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Why are non-Eurozone safeguards so important?
Open Europe's paper lays out the three key points underlying this sentiment:
How could non-Eurozone safeguards be structured?
What are the mechanisms to introduce such non-Eurozone safeguards?
As we say in the report, undoubtedly the best way to do this would be to have treaty change and ultimately this should be the goal – a clearer institutional and legal settlement between ins and outs engrained in the EU framework. However, this is only likely to be found once the Eurozone actually figures out where it is headed. But in the interim there is still a clear need for such safeguards, as explained above, and not least because the process of the Eurozone figuring out where it is going should not trample non-Eurozone states.
But there is also something underlying what Osborne is saying, which is that some of this might be done through a post-dated protocol and promise to incorporate new rules into future treaties. While this certainly can, should and probably will form part of these safeguards, they should not entirely be done this way. As such, Open Europe’s proposal for immediate changes to the voting rules combined with intergovernmental agreement which would be incorporated into the treaties as soon as possible, is in my view stronger than what Osborne was touching on in his comments which focused just on the latter part. With the referendum campaign coming and the result far from clear cut, the Government will need to come to the game with more than just post-dated promises, that is for certain.
Furthermore, new voting rights for non-euro countries could be agreed without EU treaty change. They could be written into the existing EU voting procedures in the Council of Ministers and via a separate intergovernmental legal agreement. The changes would require unanimity among national governments, but could only be undone by unanimity (i.e. with the UK’s consent).
Formal recognition of the EU as a ‘multi-currency union’ and a new right of appeal for those not taking part in enhanced cooperation would be best achieved by treaty change but could be subject to a political agreement and a separate intergovernmental legal agreement, pending subsequent treaty change. As the Financial Times notes, there are limits to what can be under intergovernmental treaties and they cannot directly contradict the EU treaties. However, there is precedent for them complementing the treaties, such as the Fiscal compact between Eurozone states. Furthermore, agreements pertaining to political decisions are not dictated by the treaties so having them agreed intergovernmentally should be possible. As always in the EU, when there is a will (which there increasingly seems to be) there is a way.
Safeguarding non-eurozone states’ rights is key to new EU settlement – here’s how to do it