Compromise defuses clash over rule of law in short term but deep divisions remain. EU leaders on Thursday clinched a deal to end a blockade of the bloc's historic €1.8 trillion budget-and-recovery package by Hungary and Poland over plans to link EU payments to respect for the rule of law.
The standoff threatened the implementation of the EU's next
seven-year budget, beginning in January, which would have meant cuts in
payments to member countries just as their economies are being hit hard
by the coronavirus crisis. It also put at risk the recovery fund, to be
financed by an unprecedented amount of joint debt and meant to fuel the
revival from the pandemic.
“Now we can start with the implementation and build back our economies,” European Council President Charles Michel tweeted after
agreement was reached at a summit in Brussels. “Our landmark recovery
package will drive forward our green & digital transitions.”
The clash over the rule-of-law scheme also revealed deepening
divisions within the EU over its fundamental values, which threaten to
widen in the months and years ahead. Under the scheme, the EU would be
able to cut off payments to a country if it judged that certain
rule-of-law criteria related to the budget were not being met.
The governments of Hungary and Poland, which both face charges from
EU institutions that they are backsliding on the rule of law and other
democratic fundamentals, opposed the measure. The European Commission
and a number of Western European countries, on the other hand, insisted
it was high time to link EU values more closely to EU money.
In the end, all sides agreed to a compromise negotiated
by Germany, the current holder of the presidency of the Council of the
EU. Under the deal, the text of the new measure remains unchanged but
will not be used until Hungary and Poland have the chance to challenge
its legality in the EU's top court and get a verdict.
Some leaders, notably Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, sought
additional legal and political assurances about the compromise but
declared themselves satisfied on Thursday evening.
Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša described the deal to POLITICO as "not good, not bad. As good as possible."
"Typical EU compromise," he said.
Time pressure played a major role in bringing all member countries on
board, as capitals feared the economic impact of relying on an
emergency EU budget and delaying the disbursement of recovery money.
“It was time to move forward,” said one EU diplomat.
While the European Parliament still needs to greenlight the long-term
budget and national parliaments have to provide consent in order for
the €750 billion recovery fund to become operational, Thursday’s deal
was likely the last major political hurdle at EU level to the
implementation of the package.
The compromise allowed all sides to claim victory. “Common sense has
prevailed,” Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared in a Facebook
video, while French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted
that “we just adopted a robust agreement on the mechanism to put in
place, to respect the rule of law. Europe goes forward, united, and
carrying its values.”
In the text of their summit conclusions, leaders asked the European
Commission to refrain from implementing the rule-of-law mechanism
pending any challenge in the Court of Justice of the European Union.
Poland and Hungary confirmed on Thursday they would mount such a
challenge.
In practice, this concession to Budapest and Warsaw means that the
implementation of the mechanism will be delayed — at least by months,
possibly longer.
The text also stipulates that the mechanism only applies to the
2021-2027 EU budget and recovery fund, and that "the European Council
will strive to formulate a common position" should a country facing
penalties request a discussion of its case. That means the matter could
go all the way to EU leaders — but it does not say that they would be
able to block any penalties.
more at Politico
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