L'éditorial de Patrick Le Hyaric. "C’est un renversement inédit des principes qui régissent le travail en France, un pas décisif vers une soumission absolue des travailleurs aux lois du capital."
Zwei Trends bei den Verfassungsreformen haben seit den 1990er Jahren das plebiszitäre Moment in den lateinamerikanischen Präsidialsystemen gestärkt: die verbreitete Einführung der Option einer Wiederwahl sowie der Ausbau direktdemokratischer Mechanismen, zu denen auch das Abberufungsreferendum gehört – mit dem eine weitere Flexibilisierung der Amtszeit einhergeht. In der politischen Praxis entfalten diese Elemente eine besondere Dynamik und sorgen gleichzeitig für größere Kontinuität in der Exekutive. Diese Kombination ist heute in drei Fällen besonders gut zu erkennen: Während es Evo Morales in Bolivien beim Plebiszit vom 21. Februar 2016 misslungen ist, die zweifache konsekutive Wiederwahl verfassungsrechtlich zu verankern, drohen Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela ein Abberufungsreferendum und Dilma Rousseff ein Impeachment-Verfahren im brasilianischen Parlament.
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Turkey's Ahmet Davutoglu, left, at a post-summit press conference early Tuesday morning
It has become customary to assume EU summits aimed at tackling the ongoing refugee crisis produce much rhetoric but little meat. But last night’s gathering of European leaders with Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish prime minister, may prove the one that broke the rule.
In talks that went on for 12 hours, the two sides emerged with the outlines of a deal that, if finalised next week, is as sweeping in its implications as it is in its substance. The German-engineered plan would allow the EU to turn back almost all migrants washing ashore in Greece and return them to Turkey. But the price will be high: in addition to billions of additional European aid to Ankara, the EU would expedite a long-dormant visa liberalisation programme that could provide Turkish nationals visa-free travel into the EU’s passport-free Schengen zone as soon as June.
That a significant deal was in the offing was clear late last week when Donald Tusk, the European Council president, travelled to Ankara and received strong signals that Mr Davutoglu was open to a massive programme of refugee returns. But the plan now on the table is significantly more ambitious than the one Mr Tusk was considering. It was driven almost entirely by Mr Davutoglu and Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, with the help of Mark Rutte, her Dutch counterpart and holder of the EU’s rotating presidency. The EU’s nominal leaders (Mr Tusk and Jean-Claude Juncker, the European Commission president) were almost entirely cut out of the deal-making, which began in earnest when the Turkish, German and Dutch leaders held a pre-summit meeting on Sunday. In her press conference, Ms Merkel acknowledged as much, saying Mr Davutoglu presented new demands at the Sunday meeting – and she endorsed them wholeheartedly.
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