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Mario Draghi has urged the EU to streamline its decision-making and deepen economic integration as the union seeks to respond to the upheaval triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Italian prime minister told the European parliament on Tuesday that the EU needed to embrace “pragmatic federalism” in multiple policy areas including defence, foreign policy and economic burden-sharing given the crisis unfolding to its east.
If the reforms required the EU to reopen its treaties then it should be prepared to do so, he added. “The institutions set up by our predecessors over the past decades have served Europe’s citizens well, but they are inadequate given the reality that confronts us today,” he said in Strasbourg. “We need a pragmatic federalism: one that encompasses all the areas affected by the transformations taking place — from the economy, to energy, to security.”
The EU responded rapidly to the Ukraine crisis, unleashing multiple rounds of sanctions on Moscow and offering generous terms to Ukrainian refugees. However, the crisis is prompting some policymakers to call for bolder reforms given the threat from Russia.
Among Draghi’s proposals are a call for the EU to abandon the requirement for most common foreign and security policy decisions to be adopted only by unanimity among member states. This comes as they debate this week whether to impose new sanctions on Russia, including an oil embargo — a proposal that has encountered resistance from EU capitals including Budapest. “We must overcome this principle of unanimity, which leads to a logic of crossed vetoes, and move towards decisions taken by a qualified majority,” said Draghi. “A Europe capable of making timely decisions is a Europe [that] is more credible vis-à-vis its citizens and vis-à-vis the world.”
Among Draghi’s other proposals are improved joint mechanisms to handle migration, and greater co-ordination on defence. While the combined defence spending of EU member states is about three times that of Russia, he said the EU operated a total of 146 defence systems — compared with just 34 in the US....
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