Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
MEP: This Catholic doctrine can save the EU
MEP: This Catholic doctrine can save the EU
Jun 27, 2026 10:09 AM

In secular Europe, it is rare for politicians to suggest that theEuropean Union’s expansive, imperious policies should be reformedby implementing a Christian doctrine. Yet that is precisely what a manifesto aimed at curbing EU excesses has done.

The document proposes paring back the EU’s authority in the name of subsidiarity, the Catholic principle that a higher level of government should refrain from interveningin the actions of a lower level of government (and, we should add, in the actions of civil society). “The principle of subsidiarity is opposed to all forms of collectivism,” TheCatechism of the Catholic Church states. “It sets limits for state intervention.”Such a program inherently diminishes the autonomy of global governance bodies like the EU.

The“Manifesto of Slovak Eurorealism”– issued to mark the 60th anniversary of signing of the Treaty of Rome– was writtenby Richard Sulik, a Member of European Parliament (MEP) and leader of the opposition Freedom and Solidarity (SaS) Party in Slovakia. He’s also a member of theEuropean Conservatives and Reformists Group.

The manifesto answers the challenge by Europhiles that reformers offer something beyond a critique of Brussels’ bureaucratization:

This manifesto is an answer to all those who are accusing us of constant criticism without concrete solutions. Well, here they are – 23 very concrete and, with enough political will, practicable proposals. And, as a heads-up to our voters – whenever there is an opportunity, we will act in line with the proposed changes.

The manifesto endorses European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker’s fourth possible scenario for theEU’s future, contained in a white paperthat he released in March: “doing less, more efficiently.”

Sulik notes that the solution was present within the EU’s governing document. The Lisbon Treaty formally establishes subsidiarity by name inArticle 5(3), saying that the EU will intervene in local affairs only if “the memberstates cannot sufficientlyachieve the objectives of the proposed action at the central level or regional and local level and can… be better achieved by the Union.”

That ambiguity furnishes the European Union with far too much discretion:

[W]ords such as “satisfactorily” and“better” give too much room for subjective decisions and disputes. We believe that the principle of subsidiarity should be defined so that if something can be decided by the memberstates alone, it should not be decided by the EU. The question whether memberstates’ decisions are better or worse should not play a role … [T]he key is whether they can decide on the matter at all.

The manifesto proposes that the EU establish a Subsidiarity Court, a concept Sulikcreditsto former German PresidentRoman Herzog, a proponent of subsidiarity who passed away this January.(Interestingly, the report also quotes the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, marking a transatlantic contribution to limited government.) Thiscourt would review whether EU actions accorded with the principle of national and local sovereignty. However, its rulings would be subject to appeals made to the European Court of Justice.

If implemented, subsidiarity would not only increase member states’ self-determination but reduce their tax and regulatory burden.

Subsidiarity brings savings

Due to the shrinking role of the EU in the lives of the remaining 27 memberstates, the reportsuggests the abolition of two advisory bodies and nine mittees. That pillar alone would save membersat least €322 million and reduce the bureaucracy by more than 1,700employees.

In addition, Sulikwould halve the number of MEPs from 751 to 376 and fire “thousands” of the European Commission’s 33,000 employees.

He would also abolish the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union – which is not to be confused with the European Council (with which it would be merged). Hefurtherproposes an independent audit to determine if mittees can be abolished.

That’s all well and good, but it leaves the problem of the long shadowof EU laws and regulations, which cover such minutiae as the proper curvature of bananas. The EU has imposed more than 12,500 regulations– 769 in 2016 alone, according to the manifesto.To restrain out-of-control decrees in the future, the report proposesa “one-in, two-out” rule for new EU regulations: repealing two administrative rules for every new one written. President Donald Trumpenactedsuch a policy by executive order this year, although it has antecedentsin Canada and the UK, making it another reform with transatlantic roots.

William F. Buckley Jr. mon (market) sense

Sulik proposes an additional reform that seems mon sense, known as “netting.” Some nations are net beneficiaries of the EU’s wealth transfers; they receive more from the EU than they pay as their share of the budget. But under EU rules, they still have to pay their assessed fees in full. For instance, from 2014 to 2020 Slovakiawill owe the EU €6.5 billion – but it will receive €13.8 billion. Yet a €6.5 billion bank transfer mustcross the wires from Bratislava to Brussels. It would be like American readers learning that theIRS owes thema massive e tax refund, but that they have to write a check for the full amount of theirtax liability, anyway.

As William F. Buckley Jr. wrote inUp From Liberalism, “Keep this up, you will readily see, and the skies are black with crisscrossing dollars” – or euros, as may be appropriate. Sulik proposes Brussels simply subtract liabilities from assets and send member nations the remainder.

Unlike much Euroskepticcriticism, the manifesto is libertarian in nature rather than populist, with a pronounced market orientation. “The capital, technology, and know-how brought to our country by [foreign] investors” due to EU membership “would have taken us decades to accumulate ourselves,” Sulik writes. Foreign investment does not merely benefit the investors; Slovak wages rose by 37 percent since joining the EU. Romanian President Klaus Iohannis has made similar observations about his own country. But market distortions harm everyone’s well-being – and large, and largely unaccountable, government deprives people of a voice in their own future. Sulik is not sanguine about the prospects of the EU taking up his reforms, though.

