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Showing 50 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
02 May 2000
Reporter (Terms of Reference)
The enlargement of the European Union is a huge topic. Some 11 countries are applying for membership, of which six will come in the first wave. Because of the size of the issue, I am conscious that our investigation must be relevant to Scotland: we must focus on what we can in...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
09 May 2001
European Union
I do not know about that.At least the Labour party has the freedom to change its mind, as we have the freedom to change our minds. That freedom would be denied us if we were to enter a single European currency. Scotland has benefited from membership of Europe. The free trade t...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
30 Nov 2000
Europe
Not yet. The real confusion is over the other two parties. The Labour party is in principle in favour of the euro, but only when the economic criteria have been satisfied. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the criteria have been satisfied...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
30 Nov 2000
Europe
We will make approaches to our colleagues at Westminster to try to ensure that Scotland has a good voice—certainly a better voice than it has when a minister does not turn up for a meeting.The Executive would no doubt say that UK ministers and the Foreign Office protect our in...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
04 Mar 2003
Executive Priorities<br />(Greek Presidency)
I am grateful, minister, that you should come in front of us with such a broad remit. As the Greek presidency is specifically on the agenda today, I hope that you will be able to answer some more detailed questions. Enlargement and the signing of the accession treaty will obvi...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
04 Mar 2003
Executive Priorities<br />(Greek Presidency)
We all agree with that, and that was the thrust of our report. However, it is not the impact of enlargement per se that we are interested in, but the impact of the derogations from EU law. We are obliged as member states in ways in which the applicant countries are not, and th...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
18 Jan 2001
Fisheries
No means no. I am sure that Mike Rumbles learned that in the Army education corps or wherever.When we come to future European negotiations, we should look at how the German Länder operate. Germany has a much better system for negotiating, which relates to its regions. Scotland...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
13 Mar 2003
International Situation
The next few days will be vital to the future of Britain and how it decides to tackle Iraq. The Prime Minister will have to decide whether Britain's interest should come before the interests of the United Nations, China and Russia. This war is not about the diplomatic hoops th...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
30 Jan 2001
Common Fisheries Policy
I return to enlargement. Have any of the organisations that are represented here been consulted by the Scottish Executive or the UK Government on the impact of enlargement to include the four Baltic countries? The fleets of most of those countries have an interest in herring a...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
22 May 2001
EU Governance
I am aware of the time. If my question is short and the answers are brief, I will not annoy my colleagues.I want to go back to comments that were made by José María Muñoa Ganuza from the Basque region, and to get a view from the members of Commission.Mr Bore said that the matt...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
18 Jun 2002
Representation in the<br />European Union
I agree that there are things to be learned, but the problem is whether we can deal with that in the inquiry. If we were holding a committee inquiry, and had a secretariat that could go out and compare the different actions of some of the smaller countries, I would agree with ...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
16 Nov 1999
Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Members will have read my report. I do not want people to be too concerned about the fact that it mentions euthanasia. I recognise that the bill does not aim to introduce euthanasia, but I thought that it was right to note the fact that it is one of the issues surrounding the ...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
09 Dec 1999
Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I speak as the reporting member of the Health and Community Care Committee and as the deputy health spokesman for the Conservative party. When I welcome the changes that the Minister for Justice has announced, I can do so only on behalf of my party—I would not like to speak fo...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
09 May 2001
European Union
I do not know whether Roseanna Cunningham has actually read the points arising out of the Nice summit. What came out of that summit, from the Portuguese, from the Australian Prime Minister and from the Dutch Prime Minister, was the fact—Members: "Australian?" Austrian. What em...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
09 May 2001
European Union
I can speak for my party's policy. We will oppose entry to the euro at the next Parliament. That is the first time that we have been asked that question in the run-up to the general election. If there is a referendum, we will allow people to take part—it is not for me to stop ...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
21 Jun 2001
Scotland's Place in the World
No, I am sorry, but I have to get on. I want to enlighten the unionist members who sit on the Labour party side of the chamber. As John Swinney rightly pointed out, the document was not released to us, although the Government in Flanders was happy to do that. At the bottom of ...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
