V
Vouthon
Guest
It doesn’t aspire to nation-statism, after all it is a supra-national union of nation-states.The EU is intended (I think vainly) to be a single “nation state”.
I will concede that there is a common European cultural identity and citizenship, but these complement and not do not abolish the national identities.
Still, the existence of countries like the UK - a multi-national state - complexify matters somewhat, given that Britain is technically a supranational union for the nations of the island of Britain that has become both a country and a unitary state, and has been one for a very long time.
The EU will remain federalistic in structure. It does not aspire to become and will never become a unitary state like Britain.
Federal polity/state, perhaps, but not unitary like France or Britain. And that’s very important where subsidiarity is concerned.
One of the causes of secessionist Scottish Nationalism, historically, has been the far too great centralisation of the unitary statehood of the UK centred in Westminster. We need more federalism within the UK as well, with greater devolution to English regions along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
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