At the time I am writing this, it looks almost certain that French electors are voting NON to the EU referendum.
But why?
After all, France (at least its farmers) has always benefited a lot from European funds and other apects. And the constitution has been drafted under the lead of a French politician, Valery Giscard d'Estaing (he was president of the republic in the late 70ies) to fix the broken Nice treaty (a half botched compromise adopted at the end of the French rotating EU presidency in 2001).
It instigate a more democratic functionning of the European Commission and clearer decision mechanisms, much needed to deal with the EU expansion -new members can mean gridlock under a qualified majority voting system.
So why say no this time?
It looks as there are several non's:
- Some left wing intellectuals like Laurent Fabius think the referefdum should be renegotiated
- More to the left (the ex. trotskysts) and the extreme right both think the constitution is too liberal and should be ditched
- But most electors just dislike the current president, Jacques Chiract (one of the most notably corrupted EU leaders) and its PM Raffarin. So instead of answering the question, they're telling their dislike of the current leadership. Annoying for the 122 millions of European who have already voted YES.
Check also those blogs if you speak French: