Europe's leaders celebrated yesterday after the Lisbon Treaty was finally ratified after two years of delay, paving the way to the creation of a new-look European Union.
The final hurdle to its endorsement was swept away when the Eurosceptic Czech President, Vaclav Klaus, became the last of the 27 EU leaders to sign the document.
But the move forced Britain's Conservative Party leadership into a damaging policy reversal as they abandoned the party's long-held promise to hold a referendum on Lisbon. William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, conceded that holding a vote on Lisbon was "no longer possible".
Leader David Cameron will now face charges of betrayal from Eurosceptics on the party's back benches after he gave a "cast-iron guarantee" to the British public in 2007 that he would hold a referendum on the treaty.
He was to outline his party's new approach to Europe today, when he is expected to back renegotiation of some of the Lisbon Treaty's measures and guarantee a referendum on any similar document drawn up in the future.
"Now that the treaty is going to become European law and is going to enter into force, that means a referendum can no longer prevent the creation of the president of the European Council and the loss of British national vetoes," Hague said.
"These things will already have happened and a referendum cannot unwind them or prevent them.
"We were very clear that our promise applied to those circumstances."
The treaty is designed to streamline EU decision-making and improve scrutiny of its policies.
Klaus added his name to the treaty, turning it into European law, after the Czech Constitutional Court threw out a claim that the agreement was unconstitutional.
Now the EU will arrange an emergency summit within two weeks to choose the holders of the posts created by the treaty, with a view to the jobs coming into force on January 1. Most attention will focus on the selection of the president of the European Council and the EU high representative, effectively its foreign minister.
Herman Van Rompuy, the Belgian Prime Minister, and Jan Peter Balkenende, his Dutch counterpart, are viewed as current front-runners for the presidency, with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair's allies insisting he is still in the running for the job. Blair's supporters say they are not deterred by the doubts cast over his candidacy by France, Germany and smaller EU member states.
Were he to drop out of the race, attention would focus on British Foreign Secretary David Miliband's credentials for the post of high representative. He has said he is "not available" for the job, but failed last week to rule himself out under all circumstances.
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Last holdout signs Lisbon Treaty
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