Originally posted by Old Greg
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Previously on "Who would you vote for in the Euro elections"
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostUnless they put some t*ts" and "bums" on the Euro site the Mail will win every time.
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostSo does the EU, in theory, although it doesn't always work that well. Having said that, the documents are all available on their website but I think people would rather just believe the Daily Wail
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post"Are" corrupt. the difference being we have the checks and balances of a democratic system of government and the media to expose them.
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostSo basically you've just insinuated that both regional and national government in the UK is corrupt?
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostThere are three recurring myths about EU rules on migration and benefits.
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostDaily Express and Telegraph Bollocks: EU rules let inspectors dig up our gardens for plant 'threats' | Nature | News | Daily Express Gardeners with Rhododendrons could be 'criminalised' by new EU law - Telegraph
There is, of course, no such thing as an ‘EU inspector’, so Sunday Express readers can relax: no euro-jobsworths in blue overalls with yellow twelve star logos will be arriving at dawn to dig up herbaceous borders or bundle rhodendron aficionados into vans.
The European Commission has proposed an EU Regulation on preventing and managing invasive alien species.
Thanks Helmutt, give my regards to Helga!
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Originally posted by Flashman View PostSo vote for political parties who want to stay in the EU? The whole organisation is corrupt, top to bottom. UKIP want to get out of it!
UKIP cannot change 'European issues'. They are outnumbered 100-1 by Euro-fanatics in the European Parliament.
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostThere have also been significant errors in regional policy –payments to UK programmes have had to be interrupted several times.
It's called corruption
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There have also been significant errors in regional policy –payments to UK programmes have had to be interrupted several times.
It's called corruption
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostI don't quite understand what point you are trying to make Helmutt but it is one thing to make rules quite another to enforce them.
Try this one:
Auditors refuse to give EU accounts a clean bill of health for 19th year in a row | Mail Online
UK media – for example the Daily Mail, Daily Express and the Times – yet again reported that the European Court of Auditors (ECA) has not signed off the EU accounts. Some media -this time including the Daily Telegraph – claim that UK taxpayers will be liable to pay back GBP 800 million. Both statements are simply false.
The Court did in fact sign off as accurate the EU’s accounts for 2012 – as it has done each year since 2007. It stated this clearly in its press release European Court of Auditors | 2012 Annual report.
The ECA (not the European Commission) was so concerned by the flagrant inaccuracy of so many reports that it tweeted Mail online and other media in UK and beyond to request changes @EUAuditorsECA
The ECA annual report tracks the amount of errors that affect financial transactions under the EU budget against a stringent set of rules and procedures.
Many media neglect to emphasise that – while the Court makes clear the Commission also has more work to do – most of the errors take place at national level, including frequently in the UK, and concern decentralised programmes like agriculture and regional funding rather than money managed centrally in Brussels. Member States are responsible for managing 80% of EU funds.
They fail to mention that where errors have serious budgetary effects, the Commission succeeds in clawing most of the money back so it can then be used for other projects: about £3.8 billion/EUR 4.4 billion in 2012.
So the fact that the error rate for 2012 is 4.8% (compared to 3.9% for 2011) does not mean – as the newspapers claim, despite having the situation fully explained to them – that the extrapolated amount of money from the EU annual budget total is written off.
Nor does this mean that the UK (or any other member state) will have to pay back any amount into a bank account in Brussels.
Neither does the fact that a project has not fully adhered to the procedures as it should have, always signify that the money is wasted or that the main project objectives were not achieved.
For example, if member state authorities spending EU money on a new bridge did not properly follow public procurement rules – that is not acceptable. But it does not mean that the bridge is not built or the money is wasted.
These Court of Auditors reports and the increase in the error rate this year, after a long period of improvement, are serious matter, something which the Commission fully recognises. It has in the past seven years endeavoured to reduce the number of errors by introducing modern accounting practices, tighter rules on EU spending, stricter supervision, and stronger control measures.
Under the next seven-year budget 2014-2020 the EU will implement further reforms EUROPA - PRESS RELEASES - Press release - Annual report of the European Court of Auditors to simplify the system and introduce even more stringent rules to encourage all Member States – including the UK – to take more care about the way they spend EU funds.
For example, the Commission has had to claw back from UK nearly EUR 300 million in corrections to UK administered EU agriculture spending over the last three years. There have also been significant errors in regional policy –payments to UK programmes have had to be interrupted several times.
As a reader put it on one of the newspapers’ blog threads – this is not the EU wasting member states’ money, but member states misspending European money.
That is certainly a very simplistic summary.
But it is perhaps less simplistic than much of the media reporting of the ECA report which has yet again seen newspapers throwing incorrect figures around to kindle public outrage.
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Daily Express and Telegraph Bollocks: EU rules let inspectors dig up our gardens for plant 'threats' | Nature | News | Daily Express Gardeners with Rhododendrons could be 'criminalised' by new EU law - Telegraph
There is, of course, no such thing as an ‘EU inspector’, so Sunday Express readers can relax: no euro-jobsworths in blue overalls with yellow twelve star logos will be arriving at dawn to dig up herbaceous borders or bundle rhodendron aficionados into vans.
The European Commission has proposed an EU Regulation on preventing and managing invasive alien species.
Leave a comment:
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