Federalists and the Beginnings of the Council of Europe: Converting Institutions and Opinion to Supranationality (1949–1951)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Strong Political Ambition
3. Corridor Politics and Constitutional Claims
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- The disappointment caused by the classic model of co-operation, which kept “the outdated system of national sovereignties intact”, and the hope of arriving at a system that would make it possible to obtain “a European political authority with limited functions but real powers”.
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- The urgent need for action given specific problems (such as in Trieste and Saarland) as well as more general ones (namely, a divided Germany), but in general to oppose the “totalitarian offensive”, i.e., the Soviet threat, which made itself most sharply felt in Berlin.
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- The need to set up a free and independent European entity, even if it was not an integral one (“an initial federal nucleus”) 31.
4. The European Vigilance Council
5. Follow-up to the European Council of Vigilance
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Many books and articles have been written on the birth of European federalism, the beginnings of the Council of Europe and more generally on the first steps of the European integration process: see in particular Vayssière 2007; Guieu and Le Dréau 2009; Wassenberg 2013; Tulli, 2017; O’Connor 2014, pp. 58–72. |
2 | Speech by Fernand Dehousse to the plenary session of the European Vigilance Council, 21 November 1950, quoted in Cohen 2006, p. 122. |
3 | European Unity: a statement by the National Executive Committeee of the British Labour Party (June 1950), London, Labour Party, 1950, 15 p. |
4 | Lipgens and Loth 1991, pp. 80–88; “Motion on the Consultative Assembly”, Paris Executive Board, 4–5 May 1949, UEF-128, Historical Archives of the European Union (now HAEU), Florence. |
5 | “Observations on the Statute of the Council of Europe submitted to the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the democratic countries of Europe”, International Executive Committee, Paris, 9 May 1949, ME-622, HAEU. |
6 | Copy of a letter from Lord Layton to Mr. Duncan Sandys circulated at Lord Layton’s request among the members of the International Executive Committee, 13 May 1949, ME-622, HAEU. |
7 | Monnet 1976, pp. 401–404. |
8 | “Memorandum presented to the European governments by the International Committee of Movements for European Unity”, 18 August 1948, Notes and Documentary Studies, No. 1081, pp. 11–12, confirmed by the Conclusions and Recommendations adopted at the inaugural session of the International Committee of the European Movement, Brussels, 25–28 February 1949, ME-107, HAEU. |
9 | Title of the editorial in the UEF Bulletin, No. 3 bis, 25 August 1948, UEF-245, HAEU. In this article, the enthusiasm is such that the redactors speak of “the path of achievement”, and foresee the establishment of a Constituent Assembly by 1950. |
10 | Lipgens and Loth 1991, p. 80. The use of the British term in the French is not accidental, as Frenay refers to a speech given by Ernest Bevin on 15 September 1948, in which he suggested that the future assembly should proceed “on the same principle of association as in the Commonwealth”, in Bossuat 1996, p. 98. |
11 | Speech by Ms Josephy in plenary session, 28 February 1949, ME-107, HAEU. |
12 | In the final declaration concerning the composition of the future Council of Europe, three points concern parliamentarians, and only one concerns non-parliamentarians, “reserved for promoters of European action” (Churchill, for example?). |
13 | Vayssière 2009, pp. 69–76. |
14 | “Theses for the elaboration of a UEF policy”, 25 March 1949, UEF-90, AHAEU. |
15 | Ibid., p. 1. |
16 | Ibid., p. 7. The strategy of the Pact is to “transform the Consultative Assembly into a Constituent Assembly, with the aim of developing a Federal Pact of the United States of Europe”. |
17 | UEF Bulletin No. 3, June 1949, pp. 28–29, in Lipgens and Loth 1991, pp. 81–82. |
18 | See in particular Bonnefous 1950, p. 123; Spaak 1969; Gouzy 1968, p. 62. |
19 | Belot 2003, p. 557. |