“Perhaps some time, when Hell freezes over, at least some of these changes will be successfully implemented,” the manifesto concludes.

That would be a sad end for a heavenly proposal.

You can read Sulik’s full manifesto here.

CC BY-SA 3.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
5 facts about the U.S. Constitution
Today is Constitution Day, which is observed every year to remember the Founding Fathers signingthe Constitution on September 17, 1787. Here are five facts you need to know about the Constitution: 1. Neither Thomas Jefferson nor John Adams signed the Constitution, nor attended the Constitutional Convention. Adams served as our representative to Great Britain, and Jefferson represented U.S. interests in France. Both died on July 4, 1826. 2. promisedid e about because the Founding Fathers considered African-Americans “three-fifths of a...
Only an EU ‘empire’ can secure liberty: EU leader
Is a European-wide patible with liberty? A prominent EU leader mended transforming the European Union into an “empire” at a UK political party conference this weekend, to sustained applause. “The world order of tomorrow … is a world order based on empires,” said Guy Verhofstadt, a Member of European Parliament (MEP) and the EU’s chief negotiator on Brexit. He is also leader of the EU’s Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe faction. ments came at the party conference of...
The problem with intellectuals
I am in the curious position of being a blogger who distrusts opinions. The late yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar put it best when he wrote, “An opinion is yesterday’s right or wrong knowledge warmed up and re-served for today’s situation.” Too often opinion is divorced from both personal experience and rigorous thought. F.A. Hayek’s essay “The Intellectuals and Socialism” is an attempt at defining the nature and function of professional opinion-havers. His description of them as, “second hand dealers in...
Every politician is Andrew Yang
Richard Nixon supposedly once said, “We’re all Keynesians now,” referring to the new accepted regime of monetary policy. Today, we have far bigger problems than our Keynesian Federal Reserve. Any present-day politician could just as well say, “We’re all Andrew Yang now.” Andrew Yang, for those who don’t know, is running for the Democratic nomination for president. He’s an eccentric businessman whose signature policy proposal is that he wants to give you cold hard cash. Really. While many, including me,...
New ‘Religion & Liberty’ focuses on the student loan crisis
The newest issue ofReligion & Libertyhas been uploaded. You can view it here. This issue ofReligion & Libertyfocuses on higher education in all its fulness. Two statistics throw the college tuition crisis into stark relief: Since 1978 – the year the federal government offered subsidized loans to all students – the cost of college tuition has risen by 1,375 percent. And another 1,400 students default on those loans every day. The cover story by Anne Rathbone Bradley unravels the crisis...
The cosmic battle for economics: Toppling ideological idols with Christian wisdom
When I began my freshman year of college, I didn’t care much about economics. Having been raised in a conservative Christian home, I had adopted a generically pro-capitalism shtick, but it wasn’t much to stand on. As I arrived at my left-leaning Christian college, that lack of foundation soon became clear. I found myself swirling amid campus debates about “economic justice,” infused with lofty religious language. Progressive economic policies were championed with social-gospel gusto and the Acts-2 arguments for socialism...
UN climate chief: Stop worrying and have babies
Climate change may well be a problem, but the chief of the United Nations’ agency on climate says it won’t destroy the world – and shouldn’t stop young people from having children. Alarmist rhetoric from “doomsters and extremists” that babies will destroy the planet “resembles religious extremism” and “will only add to [young women’s] burden” by “provoking anxiety,” he said. Petteri Taalas is no “climate-change denier.” He is secretary-general of theWorld Meteorological Organization (WMO), the UN’s special agency on weather...
Charles Dickens, poverty, and emotional arguments
Why is it that the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century is so often our go-to mental paradigm for poverty? CapX’s John Ashmore, for instance, recently wrote of those who “feel an argument about poverty is plete without claiming we’ve somehow gone back to the 19th century.” Were there no poor people before that? (There were, obviously.) There are a number of possible answers – an increase in the concentration of poverty with growing urbanization and industrialization, which made poverty...
Fact check: 5 facts about the third Democratic debate of 2019
The Democratic Party held its third presidential debate on Thursday night. The 10 hopefuls made at least five proposals that were based on erroneous premises or that would harm the country. 1. Wealth inequality is destroying the world. Senator Bernie Sanders said he felt it was “unfair” pare his version of democratic socialism with the version practiced in Venezuela. But he distinguished himself from most of the field by promising bat wealth inequality: To me, democratic socialism means we deal...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: The uncertainties of the Brexit debate
Acton’s own Alejandro Chafuen recently returned from a visit to England, and today in Forbes he offers a few of his impressions and analyses of the contentious Brexit process. The political machinations of the current situation are seemingly endless, but its ramifications are more than just political. As Chafuen points out, for instance, the ongoing saga brings uncertainty for anyone who does business in the UK. “We have many issues that go to a referendum in Switzerland. But after the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved