EU Leaders Gather in Lisbon for Treaty Talks
October 18, 2007
European Union leaders are gathering in Lisbon, Portugal, to try to end a two-year dispute about how the group should be run.
The 27 leaders will discuss a draft treaty that would streamline EU institutions and speed up decision-making.
Portuguese Foreign Minister Jose Socrates, whose country currently holds the rotating EU presidency, acknowledged that some problems remain. But he called their scope limited and said the leaders should be able to reach agreement on the document.
Italy is threatening to veto the new treaty, due to changes under which it would lose six of its current 78 seats in the European Parliament and lose parity with Britain and France.
For his part, Polish President Lech Kaczynski repeated Polish demands that the treaty include a provision allowing a minority of nations to temporarily delay EU decisions.
If approved, the treaty would extend the EU rotating presidency to a two-year term and give the bloc more say in foreign and internal security policy. The document would replace the draft EU constitution rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005.Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.
EU Leaders Gather in Lisbon for Treaty Talks by VOA News









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