20 | Brugmans 1993, p. 277. |
21 | Letter from Henri Frenay to the parliamentary correspondents of the UEF, 30 June 1950, UEF-135, HAEU. |
22 | Brugmans 1993, p. 277. Labour’s Hugh Dalton had been rather uncompromising from the Liberation onwards and not very open to any Europeanist ideas whatsoever. See Bossuat 1996, p. 99 or du Réau 1996, p. 183. |
23 | This sentence, which was to become the slogan of the Council of Europe, was essentially the work of Ronald Mackay, developed after numerous interviews with various federalist parliamentarians, including Senator Pierre de Felice, Richard Mayne and John Pinder, in Mayne and Pinder 1990, p. 103. The same authors point out, however (p. 103), that this sentence is almost word for word the slogan chosen by Federal Union in July 1943, when Frances Josephy was its president, the same Josephy who served as interpreter in Strasbourg at Mackay. See Frances Josephy, “Obituary for Ronald Mackay”, World Affairs, 1960, no 249a, p. 47. |
24 | Request for the drawing up of a Federal Pact, 31 October 1949, UEF-246 and WL-198, HAEU. One can also read the Report on the Federal Pact by Gabriel Badarau, 9 p., UEF-95, HAEU, in which the speaker defends the Pact in a very voluntarist tone. |
25 | “Theses for the elaboration of a UEF policy”, 25 March 1949, UEF-90, HAEU. |
26 | “Petition for the drawing up of a Federal Pact”, 31 October 1949, UEF-246 and WL-198, HAEU, p. 4. |
27 | “On the devaluation of the pound”, Appendix No. 4 of the minutes of the UEF Central Committee, 24–26 September 1949, UEF-246, HAEU. |
28 | Spaak 1969, p. 33. |
29 | Letter from Henri Frenay to Duncan Sandys, Paris, 20 September 1949, annex n°3 of the minutes of the UEF Central Committee of 24–26 September 1949, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 2. |
30 | “L’UEF propose à l’Assemblée de Strasbourg un Pacte fédéral de l’Occident”, Le Monde, 2 November 1949. |
31 | Minutes of the UEF Central Committee, 22 April 1950, UEF-, HAEU. |
32 | Letter to Parliamentary Delegates to Strasbourg, 28 July 1950, UEF-204, HAEU. Although the letter is signed by Henri Frenay, Vice-President of the European Movement, he begins it by saying: “It is on behalf of the European Union of Federalists that I address you...”, p. 1. |
33 | European Movement, “Poll on Public Opinion on the Question of the European Union”, WL-199, HAEU; Guglielmo Usellini, “About the Stern Poll on the Question of the European Union”, 4 p., 15 May 1950, WL-199, HAEU. |
34 | Lipgens and Loth 1991, pp. 246–247. |
35 | De Gasperi’s involvement in the petition campaign remained an excellent memory for Spinelli, who spoke of it 45 years later in an interview with RAI: “We then had de Gasperi’s first declaration in our favour, because he also signed the petition and declared that the Italian government should accept this commitment and act accordingly [...]....] This man, De Gasperi, who was basically a moderate, did it with a revolutionary spirit, triumphing over resistance in Italy, in Italian administrations, and in other countries”, in Paolini 1988, p. 81. |
36 | Quoted in Greilsammer 1975, p. 63. |
37 | André Voisin, “How the idea of the European Council of Vigilance was born”, Courrier de l’Europe, No. 10, October 1950. |
38 | André Voisin, Outline of the report on the European Vigilance Council to be presented to the 1950 International Congress of the European Union of Federalists, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 4. |
39 | Letter from Altiero Spinelli to Henri Frenay, 19 September 1950, UEF-13, HAEU. The author specifies however that a more homogeneous federalist body in France would be necessary. |
40 | Manifesto of the delegates of the European Vigilance Council to the French, 30 September 1950, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 1. |
41 | Manifesto of the delegates to the European Vigilance Council, 28 October 1950, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 1. In the archives in Florence, there are some messages of support and petitions sent by various people (teachers, SNCF inspectors) to the members of the European Vigilance Council, UEF-8, UEF-11, HAEU, which proves that the Council’s action was not totally unknown to the general public. |
