| EDITORIAL >
Polish plumbers
Written by: Philippe Riboton
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FOLLOWING THE RESULTS of the French referendum on May 29, Czech
media have been pretty keen on pointing at the French "no" and
its possible implications for the ratification process of the European
constitution. Yet in most cases they have failed at undercovering
the key figure that has crystallized the fear and anger of the
average Mr. Durand. Quite surprisingly, this was not the president
of the European Commission nor even the French president. No, the
central character that made the French set a bomb that will apparently
leave a bolder mark in history than the nuclear tests they have
been running for years in the Pacific Ocean is called the "Polish
Plumber." Although it may sound like a nice title for a Hollywood
thriller, "the Polish Plumber" is no joke: it is the
manifestation of the latest French hysteria against European enlargement,
which on May 1st, 2004 saw the Poles as well as the Czechs and
eight other nationalities join the EU bandwagon. God only knows
if any French have ever met a Polish Plumber - most probably they
have come across more Czech automotive engineers or Slovak IT specialists
in their professional dealings. Never mind: the Polish Plumber
is here to represent the jobs the French think they will lose if
new members from central Europe enter the employment game. Which
comes as no surprise when one remembers that the French are part
of this club that set up an embargo (although temporary) against
job-seekers from new country members accessing the French workplace.
To put it simply, the Polish Plumber sends the message to the Poles,
Czechs, Slovaks, and Hungarians (among others) that they are not
really welcome to work in the "homeland for human rights".
At a time thousands of French and other Europeans are losing their
jobs because their employers are delocalizing their manufacturing
facilities further East, the Polish Plumber demonstrates that the
great idea of a European job market definitely has a serious problem
in its pipes.
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