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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
We may assume that the present institutional system of the European Communities is only one stage in the long and arduous development of a European constitution. Looked at half a century hence, the trials and errors of the Coal and Steel Community; the abortive projects for a defence community and a political community; the successes and limitations of EEC and Euratom; and the vain search of the six pioneer countries for a formula for political union will appear as the first hesitant but sigruficant steps towards a complete federal system. Limited though the existing Communities are to economic and social affairs, they have now passed a point where their economies are inextricably linked, and where, although progress to more complete political unity is not automatic it is, in the long run, inevitable.
1 A term used by M. Marjolin to the press to describe the package deal of 12 May 1966, concluded when he was acting as president of the Commission.
2 France, Germany and Italy have four votes, Belgium and the Netherlands two votes each, Luxembourg one, and twelve votes are needed for a weighted majority: thus a major country can be outvoted unless able to obtain the support of one of its medium‐sized partners.