Executive summary
France’s President Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Chancellor Olaf
Scholz have stressed the geopolitical emergency of re-designing the
European Union’s relationship with its neighbourhood. Both acknowledge
that EU enlargement is necessary, but also emphasise that profound EU
institutional reform is required beforehand, though deepening and
widening the EU are complex processes that veto players could block.
The geopolitical challenges mean it is in the critical interest of
the EU to bring stability to its neighbourhood by ensuring geopolitical
alignment with the EU, limiting the blackmailing power of external,
authoritarian states, supporting more resilient democracies and
strengthening the rule of law. Meanwhile, the EU’s neighbours are
seeking a political space in which challenges to collective security and
stability can be addressed and concrete policies decided. Given the
urgency, it is not enough to rely on lengthy EU accession processes.
A ‘European Political Community’ (EPC), which will have its first
summit on 6 October 2022, could act both as a bridge to an eventual
larger EU and as a framework for continental-scale partnership. Leaders
should use the summit to start the building of a platform that can
combine political dialogue with policy delivery in a quick and flexible
way, and will thus structure more impactfully the relationship between
the EU and its neighbourhood.
The EPC could start as a soft law agreement between states and the
EU. It would work with existing institutions as far as possible, while
aiming at more effective decision-making than currently in the EU. For
instance it could function without vetoes and could work in
geopolitically relevant areas that are not yet EU competences. An
ambitious EPC would provide financial resources for deeper cooperation
on energy and climate, security and defence, and economic and social
convergence.
The EPC would not be, and should not be, regarded as a substitute for
EU accession, but should be designed in such a way that it can work as
an accelerator. For countries not seeking to join the EU, it would
provide an ongoing framework that sustains structured cooperation with
the EU.