European Integration. Mark Gilbert

European Integration - Mark Gilbert


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30–31, 1998: Accession negotiations with Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Poland, and Slovenia begin.

      June 1, 1998: European Central Bank instituted.

      September 27, 1998: Helmut Kohl’s sixteen-year leadership of Germany is ended when Gerhard Schroder’s SPD win control of the Bundestag.

      January 1, 1999: Participant currencies in the euro fix their exchange rates.

      March 15, 1999: European Commission resigns following the publication of a report on fraud, wasteful management, and cronyism. Several commissioners, including Edith Cresson, a former prime minister of France, are criticized by name.

      May 1, 1999: The Amsterdam Treaty comes into force.

      June 3–5, 1999: Javier Solana (Spain) nominated as first EU high representative for foreign policy.

      June 10–13, 1999: Fifth elections to the European Parliament. Turnout, at 49 percent, is a record low.

      October 15–16, 1999: Tampere European Council in Finland is the first to give most of its time to justice and home affairs.

      2000s

      January 15, 2000: Accession negotiations begin with Bulgaria, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Romania, and Slovakia. IGC on institutional amendments to EU treaty begin in February.

      May 12, 2000: Joschka Fischer, German foreign minister, argues in Berlin for a federal European state or else the possibility of a group of states pressing ahead to more advanced forms of integration.

      September 28, 2000: Danes vote against joining euro.

      December 7–10, 2000: Nice European Council makes further cosmetic changes to the EU’s institutional structures and welcomes the Charter of Fundamental Human Rights without incorporating it into the treaty.

      February 26, 2001: Treaty of Nice signed in Brussels.

      June 7, 2001: Irish voters reject the Treaty of Nice. They later approve it in a second referendum on October 19, 2002.

      September 11, 2001: Destruction of World Trade Center. EU begins work on a draft of antiterrorism measures and proposes the introduction of a “European arrest warrant” to eliminate lengthy extradition procedures.

      December 14–15, 2001: Laeken European Council institutes a “Convention,” chaired by a former French president, Valery Giscard d’Estaing, on the EU’s institutional and political future.

      January 1, 2002: Euro notes and coins begin to circulate throughout most of the Union.

      February 28, 2002: The Convention begins work.

      December 12–13, 2002: Copenhagen European Council recommends entry of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Malta, and Cyprus in 2004.

      April 16, 2003: Accession treaties signed with Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia in Athens.

      October 4, 2003: Constitutional Treaty IGC begins.

      May 1, 2004: Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia join the EU. The EU’s membership is now twenty-five.

      June 10–13, 2004: European Parliament elections are held.

      June 18, 2004: IGC ends with an agreement on Constitutional Treaty.

      July 22, 2004: The European Parliament approves the appointment of Jose Manuel Barroso (Portugal) as the Commission’s new president.

      October 29, 2004: The EU member states sign the treaty establishing a Constitution of Europe in Rome.

      April 25, 2005: Accession treaties signed with Bulgaria and Romania in Luxembourg. Actual accessions are scheduled to take place in 2007.

      May 29, 2005: French “no” to the Constitutional Treaty.

      June 1, 2005: Dutch “no” to the Constitutional Treaty. European Council begins a “period of reflection” on European Constitution.

      October 3, 2005: Accession negotiations with Turkey and Croatia begin.

      January 1, 2007: The accession of Bulgaria and Romania completes the fifth enlargement of the EU.

      July 23, 2007: Member states’ representatives meet in Brussels for an IGC on a draft reform treaty to amend the EU treaties.

      December 13, 2007: The Treaty of Lisbon is signed at Mosteiro dos Jeronimos, in Lisbon.

      December 21, 2007: The Schengen area is enlarged to include Estonia, the Czech Republic, Lithuania, Hungary, Latvia, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia.

      January 1, 2008: Cyprus and Malta adopt the Euro.

      June 12, 2008: Ireland rejects the Treaty of Lisbon in a referendum.

      September 1, 2008: The EU leaders meet at a summit to discuss the fighting in Georgia and condemn Russia’s “disproportionate reaction.”

      December 12, 2008: The European Council adopts the Economic Recovery Plan.

      January 1, 2009: Slovakia adopts the euro.

      June 4–7, 2009: European Parliament elections are held.

      July 23, 2009: Iceland applies for EU membership.

      September 16, 2009: The European Parliament approves the nomination of Jose Manuel Barroso for a second five-year term as president of the European Commission.

      October 3, 2009: Ireland approves the Lisbon Treaty in a second referendum.

      December 1, 2009: The Lisbon Treaty comes into effect.

      2010s

      February 9, 2010: The European Parliament approves the Barroso II Commission.

      May 7, 2010: Together with the IMF, EU leaders approve emergency funding, worth up to €750 billion, to bail out members of the Eurozone unable to finance their national debt.

      June 17, 2010: The European Council decides to open accession negotiations with Iceland. European Council adopts Europe 2020 strategy for “smart, sustainable and inclusive growth.”

      November 28, 2010: The EU agrees to support the Irish economy to help safeguard the stability of the euro.

      January 1, 2011: Estonia adopts the euro, the seventeenth state to do so.

      March 25, 2011: “Euro Plus” pact adopted by European Council.

      August


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