27 comments

  • iknownothow 14 minutes ago

    Out of curiosity, can there not be something like a two party or N party veto? i.e. requiring a minimum of two or N parties to work together to veto?

    The choice between just a single party having a veto power vs no party with veto powers seems a little black and white to me. Happy to be enlightened on the matter.

    • snowpid 4 minutes ago

      An N party veto is called a quorum. So if you need 75 % of all countries, it is a 7 nation veto.

  • dh2022 an hour ago

    Interesting situation. EU is asking countries to give up their right to veto foreign policy decisions. Any country can veto this proposal.

    Hmmm, what would I do if giving up the right to veto hinged on my veto power?

  • iammjm 33 minutes ago

    To all against a priori against this, I encourage you to read up on the history and consequences of "liberum veto"

    • busterarm 27 minutes ago

      This is very short term thinking.

      The EU will not survive losing the veto. And it'll happen in under a decade.

  • solaarphunk an hour ago

    Brussels appears to be extremely tone deaf to the basic needs of ordinary people, and taking further steps in a direction to centralize power is just going to push more people to the far right.

    For example, the fact that right-wing governments in central and eastern Europe are protecting their borders, represents a very popular perspective, apparently shared by very few in the EU governing body.

    Consolidating power at a moment when many EU policies are clearly unpopular seems like it will have unintended consequences.

    • snowpid 3 minutes ago

      " ... apparently shared by very few in the EU governing body." Source? Given Frontex' action I doubt it.

  • watwut 3 hours ago

    It is actually a good idea.

    • barbazoo 2 hours ago

      I see no path where this would be a good idea unless you want to create a group where everyone thinks the same. If Hungary is a bit of a flip flop in terms of democracy then either they have to focus their attention on improving living conditions there so people realize the value of their alliance (if that's the purpose, improving living conditions) or realize that Hungary isn't a good fit for this type of alliance and kick it out.

      Removing veto power probably makes it more likely that the next Orban pulls them out of the EU entirely which might not be in the interest of the alliance.

      • watwut 2 hours ago

        First, Hungary is not a "a bit of a flip flop in terms of democracy". They are just not fully democratic country anymore, full stop. The system there did not changed, judiciary, media and the rest of the country are as much in the hands of a leader and easy to be abused as yesterday. The person on top of it changed. He did promised reforms, it remains to be seen whether they happen or not.

        But second, regardless of Hungary, anyone can veto is dysfunctional system.

        > unless you want to create a group where everyone thinks the same.

        Everyone has veto is literally a system where everyone must think the same, else nothing will happen.

        > Removing veto power probably makes it more likely that the next Orban pulls them out of the EU entirely which might not be in the interest of the alliance.

        That would be bad for Hungary, but good for the rest of Europe. Hungary presence in EU was damaging to EU for years now.

        • dh2022 an hour ago

          Ditto. EU would be much better without Hungary. And if on their way out Hungary could leave with Slovakia that would be even better.

        • _zoltan_ an hour ago

          We are fully democratic as shown by outing Orban last night.

          Doesn't mean we should just blindly vote with the herd.

        • redeeman 2 hours ago

          > Everyone has veto is literally a system where everyone must think the same, else nothing will happen.

          thats not true, it just means that everone must not be extremely opposed to something for it to happen.

          • watwut an hour ago

            No, it means anyone can make any decision hostage. They do not need to be extremely opposed. They just need to slightly not want it.

            • dh2022 an hour ago

              This is a very simplistic view. There are benefits to approving things one dislikes slightly: like being able to influence decisions which are personally important. Rejecting things you disagree a bit with just because you can leads to being ignored. Like for example Orban - did anyone in the EU take this guy seriously in the past few years? EU more or less talked over his head (and the head of Slovakia as well)

            • redeeman 21 minutes ago

              and yet this is clearly not what has happened. you COULD make any decision hostage, but thats not what anyone does, as such, the veto has a very important purpose, and removing it would be betraying the terms that the union was based on, just because people are now members. its basically "I altered the deal, pray I dont alter it further"

  • raxxorraxor 4 hours ago

    The EU has a problem with a lack of legitimisation of the whole political construct and other power players know about this weakness. The degree of freedom in political decision is strongly inhibited.

