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EU PRES

Interest high on EU election day opener

Interest for the "forgotten" EU election appears to be greater than at first feared.

Interest high on EU election day opener

At least if any conclusion can be drawn from the numbers that turned out in Gothenburg as pre-voting for the June 7th election got underway.

“There has generally been a great deal of interest,” according to Jonas Andrén at the Gothenburg election committee to news agency TT.

By Wednesday evening the votes had not yet been counted but early indications pointed to a larger than normal turn out.

“Without having an exact check there are many more voting on the first day than in the voting prior to the 2006 general election, said Andrén, who has extensive experience of election voting.

Gothenburg has 45 locations in which to place a vote for the EU parliamentary elections. These include public libraries, local government buildings, at election booths across the city centre and in business centres.

One of the main locations is in the Nordstan shopping centre – Scandinavia’s largest – where by 10pm, 900 people had placed their vote. In 2006, only 278 had taken the chance to vote on the first day of pre-voting.

“We had thought that it would be a calmer opening for the election workers. We were prepared but…”

It is expected that official voting statistics from the opening day’s voting in Gothenburg will be compiled on Thursday.

Pre-voting for the EU election on June 7th opened at locations all across Sweden on Wednesday.

Recent surveys indicate that as many as half of the Swedish electorate are unlikely to vote in the election. A Synovate poll published in Dagens Nyheter on Wednesday morning indicated that 45 percent of Swedes do not even know that the June election is taking place.

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CZECH

Czechs praise Swedish input on Lisbon treaty

Sweden was lauded on Friday by the Czech President Vaclav Klaus for framing

a solution to his demands for an opt-out from the bloc’s Lisbon Treaty.

“President Vaclav Klaus received a proposal from the Swedish EU presidency, in response to his request relating to the ratification of the Lisbon Treaty in the Czech Republic,” his office said in a statement, without elaborating.

Sweden has been working to ease the concerns of the Czech Republic and Vaclav Klaus, who is the last EU leader holding out on signing the treaty, which aims to streamline decision-making in the 27-member EU.

“This proposal corresponds to the president’s expectations and he can continue to work with it,” his office said.

The bloc has nearly doubled in size in the past five years as a swathe of former communist countries such as the Czech Republic have joined.

On Wednesday Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt – who has been instrumental in the negotiations to overcome Klaus’s objections to the treaty as it stands – said

the EU was working on a new way to settle the issue.

“I feel confident that if we have this (opt-out) in place we will have a Czech ratification after that,” Reinfeldt said, adding that he expected the issue to be discussed at an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday.

Eurosceptic Klaus has a record of throwing up new hurdles to the treaty, which must be approved by all EU member states to enter into force.

Earlier this month he angered EU partners by demanding an opt-out to make sure that ethnic Germans forced out of the country after World War II in punishment for alleged wartime collaboration with the occupying Nazis cannot claim their property back.

A Czech opt-out would not be the first time such a solution has been granted with both Britain and Poland also having won similar exemptions in their own areas of concern.

Last week, Klaus suggested he would ultimately sign.

In any case, he cannot sign the treaty now as the Czech Constitutional Court banned him from ratification pending its verdict on the treaty’s compliance with the constitution, expected on Tuesday.

The case was brought to the court by a group of pro-Klaus lawmakers.

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