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- <text id=89TT2438>
- <title>
- Sep. 18, 1989: "Mr. Europe" Leads The Way
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 18, 1989 Torching The Amazon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 43
- "Mr. Europe" Leads the Way
- </hdr><body>
- <p> If Western Europe's plane ride toward market unity in 1992
- has finally reached cruising speed, that is due in large measure
- to the skillful maneuvering performed by the craft's chief
- pilot, Jacques Delors. It was the shrewd but sometimes prickly
- Frenchman, shortly after he became the European Commission's
- President in 1985, who selected 1992 as the target date for
- eliminating trade barriers among the Community's twelve members.
- And it was Delors, 64, who conducted a nonstop p.r. campaign on
- behalf of the plan. His efforts have earned him the nickname
- "Mr. Europe" and comparisons to the late Jean Monnet, his fellow
- Frenchman and the architect of the postwar European movement.
- </p>
- <p> When Delors arrived in Brussels, the Community had
- experienced more than a decade of drift, along with some
- unpleasant jolts brought on by two international oil crises.
- Even though the establishment of the Community in 1958 had
- resulted in the removal of some tariffs, Delors found that
- others still persisted and that customs requirements and
- manufacturing regulations remained rampant. The new E.C. chief
- quickly realized that the elimination of such impediments could
- not be accomplished within one four-year term of office, so he
- chose the end of the following term, 1992, as the deadline. At
- the time, Delors did not know that he would be reappointed to
- office and would preside over the transition to a new Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The son of a messenger for the Banque de France, Delors is
- very much a self-made man. After graduating from high school,
- he worked for his father's employer by day and acquired degrees
- in law and economics at night. Politically, he has operated both
- sides of the fence. From 1969 to 1972 he worked as an adviser
- to Gaullist Prime Minister Jacques Chaban-Delmas, and from 1981
- to 1984 he served as Socialist President Francois Mitterrand's
- Economy and Finance Minister. When in Paris, Delors lives with
- wife Marie in a five-room apartment near the Gare de Lyons. They
- have one married daughter Martine; their only son Jean Paul died
- of cancer several years ago. Delors's passions other than work
- are jazz, movies, soccer and the annual Tour de France, which
- he has twice observed as a commentator on French television.
- </p>
- <p> For a bureaucrat who serves at the pleasure of a dozen
- bosses, Delors can be short-tempered and occasionally imperious.
- During one memorable speech last year, he accused a British
- representative on the 16-member European Commission of being "a
- lackey of the Labour Party" and referred indelicately to West
- German Chancellor Helmut Kohl as "fat-assed." His blithe
- contention that eventually E.C. officials would preside over 80%
- of the national economic and social decision making now
- conducted by individual countries infuriated Britain's Margaret
- Thatcher. So does his next major goal: replacing each nation's
- currency with a unified European monetary system. Delors rarely
- takes on Thatcher directly (surely a wise decision), but he does
- go right on talking. "We must build Europe every day," he says.
- "We must go all the way."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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