1814

Saint-Simon proposes the creation of a European Parliament

At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the French philosopher Henri de Saint-Simon (the forefather of sociology) saw that the new technology would overturn the relationships between the nations.On the eve of the Congress of Vienna, he published a pamphlet entitled: 'On the reorganisation of European society, or the need and the means to unite the peoples of Europe in one political body, while preserving national independence for each'.At the pinnacle of his edifice, he placed a parliament with 240 members: 'Europe would have the best possible organisation if all the nations within its borders, each governed by its own parliament, recognised the supremacy of a general parliament placed above all the national governments and invested with the power to pass judgment over their disagreements'. At the time, this visionary idea was dismissed as a Utopian fantasy.