When Culture Becomes Politics. Thomas Pedersen

When Culture Becomes Politics - Thomas Pedersen


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The commitment to a social Europe is confirmed in the Berlin declaration, which refers to justice, social responsibility and solidarity as European values.3

      Europeans are deeply divided on the issue of the place of religion in society with 46 % saying that it is too important and 48 % disagreeing. On this question many French and German politicians take opposite views with German Christian democrats advocating the inclusion of a reference to Christianity in the EU constitution and French politicians calling for a clear separation between religion and politics in European – as well as national – politics.

      We may, however, be dealing with a spurious relationship in that many respondents may have been thinking about Muslim immigration when responding to the general question about religion. Unfortunately, Eurobarometer tends to ask one-off questions without following up with control questions, which is also the case here. However, in a separate question Eurobarometer does enquire about attitudes to immigrants. Interestingly, a majority of Europeans do not agree with the proposition that … “immigrants contribute a lot to our country”. Thus probably the surprisingly high number of people saying that they think religion plays too big a role in European society should not be interpreted as an indication that many Europeans are becoming atheists, but rather as a sign that there is widespread concern about the strong presence of a non-European religion on European soil.

      Homosexual marriages and child adoption by homosexual couples are rejected by a clear majority of European citizens with only 32 % in support, and there is even stronger opposition to the legalisation of cannabis. This pits the majority of Europeans against very libertarian nations like the Netherlands.

      As regards the proposed European constitution, over half of the people living in the countries, which at the time of the survey had not yet ratified the treaty establishing the European constitution, supported the constitution (53 %). This represents an improvement of 6 % compared with spring 2006. But it is a far cry from the large majorities normally associated with constitutional decisions.

      The European citizens’ attitude to the European institutions is not very well analyzed by Eurobarometer. Significantly, in a 2006-poll the question is not asked, what Europeans think about the European institutions as a whole, but instead a comparison about trust in individual institutions is made. This is a clever tactical move in that it sidesteps the fundamental question, if the current set of European institutions are deemed worthy of support and trust.

      The European Parliament remains the most trusted European institution with 52 % of all EU-citizens trusting it. The European Commission is trusted by 48 % of Europeans. Once again, the validity of this polling can be questioned. In recent years the summits (European Council) have gained in importance as an agenda-setting institution. Yet, neither the attitude to the European Council nor the attitude to the Council of ministers has been examined.

      Turning to more traditional questions, one notes a very considerable support for a common European foreign policy (68 %), and an even higher support for a common security and defence policy (75 %). The latter figure is surprisingly high and probably to some extent reflects context-specific factors such as widespread concern over US-policy in Iraq.

      To enquire about European identity also begs the question, which Europe? Not only in geographical terms but also in cultural and ideological terms. Our knowledge on this matter is imperfect in a number of respects. Thus a number of the existing polls, for instance on attitudes to citizens from other countries, only cover attitudes in the EU-15. We do however have data on EU-25 attitudes to further enlargement. On average, 46 % of EU citizens support further enlargement, while 42 % oppose it. This is a very significant opposition and a politically relevant opposition, since an important country


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