Switch to an accessible version of this website which is easier to read. (requires cookies)

Letter from Brussels

February 20, 2006 11:59 AM
Andrew Duff

Andrew Duff MEP

Written by Andrew Duff and published in East Anglian Daily Times

In January, the European Parliament threw out a directive on opening up access to port services. It was an ill-judged measure, and MEPs were right to defeat it. But it is not the end of the matter, as many of us continue to believe that it is desirable to increase competition between Europe's ports, and many shippers and hauliers remain dissatisfied with the service they get.

This month the Parliament gets to grips with a more important piece of legislation whose aim is to extend the advantages of the European single market to the whole service sector. The new Services Directive will make it easier for people to work in EU countries other than their own. A Czech builder would be able to work in the UK, for example, without having formally established his enterprise in this country. He would, of course, be subject to British planning, building, health and safety regulations, and his workers would benefit from the safeguards of British labour law, including the minimum wage.

Needless to say, there is huge controversy in the Parliament about how liberal to make this measure. Many vested interests in the richer, older member states are trying to protect themselves from competition from the newer, cheaper and in some ways keener workers from Central Europe. Already services of 'general interest' are excluded from the scope of the law such as education and the NHS. But now bankers and lawyers, with much less justification, are also trying to win an exemption. In any case, the wide variety between EU member states in relation to forms of ownership and management of utilities like post, electricity, water and gas make the design of an EU-wide law rather complex. Another obstacle to be overcome is the obsession of many national civil services, backed up by public service trade unions, in imposing officious technical restrictions on foreign enterprises.

Conservatives oppose the measure because it is too 'European'; the socialists because it is too 'liberal'. I and my Liberal colleagues will fight to lift the bureaucratic burden and to make the scope of the legislation as broad as possible. It is ridiculous to seek to resist the spread of the single market to the fastest growing sector of the European economy. It is also wrong for the old member states to veto competition from the new ones, thereby negating one of the main purposes of enlargement.

Andrew Duff is the Lib Dem Euro MP for the East of England.

What would you like to do next?

  • Subscribe for updates

    Read updates from this website in your desktop or online news reader

    • On a news reader website

      •  
      •  
      •  

      In a desktop news reader or a website not listed above

      •  
    • Example monthly digest email
      •  
      •  
      •  
    • If you submit your contact details, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting


    • Generate different image

    Join our email list

    • If you submit your contact details, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting


    • Generate different image

    Follow the party's activity on...

  • Share this page

    Share this page on another website

    Link to this page

    On websites and printed material:
    bedfordlibdems.org.uk/en/article/2006/010651/letter-from-brussels
    In text messages, Twitter, or reading over the phone:
    bedfordlibdems.org/a1q9

    Email this page to a friend


    • Generate different image
  • Help out or donate

    Help out in your local area

      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
    • If you submit your contact details, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting


    • Generate different image
  • Tell us what you think

    Send us your views

    • If you agree, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting us.


    • Generate different image