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The EU: More Competent Than Thou




This Rock
Volume 17, Number 4
  April 2006  

 Reasons for Hope
By Cherie Peacock
 Letters
 Our Quiet Pope
By Russell Shaw
 For Further Reading
 What Do You See at Mass?
By Anthony E. Clark
 The Saints Speak
 The Pope Speaks
 Babies Deserve Better
By Jameson and Jennifer Taylor
 Infertility Terms You Need to Know
 Where to Turn for Help
 Further Reading
 Why Don't Catholics Go Straight to Jesus?
By Robert G. Schroeder
 Confession in the Early Church
 Further Reading
 Catholic Social Responsibility: Who Should Do What?
By Gregory Beabout
 The Vatican and the Welfare State
 The Foundations of the Tradition
 The EU: More Competent Than Thou
 Damascus Road
From Pastor to Parishioner: My Love for Christ Led Me Home
By Drake McCalister
 By the Book
Homosexuality
By Jim Blackburn
 Truth Be Told
Reform Came before the Reformation
By Matthew E. Bunson
 Up a Notch
Apologetics and Canon Law
By Pete Vere, JCL
 Quick Questions
 Last Writes
By Karl Keating

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Over the last fifteen years, with the formation of the European Union, the principle of subsidiarity has become a central part of European political debates. The 1992 Treaty of Maastricht explicitly mentions subsidiarity, as does the proposed European Constitution. Virtually every politician in Europe gives speeches about it. Newspapers routinely run editorials on the topic, and it is debated on the op-ed pages.

Political leaders who support European unification often interpret the idea of subsidiarity to mean (perhaps with a little twisting) that the larger body is presumed to have more expertise than the smaller one, effectively turning subsidiarity into an endorsement of centralized power. The proposed constitution would create a new "big government" of Europe.

In contrast, subsidiarity is rarely mentioned in American political debates, and when it is, it is usually understood as a principle that supports decentralization, local groups, and limits to federal power. Almost every American politician complains that "big government" is inefficient and impersonal. Americans interpret subsidiarity as being in accord with the Tenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."



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