42 | Manifesto of the delegates to the European Vigilance Council, 28 October 1950, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 1. |
43 | André Voisin, Outline of the report on the European Vigilance Council to be presented to the 1950 International Congress of the European Union of Federalists, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 3. |
44 | International Organising Committee of the European Vigilance Council, General Document No. 1, 6 October 1950, 6 p., UEF-204, HAEU. |
45 | List of delegates to the European Vigilance Council established on 1 November 1950, 4 p., UEF-204, HAEU. |
46 | Raymond Rifflet, Lettre à Henri Frenay, 14 octobre 1950, farde n°24, Groupe d’études histoire de l’Europe contemporaine (GEHEC), Louvain-la-Neuve; Vayssière 2018. |
47 | Raymond Rifflet, Letter to Charles Baré, June 9, 1950, folder n°24, GEHEC, Louvain-la-Neuve. |
48 | Raymond Rifflet, Letter to Henri Frenay, Enrique Gironella, Albert Lohest and Charles Baré, p. 1, 11 October 1950, folder n°24, GEHEC, Louvain-la-Neuve. |
49 | Letter from Paul Finet to Raymond Rifflet, 16 October 1950, folder n°24, GEHEC, Louvain-la-Neuve. |
50 | Letter from Albert Lohest to Raymond Rifflet, October 23, 1950, folder n°24, GEHEC, Louvain-la-Neuve. |
51 | Letter from Maurice Lambilliotte to Raymond Rifflet, 25 October 1950, folder n°24, GEHEC, Louvain-la-Neuve. |
52 | Letter from Raymond Rifflet to Henri Frenay, Enrique Gironella, Albert Lohest and Charles Baré, 11 October 1950, folder n°24, GEHEC, Louvain-la-Neuve, p. 1. |
53 | Brugmans 1970, p. 147. |
54 | Altiero Spinelli, “History and Perspectives of the European Federalist Movement”, p. 169–170. |
55 | Council of Europe, Strasbourg, 21–24 November 1950, UEF-204, HAEU. |
56 | Gouzy 1968, p. 69. |
57 | Letter from André Voisin to the Director of Le Monde, 5 October 1950, UEF-14, HAEU. |
58 | “5000 giovani a comizio davanti alla Maison d’Europe”, Europa Federata, III, 1 December 1950, n°36, p. 6. |
59 | “Parliamentarians of Free Europe, ask your governments for the convocation of the European Federal Constituent Assembly”, UEF document, May 1951, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 1. |
60 | These reproaches are explained in detail in a letter from Henri Frenay to Fernand Dehousse, Paris, 26 November 1950, UEF-8, HAEU. |
61 | Letter from Guglielmo Usellini to Joseph Retinger, 21 December 1950, ME-404, HAEU, p. 2. |
62 | “Parliamentarians of Free Europe, ask your governments to convene the European Federal Constituent Assembly”, UEF document, May 1951, UEF-204, HAEU, p. 1. |
63 | For example, a rather ambitious memorandum was sent to Alcide de Gasperi on 5 February 1951, UEF-97, HAEU. The same memorandum was sent a little later to René Pleven. |
64 | UEF Press Release, 29 May 1951, UEF-96, HAEU. |
65 | Brugmans 1970, p. 285. |
66 | Letter sent by the UEF to the citizens of the six Schuman Plan countries, containing the call for the European Constitution, UEF-97, HAEU. |
67 | According to Richard J. Aldrich, the amount allocated to the European Vigilance Council alone was $42,000, (Durkee Report to ACUE Directors, July 1951, WBS/DDE), quoted in Aldrich 1995, p. 170. |
68 | Altiero Spinelli, “Bilancio dell’Assemblea”, Europa Federata, III, n°36, 1 December 1950, p. 11. |
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Vayssière, B. Federalists and the Beginnings of the Council of Europe: Converting Institutions and Opinion to Supranationality (1949–1951). Histories 2022, 2, 1-14. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2010001
Vayssière B. Federalists and the Beginnings of the Council of Europe: Converting Institutions and Opinion to Supranationality (1949–1951). Histories. 2022; 2(1):1-14. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2010001
Chicago/Turabian StyleVayssière, Bertrand. 2022. "Federalists and the Beginnings of the Council of Europe: Converting Institutions and Opinion to Supranationality (1949–1951)" Histories 2, no. 1: 1-14. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2010001
APA StyleVayssière, B. (2022). Federalists and the Beginnings of the Council of Europe: Converting Institutions and Opinion to Supranationality (1949–1951). Histories, 2(1), 1-14. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2010001