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Making Progress

A little over a year ago, the Economist wrote a piece analysing Britain’s place in Europe. There wasn’t a lot of good news. Efforts to reform the way Brussels works were simply “making things worse” as “other countries are tiring of British demands”. The best we could hope for, it was argued, was to “rediscover the virtues of muddling along”.

They were wrong. The last year shows why.

The Prime Minister’s speech in January set a clear vision for the reformed Europe which we will work with our partners to achieve: one that is open, flexible, competitive and democratically accountable.  Since then, this vision has won support across Europe. Increasingly, the argument isn’t about whether the EU needs to reform, but how it should reform.

To quote (again) the Economist, this time eleven months later: “continental Europeans are coming round to the long-held British view that the EU should be smaller, less bureaucratic and lighter on business”.

We are making progress.  To take a few examples:

There is much, much more to do. In 2014, a new European Commission presents an opportunity for a new way of doing business in Europe. As the Dutch have said, we need a new principle: “European where necessary, national where possible”. What people across Europe need from the Commission is a laser focus on building Europe’s competitiveness and enabling growth.

Our achievements this year have fired me up for the challenge of making that a reality.

A Happy – and fruitful – New Year to you all.

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