    This wouldn't solve any problems either, on the contrary. Personally I don't feel like a EU citizen. It is like being a citizen of a bureaucratic monster that serves no specific function. That tries to justify its existence not through being a guardian of common values, but a bureaucracy of not-quite-experts.

    I genuinely wonder about people that feel patriotic about the EU. I have nothing against them, I just don't want to share the same house.

    Orban was someone to point the finger to for what feels like decades. To see this result and extract a mission to extend EU powers is delusional in my opinion.

    • torginus 3 hours ago

      I think the EU is just a bunch of countries in a trenchcoat. The main reason for this is the lack of mobility between countries. Each country has its own language, and more importantly social security, benefits, taxes, and the properties are much more expensive compared to salaries than pretty much anywhere in the world.

      So either you're a long term renter with locked in low rates, or own an apt, so you have very little incentive to move. People who do move usually come from a poorer part to a richer part, and once in their lives, or they move to a warmer country like Spain when they retire.

    • ahartmetz 3 hours ago

      There could also hardly be a worse representative than von der Leyen. She is the perfect example of an incredibly unpopular and even incapable (she did terribly as the German minister of defense) but cunning career politician who SOMEHOW made it to a top position in the EU.

  • nickysielicki 3 hours ago

    > Orbán, the EU’s most autocratic leader […] lost by a decisive margin in Sunday’s vote, amid the highest turnout in Hungary’s democratic history.

    What a ridiculous sentence. He’s an autocrat, but he’s out of power after losing a democratic election. Which is it?

    Words have meaning.

    • atoav 2 hours ago

      Yes they do. A kindergardener can lead their kindergarden in an autocratic style. That means they (=auto) decide (=cratos) things and don't e.g. ask others (=demos) in a democratic sense.

      Then they can still end up being fired. Autocratic is a style of leadership, and nowhere in the definition does it say autocrats can't be removed from their position of power. Sure, it is hard to remove autocrats once they have consolidated power, but that doesn't mean they are not autocrats before they did.

      Whst you do is like calling a fire only a fire if it burns down a house. But that would be too late you know?

    • watwut 3 hours ago

      It was election, but Hungarian democracy is severely lacking and barely a democracy. A miracle happened, because too many people were too pissed at Orban. That does not make the country non autocratic, it means miracle happened and now new guys has all that power.

      • redeeman 2 hours ago

        haha, a miracle happened, people voted someone out, but its NOT a democracy.

        why is it so needed to try paint it as not a democracy when it has CLEARLY proven that it is such

        • watwut an hour ago

          Mostly because I know more about Hungarian system then you. It is was not clearly proven as such. The system is still heavily favoring one party. Just because you can flip who is on top of all stars align and 80% of voters come in mostly does not make it functional democracy worth the name. Orban was able to stay in power so long, because anything less then that would mean he gets all that power again. Opposition media and parties in the country were destroyed long time ago. Judiciary is routinely abused.

          Simple as that. Yes, it was pro-democracy, anti-Russia, pro-EU vote. That does not mean Hungary changed over time. It means it has one last chance at reform. If it does not reform, there will be no way to flip it in elections the next time.

          And yes, American conservative fans of Orban know all of that - Rubio, Vance, Rod Dreher, Peterson. They loved and admired the arrangement and want to emulate it.

          • redeeman 22 minutes ago

            "one last chance to reform", i dont buy it. these things happen, and will happen again. people have been predicting doom for thousands of years, but this time its truly the last!

    • barbazoo 3 hours ago

      I think there's quite a difference between calling someone an autocrat vs an autocratic leader, the latter being more of a characterization of how they are leading, which is I imagine why those words were chosen.

      • hellojimbo 2 hours ago

        How does an autocratic leader lose an election, can Xi lose an election?