14 Mar 2002
National Health Service
Mr Lyon said that he would come to the point about the Arbuthnott formula, but he did not. Unlike him, I will come later to the point on European spending and gross domestic product.The Executive amendment refers to patient-centred services. However, as Dorothy-Grace Elder all...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
09 May 2002
Europe Day
Who could forget that it was a Conservative Government that took the United Kingdom into the Common Market in the early 1970s? Europe day, if any, is a time to reflect on how the EU and its development have been a political struggle in all parties in the UK. After all, Labour ...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
07 Dec 1999
Forward Work Programme
Work on enlargement would tie in with the policy implications of the single currency. There will be an enlargement of the European Union concept, with some countries in the euro zone and some not. The differences that we might have to cope with are important.
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
07 Dec 1999
Forward Work Programme
All those countries that will be part of the enlargement process will not be part of the euro zone.
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
19 Sep 2000
Aquaculture Industry
Norway and Canada do not classify ISA as a list 1 disease. Some of the problems that we encounter with the way in which the EU makes us deal with ISA arise because it is classified as a list 1 disease. Unlike foot-and-mouth disease or anthrax, which are harmful to humans, ISA ...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
27 Mar 2001
Common Fisheries Policy
If that is not done within five years, will enlargement make it harder to reform or change it again? Many new countries, especially from the Baltic, are quite keen to invest in their fleet. Do you think that missing this opportunity will make it harder to change in future?
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
27 Mar 2001
Common Fisheries Policy
I feel like I am trapped between a rock and a hard place. I apologise to the director general for members' behaviour.For many years, Scotland has led the way on adopting technical measures to try to contribute to conservation and capacity reduction. Could enforcement be steppe...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
27 Mar 2001
Common Fisheries Policy
At the moment, Scotland is one of the few countries—if not the only one—that is implementing some of the measures. Should the green paper go further on clear time scales for implementing measures?
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
11 Sep 2001
Proposal for a Directive (Employees' Rights)
Before we agree to do that, I would be keen to examine the differences in the member states. We are conducting an inquiry into the governance and future of the European Union that will consider how different regions may be suited to different methods of implementation. I would...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
29 Jan 2002
Convener's Report
We are in the same situation in relation to the date and the venue; we did not discuss either at the December meeting—they were decided by e-mail.In the game of enlargement, the Commission plays the role of the referee; in effect, it is neutral. I would not feel awkward about ...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
07 May 2002
Enlargement
I read the Executive's response a number of times. The only outstanding matter is that the Executive said that its access to the United Kingdom Government would allow it to be involved in the enlargement process, but there seems to be no notion that the Executive should be res...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
07 May 2002
Enlargement
Sarah Boyack made a point earlier about state-aid rules. Our report recommended that the Executive should promote direct transport links to the candidate countries. The Executive's response is that that is a matter for the private market and that we could get into difficulties...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
21 May 2002
Cohesion Policy and Structural Funds Inquiry
On rounding up the inquiry into the cohesion policy, there are two significant points that have not come out previously. First, following discussion around the yet-to-be ratified Treaty of Nice, the next round of the European budget must be finalised before enlargement happens...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
18 Jun 2002
Executive Briefings
The agenda for the fisheries council meeting on 11 June is outlined on page 16 of the briefing paper. Members will be aware that the Commission has proposed a package of reforms for the common fisheries policy, which is obviously important to Scottish fishermen. However, there...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
05 Nov 2002
Scottish Executive (Scrutiny)
Would any other countries round the North sea be adversely affected by such a ban on fishing for cod?
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
14 Jan 2003
Employment and Corporate Social Responsibility Inquiry
Forgive me, but many small or medium-sized enterprises do not compete with communities, but with other SMEs, perhaps from other countries, which might not be under CSR requirements. How does that help an SME in West Lothian to compete?
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
14 Jan 2003
Employment and Corporate Social Responsibility Inquiry
Sandy Boyle will forgive me if I do not agree with his earlier comments. The countries in Europe with the greatest amount of social and employment legislation have the highest levels of unemployment. France might have more rights for its workers, but it has fewer people in emp...
Ben Wallace: Con Committee
16 May 2000
Subordinate Legislation
I welcome most of the measures that are before us to make things safer for us all—the consumer as well as the producer. I do not think that any of us would wish to see a repeat of the tragedy that we saw some years ago. I also recognise that much of the movement on food safety...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
