Eu cred în tine. Crezi şi tu cu mine?
Eu, Adina Vălean, am ajuns la Bruxelles fiindcă mi-am dorit şi fiindca am muncit din greu ca să fiu europarlamentar. Alţii dintre noi ajung în Spania sau în Italia, unde muncesc mai din greu ca mine, pentru banii pe care îi aduc în România. De aceea, eu cred în muncă şi în spiritul întreprinzător. Unul din visele frumoase ale românilor era, înainte de 1989, acela de a pleca într-o ţară din Vest. Acum, de la intrarea în Uniunea Europeană, avem acest drept.

Dreptul la liberă circulaţie, pe care îl susţin, înseamna că fiecare dintre noi poate să îşi aleagă orice loc din Europa pentru a munci, a se distra sau a îşi stabili reşedinţa. Fiecare are drumul lui în viaţă. De aceea, eu cred în tine, la fel cum cred şi în mine, şi în oricine lucreaza onest pentru binele propriu, fie înăuntrul României, fie în afara ei. Fiindcă binele fiecaruia este binele nostru.

Te invit şi pe tine să crezi - să crezi că îţi va fi mai bine!

Speech in plenul Parlamentului European

26 03 2008


0

In numele grupului liberal din Parlamentul Europei, dna Valean a luat azi cuvantul in plen la dezbaterea concluziilor summitului Consiliului European de pe 13-14 martie. Iata mai jos, in original, transcriptul acestui speech:

One thing is certain – without the pressure of collective action and accountability Member States would lack the will to act on climate change.  Yet the inconvenient truth for the EU is that summit conclusions are often long on rhetoric and short on delivery.

We already see signs of Member States looking for ways to cut corners and costs on last year’s political commitments even though the Stern report of 2006 warned that the costs of action now are far less than the costs of inaction later.

Some of the language in the final conclusions suggests that the urgency and imperative of responding to climate change is already waning. This would spell disaster both for our climate and credibility.

Somewhat overlooked in this debate is energy efficiency – the simplest and most cost-effective way of reducing our overall emissions.  An early draft of the Council conclusions committed Member States to a 10% reduction in energy use in government buildings and car fleets, yet now reads simply as “substantial progress”. It would be a small but significant gesture that governments are leading by example.

The Spring summit each year between now and 2020 should provide a scoreboard of progress in reducing our demand on scarce resources.

Fiscal instruments to stimulate better environmental behaviour should indeed be exploited. ETS has proved its worth and been taken up as a global standard for providing economic incentives for emissions reductions. Green taxes such as reduced VAT rates can also have a similar effect by stimulating demand for low-consumption vehicles and domestic appliances.

Turning to the economic aspects of the Summit, the conclusions boast that the fundamentals of the EU economy remain sound. Yet this is not how the outlook is perceived by many of our citizens facing higher bills and growing indebtedness which should caution us against excessive optimism.

The underlying principles of the Lisbon Strategy are worth recalling – structural reforms, fiscal discipline and targeted investment in productive areas that will deliver future growth. EU Member States remain (with 1 or 2 honourable exceptions) well short of their commitment to spending 3% of their GDP on R&D.

Now we talk of a Fifth Freedom for knowledge and innovation but we should not forget that we have not yet managed to complete the original Four Freedoms – especially in the area of free movement of labour and services across the whole of the EU.

Finally, support for SMEs is rightly identified as key to economic growth and innovation. We must enable them to reap the full benefit from the Internal Market.  The Council could achieve much for European competitiveness by bringing the long-running disputes over a European patent and private company statute to a successful conclusion.

The Council conclusions cautiously declare that the challenge is to deliver. The Parliament for its part certainly will.

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Intervenţii în plen în limba engleză

14 03 2008


3

De fiecare data când ia cuvântul în plenul Parlamentului European, fie că se află în sesiune la Strasbourg, fie că e la Bruxelles, dna Adina Vălean se adresează auditoriului în limba engleză. Şi pentru că foarte puţini dintre cei ce citesc acest blog au acces la speech-urile dânsei în limba engleză am decis să le publicăm pe site. Iată mai jos cea mai recentă intervenţie în plen a doamnei europarlamentar. Comentariile pot fi făcute şi în engleză :-)

Commissioner, dear colleagues,

2009 will be the year of enormous changes. A new Commission, new Parliament and a new Treaty. For the first time a in a “reunited Europe” our citizens will get the chance to vote all at the same time for their representatives at European level. 2009 will turn a fresh new page for Europe. I believe 2009 should be the year of free movement for all our citizens and that priority should be high on our agenda. By the end of this year, the Commission will present two related reports on free movement. The first one will probably advise the Member States to lift the transitional arrangements applied to the workers coming from the new Member States. The second report will evaluate the implementation of the of the directive regarding the free movement of citizens by the Member States. Considering the latest state of play, a large number of States might be sent to the EU Court of Justice.

If we are to be true about one of the fundamental freedoms enshrined in the Treaties and if we are serious about making the Lisbon Strategy a reality, time has come to put an end to verbal action and start the real action! All the fears that governed the transitional arrangements put in place since the 2004 enlargement now start to dissipate. No economic, security or demographic reason stands for keeping the work restrictions for another five years, on the contrary! A free European market is what is needed to talk about Europe as a model, as a partner and as a world leader. We are now regulating access to the European labour market for third country citizens. Fair enough and much appreciated. But first, let’s sort things out in our own courtyard, let´s have a coherent and common policy on free movement of workers inside the Union. The European Union in 2009 should be one of equity among all European citizens. Let´s show our citizens that we are serious about it. I repeat it, 2009 should be the year of free movement!

P.S.: Este vorba de speech-ul din 11.03.2008 rostit în faţa Comisiei Europene şi a Parlamentului la dezbaterea prilejuită de prezentarea priorităţilor politice pentru anul viitor.

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