16/07/24View in Browser

Will the UK lose its marbles?

By Alice Taylor

There are whispers that the recent change of government in the UK may result in gains in terms of closer ties with Brussels, not only a softer approach to migration but also in losses – particularly of its marbles.

The Elgin Marbles, more correctly known as the Parthenon Marbles, have been a bone of contention between the UK and Greece since the 7th Earl of Elgin, Thomas Bruce. He did what the British ruling class did best: stripped Ancient Greek sculptures from the Parthenon in the early 1800s and shipped them off to England. 

He then sold them to the British Museum, where they have sat for over 200 years, despite multiple pleas to return them to their rightful home. Elgin claimed he had permission from the Ottoman authorities who ruled Athens at the time, whereas the Greeks and many others insist they were stolen.

More fuel was added to the fire at the start of June, when a Turkish representative at the UNESCO Intergovernmental Commission for the Return of Cultural Property to the Countries of Origin, stated there is no document in existence, legitimising the handing over of the marbles to Elgin, taking the wind out of the sales of the UK’s main argument.

The author of this brief, a Brit, believes that regardless of whether they were taken with the permission of an occupying force or not, they do not belong to the UK and should be returned. As for public opinion in the UK, 64% agree with me.

The issue has arisen many times over the years, but during the reign of former Labour prime minister Tony Blair, it was deemed too much of a thorny issue to touch. Former minister for Europe during those years, Denis McShane, published an op-ed in The Times last week where he said Blair was hesitant to upset the powerful Oxbridge elite, many of whom had a close affinity with ‘the Classics’.

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Photo of the day

 Roberta Metsola sits next to bouquets of flowers after being re-elected President of the European Parliament during a plenary session of the parliament in Strasbourg, France, 16 July 2024. The first session of the new European Parliament opened on July 16, with MEPs electing their president for the next two and a half years. EPA-EFE/RONALD WITTEK

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The Roundup

With two years of economic stagnation and insolvencies on the rise, analysts are divided on how to interpret the current state of the German economy.

Roberta Metsola has been re-elected as president of the European Parliament as she won in the first round of voting with 562 votes at the Parliament’s inaugural plenary sitting in Strasbourg Tuesday (16 July)

In an interview with Euractiv, the outgoing chair of the European Parliament’s Environment Committee (ENVI), Pascal Canfin, called on lawmakers from the centre-right European People’s Party, who supported farmers’ strikes, to embrace a more ecological approach.

The left-wing parties of the New Popular Front (NFP), whose ad-hoc coalition managed to beat the far-right Rassemblement national (RN) in the snap legislative elections, are now at loggerheads over the name of a new prime minister.

YouTuber-turned-MEP Panayiotou ran an X poll to decide whether he will vote for Ursula von der Leyen.

Look out for…

  • Meeting of the European Political Community in the UK
  • European Commission Vice-President Margaritis Schinas participates in the International Trans-Mediterranean Migration Forum, in Tripoli, Libya.
  • European Commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski opens the inaugural meeting of the EU Agri-Food Chain Observatory, in Brussels, Belgium.
  • European Commissioner Kadri Simson delivers a keynote speech at the Energy Solutions’ Networking Lunch Event “The future of European energy policy: Challenges and opportunities to address during the new legislative mandate.”
  • European Commissioner Helena Dalli meets Member of the European Parliament Evelyn Regner
  • European Commissioner Iliana Ivanova meets with Zhivko Todorov, Mayor of the Municipality of Stara Zagora

[Edited by Rajnish Singh]

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