20 Sep 2000
Petitions
If we were to do some form of inquiry, we would have to ask whether Scotland warrants an independent cardiac transplant service. It is all very well saying that we must have one, but the critical mass may not be there. Some small countries in Europe are very wealthy, but for u...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
24 May 2000
Heart Transplant Unit
The Conservative party considered the SNP's motion and the Executive's amendment, and could disagree with little in either. The Conservatives pay tribute to those in Newcastle who have helped in this situation, and to the three surgeons who have offered to step in to keep the ...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
30 Nov 2000
Europe
If England and Scotland had more votes as separate countries, would Andrew Wilson think that it was fair that Britain, with a population of 58 million, should have more votes than had Germany, with a population of 65 million? Is that a balanced position to take?
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
09 May 2001
European Union
I am grateful to Mr Rumbles for giving way.In every country that has been asked about the euro and which was in favour of it, the majority has been slim—51:49—and in Denmark, the decision went against the euro. That does not cry out to me that the countries that have been aske...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
09 May 2001
European Union
In a minute.Will Europe, on the other hand, rekindle the principles that the Community was founded on, which were free trade and security? Will it embrace the countries in the east, if the cost is less integration and more diversification? We in the Conservative party believe ...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
09 May 2001
European Union
Scotland could not join the European Community in the way that Winnie Ewing suggests. It is interesting that she talked about the causes of the war, and I agree, but she completely forgot that nationalism has been a major reason for conflict all over the world, because of the ...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
31 May 2001
Scottish Regiments
I thank the Presiding Officer for letting me speak and David McLetchie for lodging the motion. I also thank The Daily Telegraph, which provided some of the documents to which I will refer, and John Spellar, the Minister of State for the Armed Forces, for clarifying the positio...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
21 Jun 2001
Scotland's Place in the World
As unionists, it is with some regret that we debate an SNP motion that has some reason in its origin, although not in its latter part. The clear aim of the debate must be to examine why the First Minister went to Brussels last month to sign up to a document that contradicts Un...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
20 Sep 2001
Patient Care
I wonder whether Shona Robison agrees with her principal spokesman, Nicola Sturgeon, who in an interview with The Economist on 14 July mentioned that perhaps we should move to the European system of a partly social-insurance based system instead of a taxation-based system for ...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
25 Oct 2001
International Situation
No, I will give way in a minute. Sit down and listen.I have been in war zones and have seen people—from the third world and all over—fleeing in fear. I have seen people in Northern Ireland suffering from fear of terrorism. When I saw the fear in their eyes, frightened because ...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
30 Jan 2002
Fur Farming (Prohibition) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Let us consider the context of today's debate. The NHS is on the brink, transport is in chaos and farming is in crisis, yet today we are debating a bill to ban something else—this time, fur farming. The bill comes courtesy of the SNP, which decided not to support a Sewel motio...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
02 May 2002
Parliament (Powers)
I am tempted to say "Here endeth the lesson" when we get such a rant from Mr MacAskill.We need to talk about the policy that dare not speak its name—the SNP's policy on defence and foreign security. A debate about independence should be a grown-up debate. The first role and du...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
09 May 2002
Nurses
No. Why does Labour not consider taking advantage of the 1.1 per cent increase in gross domestic product in Scotland that has been completely ignored by the NHS? Other countries do not ignore private funding streams and end up with better results, morale and staffing levels. T...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
16 May 2002
Health and Community Care
I would like all the information to be made available, so that the customer—the patient—can decide what is meaningful. Who is Malcolm Chisholm to tell people what is meaningful information? He should let them decide. Will he make available infection rates for hospital acquired...
Ben Wallace (North-East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
13 Jun 2002
Common Fisheries Policy
The context for this debate is that most people in the chamber agree with the measures that Franz Fischler and the European Commission introduced. Members of the European Committee, after hours of deliberation, produced a report that we are delighted to see is pretty much mirr...
Ben Wallace: Con Chamber
13 Mar 2003
International Situation
The Conservatives' position on Iraq has always been that we should act in Britain's interest. If we cannot secure a United Nations resolution, we must decide whether acting in Britain's interest is enough. The Liberal Democrats say that the UN is the only way, but under the le...
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Committee

