Hungary and Poland blocked the approval of the EU’s seven-year budget and the recovery fund totalling €1.81 trillion, as both countries continued to oppose the rule of law mechanism attached to the EU funds.
The veto – which could still be overcome at the level of EU27
national leaders – further complicates the arrival of the badly needed
EU funds in hard-hit countries like Spain or Italy, at a time when the
pandemic continues to spread across Europe and the reinstalled
restrictive measures are hampering the recovery.
The 27 EU ambassadors (Coreper) met on Monday (16 November) to
approve a series of compromises reached between the European Parliament
negotiators and the German presidency of the Council representing the
member states.
It included the multi-annual financial framework (MFF), the EU’s
seven-year budget of almost 1.1 trillion, and the €750 billion recovery
fund to tackle the worst recession in EU’s history caused by the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The package also included the new rule of law mechanism, which would
allow for the suspension of EU funds in case of mishandling European
money or breaching EU principles.
In spite of Hungary and Poland’s opposition to the mechanism, the
rule of law conditionality was approved by the required qualified
majority in the Council.
In retaliation, Budapest and Warsaw blocked the MFF and the recovery
fund on Monday, given that the unanimity was needed in both cases
through the so-called own resources decision.
Their veto will be discussed at a meeting of EU European affairs
ministers on Tuesday and then at a video-summit of EU leaders on
Thursday.
A spokesperson of the Germany presidency said on Twitter the EU
ambassadors had failed to reach “the necessary unanimity for initiating
the written procedure due to reservations expressed by two member
states.”
In addition, the own resources procedure must be completed by the
ratification in all the member states, mostly through their national
parliaments, which will further prolong the approval process at least
until next spring. The bulk of the EU recovery funds is not expected
until the second half of 2021.
The European Parliament and Council reached a final deal on the EU’s
next seven-year budget, worth €1.0743 trillion, on Tuesday (10
November), agreeing to add an additional €16 billion to the budget,
mostly for health and education and introduce a roadmap for new European
levies and biodiversity targets.
The EU’s long-term budget compromise was also blocked in the Coreper.
A German spokesperson said that two member states “expressed
reservations with regard to their opposition to one element of the
overall package”, in a reference to the Rule of Law mechanism, “but not
to the substance of the MFF agreement”.
In an earlier letter sent to the Commission, Hungary and Poland had
threatened to block the approval process of the MFF and the recovery
fund if the rule of law mechanism was approved, as they considered it an
encroachment on their “national sovereignty”.
The Hungarian government spokesperson, Zoltan Kovacs, explained their
veto by saying that the rule of law compromise “runs contrary to the
July Council conclusions”, referring to the summit where EU27 leaders
agreed the budget.
The European Parliament and the Council representing the EU27 reached
a preliminary deal on linking the disbursement of EU funds to rule of
law after five rounds of talks, clearing a major hurdle in the wider
negotiations on the bloc’s budget.
During the negotiations with the European Parliament, this
conditionality included more cases under which EU funds could be
suspended, such as endangering the independence of the judiciary, and a
preventive orientation, which sparked the criticism of Hungary and
Poland.
“The question is whether Poland… will be subject to political and
institutionalised enslavement,” Polish Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro
said on Monday.
The impact of the second wave of the pandemic has forced the European Commission to cut its growth forecast for next year.
“We are back in a crisis”, a senior EU official said commenting on Budapest and Warsaw’s expected veto.
The Commissioner for Budget, Johannes Hahn, expressed his disappointment with the outcome of the Coreper meeting
He urged member states to “assume political responsibility” and take the necessary steps to pass the EU budget package.
“This is not about ideologies but about help for our citizens in the worst crisis since World War II, he said.
It remains to be seen how the veto of these two countries could be
overcome, given that the Council already endorsed the rule of law
mechanism.
The Commission considers that it is the German presidency’s role to
find a way out of this standoff, but it may require the intervention of
EU leaders, who are meeting online on Thursday to discuss Brexit, the
state of play of the pandemic, and their efforts to fight against the
virus.
Meanwhile, the German presidency and the Parliament negotiators are
discussing the details of the €672 billion Recovery and Resilience
Facility, the main pillar of the recovery fund and the outstanding piece
in the negotiation of the EU budget.
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