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... 2005, the House of Representatives of Malta unanimously approved a Motion for the Ratification of the European Constitutional Treaty, thus making the Mediterranean island nation the 12th state party to that European Union pact. But as we've posted, the treaty failed to take effect on account of "No" votes in referenda held earlier the same year in France and the Netherlands. As a consequence the EU then shifted, seeking member states' OK of the Lisbon Treaty, an agreement that includes much of its predecessor but eschews any claim to being a Constitution. The future of this treaty too is in doubt, on 2 fronts: 1st, the electorate in Ireland, having received certain new assurances from the EU since its 2008 "No to Lisbon" vote, will stage a do-over referendum in October; and 2d, a national court has just ruled that Germany's ratification is not yet valid. (credit for map at left, prepared before German court ruling, which shows Ireland, in red, as the lone Lisbon Treaty holdout among EU member states, otherwise in green)
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