European Committee, 02 May 2000

02 May 2000 · S1 · European Committee
Item of business
Reporter (Terms of Reference)
Wallace, Ben Con North East Scotland Watch on SPTV
The enlargement of the European Union is a huge topic. Some 11 countries are applying for membership, of which six will come in the first wave. Because of the size of the issue, I am conscious that our investigation must be relevant to Scotland: we must focus on what we can influence, so that we do not waste time by wandering into areas that do not concern us, or which Westminster should be considering.

Many other reports have been, and are being, conducted into EU enlargement as it affects Scotland and the UK. The House of Lords completed such a report last year—I have notes on it—and numerous others continue. I am concerned that we should not contradict or duplicate existing work that may be relevant to Scotland.

My submission contains the background to the issues. It lays out the candidate countries and concentrates on the first six, as they hope to accede to the European Union between 2003 and 2005 and will affect what happens in Scotland regarding European structural funds.

My main concerns are listed on page 2 of the document, under the heading "Specific plans". The EU will push towards the east and many of the former eastern bloc countries. That will have an effect on the geographic axis of Europe. We need to examine that, as it will affect the way in which Scotland fits into Europe geographically. There will be a shift towards Berlin and the Baltic side of Europe will be opened up for Scotland.

Demands will be made on institutions. Point 2 in the same section of the document questions how the knock-on effect of those institutional changes in Brussels will affect the UK and, perhaps, institutions in Scotland. The judiciary will also be affected; we have already seen how the implementation of the European convention on human rights affects us.

Point 3 concerns economic implications and European aid. Point 4 addresses the basic business opportunities of investment in Scotland and the implications of a bigger market that our producers and businesses will be able to exploit. Changes to structural funds are addressed in point 5. We are all conscious that 2006 will be a big deadline for us in Scotland, and there will be even more pressure.

Point 6 is important. There are many requirements for entry into the EU. Increasingly, I am discovering that many of the applicant countries are asking for exemption from the rules. Irene Oldfather will be aware of that in the context of social and employment policies. Will those countries want all the benefits of the EU without taking on all the responsibilities at the same time? That is a quite important point, as we could be in positions of unfair competition. I shall expand on that in the project, rather than now.

Point 7 focuses on social reforms. Many of the applicant countries, especially those in the east, have a communist past, so the social ethos in employment and health care is very different. They are also undergoing changes. For example, Poland has just introduced a private health care system, which has taken it from one extreme to another. That sort of change will be an issue when we address EU directives, new formalisations and the employment policies that are increasingly coming out of Europe, in line with the Amsterdam treaty.

Assessing the way in which enlargement of the EU will affect the common agricultural policy will be a big project in itself. Implementation of that policy continues even in the member states. A country such as Poland, which has a population of nearly 39 million, represents a big agricultural producer that is joining the EU and will shift the axis—not geographically, but in farming. At the moment, France dominates the common agricultural policy, but Poland's entry will change that. The common agricultural policy alone is a big issue, so I shall investigate that change in the context of the immediate impact that it will have on Scotland.

Those are the eight points that I shall address. I shall try to keep my report as concise and relevant to Scotland's concerns as possible, focusing on ways in which we can influence the situation.

Under the heading "Organisations to be consulted", hundreds of people could be chosen for consultation. I have already met some of them. I took advantage of the fact that they happened to be in Scotland. I met the ambassador of Slovenia and the consul general of Poland, who is happy for the ambassador to come here to meet us. If the committee can suggest anyone else we should invite, I would be happy to include them.

We should invite the academics from the University of Edinburgh: not out of bias towards that university, but out of consideration of costs and because Alice Brown is holding a conference on EU enlargement at the moment, which would be particularly relevant. I shall also make available to the committee a UK white paper on enlargement, which was published in March.

The project is pretty substantial, as members will appreciate. I shall try to limit travelling as much as possible. I have already taken advantage of visits to Scotland by dignitaries from other countries. A trip to Brussels would be useful; however, I have kept travelling to a minimum, as is requested in the guidelines.

The European project teams will give us clues as to what countries want exemptions in the process of EU enlargement. For example, Poland wants to extend one of its deadlines for an environmental measure by 12 years, which would have an impact on how enlargement might progress. It is difficult to get hold of such information, and a trip to Brussels may be needed to consult the project teams on what exemptions are being negotiated.

I would be happy to take on board any other suggestions from members of the committee.

In the same item of business