
Its ratification will become official on Thursday, February 14, following its publication in the government's official gazette, Sarkozy's office said.France is the fifth EU country-and the first major EU power-to ratify the new treaty, which must be approved in all 27 member states before it can come into force as planned in 2009."Europe now has the framework it needs to get moving again," Sarkozy said.But the president warned that decision-making gridlock was only part of the EU's problem."Now that Europe can make decisions, the problem is knowing what it wants," he said, before repeating his controversial call for European leaders to have a say in fixing monetary policy in the 15-nation eurozone."We must be able to talk about everything just like in any democracy: of our currency which is not a taboo subject, of trade policy, of industrial policy, of reciprocity in competition matters or the excesses of financial capitalism.""Right now, what is at stake is to put politics back in Europe, to not leave Europe in the hands of automatic rules that allow no room for decisions and political responsibility," Sarkozy said.He repeated his insistence that unbridled competition should be "a means to an end, rather than a goal in itself" -- a key change in the text of the Lisbon treaty that sparked protests from some European nations.Like the rejected constitution, the Lisbon treaty proposes a European foreign policy supremo and a permanent president to replace the six-month rotation system.The charter cuts the size of the European Parliament and the number of EU decisions which require unanimous support, thus reducing national vetoes.It also includes a European charter of fundamental human and legal rights, which Britain and Poland have refused to make binding.However it drops all references to an EU flag or anthem which had fanned eurosceptic fears of another step towards a federal Europe.The French president had insisted before his election that any new EU treaty should be adopted by parliament rather than risk a second referendum.His refusal to submit it to popular scrutiny fuelled anger across opposition ranks, but Sarkozy defended his decision as the only way to break the gridlock.France's main opposition Socialists had split over the 2005 EU referendum when a rebel faction defied party leaders to campaign for a "No" vote, and the new treaty re-opened many of the old wounds.A breakaway group of Socialist deputies voted against the treaty, although most finally joined the ruling Union for a Popular Movement and its centrist allies to back the text.
As in the days of Noah....