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Edmund Stoiber, ministre-président de Bavière, écrit dans l'édition estivale de Europe's World qu'un mécanisme de pré-alerte en matière de subsidiarité - ainsi qu'un système règlementaire d'analyse d'impact - constituerait un grand pas en avant pour rendre l'UE plus forte et plus compétitive.
Acceptance of the EU by its citizens is on the decline and Mr. Stoiber points to a lack of knowledge about the EU, enlargement anxiety and "increasing regulation and bureaucracy from Brussels" as sources of the problem. He goes on to give examples of violations of the subsidiarity principle and areas of overregulation recorded by Germany's Bundesrat. Among them are aspects of the EU's directive on flood risk management, the Flora, Fauna, Habitat (FFH) directive and the REACH proposal on safer chemicals management. Mr. Stoiber argues, "strict observance of the subsidiarity principle and improvements in EU level legislation are crucial to reinvigorating citizens' acceptance of the European project."
These issues are particularly important in an enlarged EU according to Mr. Stoiber, and immediate action should be taken. He suggests:
Mr. Stoiber sees an enforceable subsidiarity system along with improved regulatory impact assessment as "key contribution(s) to Europe’s competitiveness".