the EU architecture?

A list of questions like these may be enough to shake one's faith in such naively romantic conceptualizations, yet despite the easiness with which this heap of illusions may be scattered to the winds, it still is important to stress that there is no such thing as a homogeneous, definite and specific 'being', 'thing' or even generic concept named 'Europe'. Europe per se is, strictly and properly speaking, just a word that anyone may utilize in different conditions to describe or propose a series of valid or (usually) erroneous facts or ideas. "More Europe" is in this sense nothing more than absurdity writ large.

Confusion and mushiness of mind are therefore among the key reasons why today's trendy federalists are not necessarily progressive. There is however another important factor which is concomitant with or strongly related to the above-mentioned tangle of misunderstandings; which is the delicate recrudescence of nationalism, mercantilism and imperialism, in the name of either "regaining the sovereignty from the markets" or "building a stronger Europe" or generally any other similar clarion call against perceived villains. In this frame of reasoning a federal Europe or rather "more Europe" is the best way to play, with efficiency, a hegemonic 'leading' role in the world, to counter the rise of other economies across the globe, to preserve our much-touted "achievements" and among others to supposedly put an abrupt end to the machinations of rapacious corporations, usually banks (even though such bank-bashing ignores the insight that mega-banks and established corporations are the very products of the existing corporate-capitalist system and are continuously being strengthened by red tape and state bungling as they are insulated from the regulative forces of genuine competition – see here, here and here among others).

Springing from these beliefs are such statements as a "post-national and post-sovereign Europe" which appear to be quite progressive, even radical to the inattentive listener or thinker. Yet the inferences to be drawn from these positions are quite clearly leading down the slippery path of a Europe that has certainly changed form, but which has retained its core essence in continuing to be national and sovereign. For if we are to replace the imaginary constructs of all nation states with an ever greater myth named (federal) Europe we are simply dealing with an issue of degree not principle. To construct a European nation is not progress at all, but only a mere shift in focus and scale of the same self-destructive ideas, 'we-they' syndromes, complexes of superiority and cultural chauvinism that have plagued this world for centuries.

Progress properly understood is not an opportunistic change of forms, nor a mere reallocation or redistribution of state supremacy, but a thoroughgoing and painstaking reformation of the entire set of ideas governing political life. The federalists who are genuinely progressive, in being unafraid to challenge the structures, fictions and figments of the previous and present eras, are indeed quite few, certainly significantly fewer than what appears to be the case in the exuberance of uninformed self-admiration that has lately been environing us. Besides with Mr Barroso, the Commission President, appearing as the latest cheerleader of 'federalism' it is readily apparent that the concept has been narrowed down to a technocratic affair of forging another system of governance, of bossing people around, so as to best flesh out the apocryphal caprices that our omniscient 'leaders' have for us.
Copyleft (ɔ) 2013 Protesilaos Stavrou—All wrongs reserved
Article source: http://www.protesilaos.com/2012/10/european-federalist-progressive.html
Protesilaos Stavrou—Analyses on European Union politics and political economy by Protesilaos Stavrou is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. All original works are hosted on www.protesilaos.com
The full scope of this license may be read at www.protesilaos.com/p/rights.html, while further permissions can be requested at www.protesilaos.com/p/contact.html
Protesilaos Stavrou Picture Author

Protesilaos Stavrou

I specialize in European Union politics and the political economy of the Euro area. I am a left libertarian, a relativist and a Cynic in the original sense of the latter term. I was born in Greece in 1988 and since February 2012 I live in Brussels, where I work at the European Parliament as an assistant to an MEP. The opinions Ι express on this website and my other social media profiles are strictly personal and do not reflect the views of any employers, organizations or institutions that are, have been, or may be affiliated with me.

See full profile.

6 comments:

  1. Overall, a good analysis, and I get your general point (which I also share) that many who call for "more Europe" sometimes are, at the end of the day, substantially conservatives, since they are only interested in the conservation and strengthening of some forms of power, outside the democratic control and accountability (the bureaucracy argument, etc etc..). True that.


    However... Federalism is something else. Federalists are not just pro-Europeans, but they are true progressists (by definition). And surely they are not fighting for a "European nation". I have never met a federalist in my life who uses the word 'nation' while speaking about Europe.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It is indeed fair to say that federalists never make use of the term 'nation' in any explicit way. This however does not mean that a given federal state will refrain from setting in place policies and social constructs which are inherent in nation-state and national-identity building. Economic nationalism for instance may be set in place by any sort of European political entity, including a federation properly understood.

    On the issue of federalists being progressists by definition that you mentioned, I will have to disagree with you. Strictly speaking a 'federation' is a system of governance concerning the distribution of power and the relations between the various levels of administration. As such there is nothing intrinsically ideological in federalism per se. This of course does not mean, as I already mentioned in the article, that some federalists are indeed progressive.

    The basic point remains that there needs to be a de-homogenization of terms and concepts, both for understanding political phenomena and for being precise and specific.

    ReplyDelete
  3. So,we have progressive and concervative federalists.But we have those (progressives and conservatives) in national level ,too.It is up to the people to see through them.A good goverment is one that puts in place laws to help people and not individuals.Lets have a good European goverment.
    A good analysis.

    ReplyDelete
  4. You do know how to hit the nail squarely on the head. I for one would if asked prior to the current construct of the EU if I would like to see a political and economic union of European nations I would have said yes. It would not have occurred to me that by doing so I was endorsing the growth of a malignant monster. I should have known because the EU is only a magnified mirror image of nation states that have for some decades now being following policies and practices (which to me come under the banner of social democracy) that are not in their best interests. Could the construct of the EU have been any different than it has now become? I do not believe so because what is driving the engine of EU integration is as much for self preservation as for anything else. If nation states had not embraced social democracy so wholeheartedly as they have and preserved all that was best in the free market capitalist system then the EU would never have been born instead we would have a thriving common market with varying levels of inter-state cooperation.

    ReplyDelete
  5. There are different types of federalismas as different types of
    federalists. I do believe there are federalists from the right to the the left...
    My experience in Brussels and working with JEF has showed me the diversity of
    thinking of European federalism, and the ways how to achieve it. I agree with you that a "truly" European federalist does not need to be progressist. In my case, I
    have a battle last weeks with myself because of the Catalonia thingy. I am
    starting to support an independent Catalonia, so I am less "European"
    that any other? My answer would be a big no, but I have different conception of
    a Federal Europe than the classic one. Maybe we are in a new level, and we need
    theory to explain all of this. Referendum on independence in Scotland,
    separatist demonstrations in Catalonia, large parades of the Silesian autonomy
    movement in Poland - supranationalism and regionalism challenge the traditional
    position of the "old states" as the basic organization units of the
    European political space...

    ReplyDelete
  6. Very valid points and as you know I effectively agree with you on the independence of Catalonia. This does not make you less 'European' in any sense.


    It is indeed a moment in history where the idea of a centralized nation-state is being brought into question by several forces.
    This can certainly be a very positive evolution in overcoming the fictions of the Westphalian perception of state and the consequent nationalism it engendered.
    On the other hand it might prove to be nothing more than a repetition of the same old modes of political thought in creating yet more squabbling (nation-)states. It might be a recrudescence of the same old theories on the imaginary institution of society, only this time they will be on a different geographic scale.
    I guess the final outcome will depend on the theories that will emerge to describe this phenomenon or to direct it.

    ReplyDelete

All comments are held for moderation only for the sake of avoiding spam and malicious content—no censorship is intended. For formal purposes, it should be noted that by commenting, you agree to the guidelines of this blog's comment policy, such as avoiding profanity and respecting the views of others.