Enlargement of the European communities
- Author(s):
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Origin
- Assembly
debates on 26th September 1967 (10th and 11th Sittings)
(see Doc. 2282,
report of the Political Committee; Doc. 2261, report of the Economic
Committee; Doc. 2281,
report of the Committee on Agriculture; and Doc. 2287 (draft Resolution). Text adopted by the Assembly on
27th September 1967 (12th Sitting).
- Thesaurus
The Assembly,
1. Noting the progress which EFTA and EEC have made,
but convinced that important political and economic advantages would
flow from the creation of a single continent-sized European market;
2. Recording its satisfaction at the successful conclusion of
the Kennedy Round of tariff negotiations in GATT which cannot but
facilitate an enlargement of the Common Market;
3. Bearing in mind the wider scope which the creation of such
a unified market would provide for technological development in
Europe;
4. Welcoming the new prospects for the enlargement of the European
Communities opened up as a result of recent formal applications
for membership by the United Kingdom, Ireland, Denmark and Norway,
and taking into account the requests for participation in one form
or another by Sweden, Austria and Switzerland and also the request
made on 18th September 1967 by Malta;
5. Convinced also that political and economic co-operation must
develop together, and that the European Community, as it expands,
will exert a wider influence and accept greater responsibilities
in international relations;
6. Recognising that the only way to deal with the problems is
by negotiations between the Six and the applicants;
7. Conscious that a certain number of concrete and complex problems
- i.e. in the field of agricultural policies, in the monetary field
and with regard to the trade of EFTA countries with non-Community
Members -will have to be resolved in the framework of these negotiations,
and that adequate transition periods have to be provided for, if
the encouraging prospects for the enlargement of the European Communities
are to be fulfilled;
8. Recognising that it will be necessary to ensure a certain
stability in the basic structure of the common agricultural policy
and to safeguard the substance of the regulations already adopted,
adjusting the present regulations on particular points, without
bringing into question fundamental characteristics of the common agricultural
policy but taking into account the actual situation of certain applicant
countries,
9. Calls on all those concerned to make the most determined efforts
in a spirit of mutual understanding to resolve the problems in question
and therefore to begin the negotiations with a minimum of delay.