Many countries in the EU are slipping into or already in recession. Hopefully - and I know we can't bank on hope - these countries will come to understand "don't raise taxes during a recession."
Just read about Finland and Nokia today and how they are in recession and there is gloom. It's probably one reason why they said no to FTT and cheering from Brussels. Who wants to hurt their tax base to fund Greece? Northern EU countries resented bailouts before and they will resent them more as the recession bites during this cold winter. They are getting cold feet on FTT.
I do think that France and Germany are stalling a losing QMV vote. Like Leader Harry Reid not bringing a bill for voting on the Senate floor.
Pile on the media comment boards with "don't raise taxes and hurt your economic base during a recession." That argument makes politicians very nervous. Of course, we know FTT is bad in any economic cycle.
The EU is losing manufacturing jobs to emerging markets due to significant wage and payroll tax differences. Why tax banks and capital with FTT which will chase banking and finance jobs to emerging markets, too?