Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
In 1957, the European Union was founded to facilitate economic
and trade cooperation among six founding European members, with the
ready support of the United States. Since then, a cacophony of
integrationist and centralizing EU policies has added a deep
political dimension to the European project, most notably the
modern-day EU Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP). Brussels
is actively constructing a "speak with one voice" approach to
foreign policy whereby nation states will pool sovereign policy
making at the EU level. Several instruments and agencies already
exist to enact the CFSP, overseen by the EU's foreign policy "High
Representative" Javier Solana.
What does this mean for America's traditional allies in Europe,
such as Britain? The deep political integration of the EU, presided
over by its own supranational legal authority, has trumped
nation-state sovereign decision-making and degraded important
elements of the transatlantic alliance. What does this mean for the
United States and for NATO? A single European foreign policy
determined by Brussels, with a common defense structure, represents
the biggest geopolitical change in transatlantic affairs in half a
century.
Three British Conservative Party Members of the European
Parliament will give us their perspectives and what it means for
the UK-U.S. Special Relationship.
More About the Speakers
Chris Heaton-Harris MEP
UK, Conservative Party
Member of the Internal Market and
Consumer Protection Committee
Roger Helmer MEP
UK, Conservative Party
Member of the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs
Syed Kamall MEP
UK, Conservative Party
Member of the Committee on International Trade
Hosted By
Sally McNamara
Senior Policy Analyst, European Affairs
Read More