Christopher Huhne: It may be time for the Paris train

New pan-European regulator may put further pressure on London

At first sight, there is no obvious reason why anyone in financial services should care about the European Union's constitutional convention. That would be a mistake. This body of 105 ministers and members of the European and national parliaments under the chairmanship of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, the former French president, may yet put a lot of City of London bankers on the Eurostar to and from Paris.

The convention is meant to propose a new, simpler and more democratic set of EU procedures. These revised draft treaties would then go to the member states meeting in the usual inter-governmental convention (IGC). If the IGC – slated for later this year under the Italian presidency, so that there can be a new Treaty of Rome – agrees, then each national parliament has to ratify the EU's new treaty basis.

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