European leaders said they had no "plan B" if the treaty was rejected Substantial vote tallies across Ireland show the European Union Lisbon reform treaty has been rejected, Irish Justice Minister Dermot Ahern has said. European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso said all indications were that Ireland had indeed rejected the treaty. He called for other states to continue their ratification processes and said a solution should be sought. The treaty must be ratified by all 27 members. Only Ireland has held a public vote on it. With results in from 39 of 43 constituencies, the No campaign was ahead by 53.6% to 46.4%, state broadcaster RTE reported. Mr Ahern was the first senior figure from the Irish government to admit that it looked like the treaty had failed. "It looks like this will be a No vote," Mr Ahern said on live television. "At the end of the day, for a myriad of reasons, the people have spoken." Obviously it's disappointing. It's quite clear there's a very substantial No vote

Dermot Ahern, Justice Minister

Q&A: Irish referendum Mark Mardell's Euroblog In quotes: Referendum reaction He said it looked like other EU countries would ratify the treaty, so an Irish No vote would leave the EU in "uncharted waters". Mr Barroso said he had spoken to Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen and agreed with him that this was not a vote against the EU. "Ireland remains committed to a strong Europe," he said. "Ratifications should continue to take their course." Mr Barroso said EU leaders would have to decide at a summit next week how to proceed. The people of Ireland have shown enormous courage and wisdom in analysing the facts presented to them and making the decision they have

Declan Ganley, Libertas

UK to press ahead Send us your comments However, the BBC's Oana Lungescu in Brussels says the third failed referendum in three years on the EU's reform plans is bound to undermine the bloc's public legitimacy and dent its confidence when it faces other big players on the world stage. France and Germany quickly issued a joint statement expressing regret over the Irish result. European leaders earlier said they had no "plan B" for how to proceed if Ireland's electorate voted No. Declan Ganley of the anti-treaty lobby group Libertas said that if the No vote had indeed triumphed that it was "a great day for Ireland". "The people of Ireland have shown enormous courage and wisdom in analysing the facts presented to them and making the decision they have," Mr Ganley said. The No campaign was a broad coalition ranging from Libertas to Sinn Fein, the only party in parliament to oppose the treaty. Confusion Correspondents say many voters did not understand the treaty despite a high-profile campaign led by Mr Cowen, which had the support of most of the country's main parties. Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. Mr Cowen accused the No camp of "misrepresentation", saying voters had voiced concern about "issues that clearly weren't in the treaty at all", the Irish Times reported. Turnout is said to have been about 45%. Commentators had predicted that a low turnout figure would suggest a rejection. The treaty, which is designed to help the EU cope with its expansion into eastern Europe, provides for a streamlining of the European Commission, the removal of the national veto in more policy areas, a new president of the European Council and a strengthened foreign affairs post. The treaty is due to come into force on 1 January 2009. Fourteen countries out of the 27 have completed ratification so far. The Lisbon Treaty replaces a more ambitious draft constitution that was rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005. Just over three million Irish voters are registered - in a European Union of 490 million people. In 2001, Irish voters almost wrecked EU plans to expand eastwards when they rejected the Nice treaty. It was only passed in a much-criticised second vote.



E-mail this to a friend Printable version Bookmark with: Delicious

Digg

reddit

Facebook

StumbleUpon What are these?