
The Brief – 27 June 2025: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Orlando Whitehead Euractiv Jun 27, 2025 18:13 4 min. read Opinion
Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the author/producer's interpretation of facts and data.
Good Friday afternoon. Well done for making it through the succession of early doorsteps and late nights, roundtables and sideline stunts, and all the thrills that came with a double-barrel week of NATO and EUCO summits.
As is always the case when Trump is on the bill, the meeting in The Hague was the focus of attention, his arrival prefaced by debate in Europe about defence spending. Keeping the big man sweet was the name of the game, and alliance chief Rutte was prepared to prostrate himself (and European allies) for his excellency's pleasure.
Any self-respecting person would have told him to knock it off. Instead, Trump shared the intimate messages. And the NATO comms team kept up the nauseating narrative, sharing a "family photo" shortly after the 'daddy' of the group cast doubt over America's commitment to Article 5 – the very cornerstone of the alliance. It's almost as if someone's forgotten who came to their assistance on the only occasion the crucial article has ever been invoked...
Surprising perhaps, was the general acceptance that this degradation was vindicated by Trump's apparent satisfaction with the 5% pledge. A credulous Rutte vaunted a "stronger, fairer and more lethal alliance", and others applauded his efforts. If realpolitik demands spinlessness, so be it.
The President's parting homage to "the love and the passion that [EU leaders] showed for their country" was especially uncomfortable to hear. "I've never seen anything like it,' he beamed. Neither had we. But will it stop him clobbering the continent with 50% tariffs in two weeks? Don't hold your breath.
EUCO
With NATO hailed a success, a weary procession headed closer to Euractiv HQ for the European Council summit, which president António Costa was intent on keeping to one day (they overshot by a couple of hours).
High on the agenda was the EU's response to incoming US tariffs, and how to strike the balance between assertiveness and provoking an aggressive pushback.
While the jury is out on the best strategy for dealing with POTUS, the desire to reduce economic dependence on America is universal. To this end, von der Leyen floated the idea of an alternative to the World Trade Organisation, whose rules Trump has interpreted as optional as he rides roughshod over free trade agreements.
But besides indicating that this could not include the US, the proposal is still in gestation. A Space Act to make Musk blast off? Not content with wrapping 27 member countries with red tape, the Commission plans to turn its regulatory spray gun on the cosmos, with a landmark Space Act that aims to set the global standards for launching rockets and maintaining satellites.
The law won't apply until at least 2030, but it could be on a collision course with tech companies already angling to exploit the extraterrestrial zone. Greenwashing back on the menu? The controversy that broke last Friday when the Commission announced that the Green Claims law would be dropped, continued to boil this week.
Whilst a Commission official told The Capitals newsletter on Sunday that the law – which is designed to prevent companies from making unfounded claims about the environmental or climate friendliness of their products – would live on (albeit substantially diluted), Italy withdrew support for the law on Monday, casting further doubt over its future.
Progressive MEPs have been fuming over the subterfuge but EPP president Manfred Weber was unrepentant, describing a "authoritarian wave" of green policies that his party is on a mission to kill. Vilified by the left, assailed by the right At the same time, the Commission was targeted by a motion of no confidence on Thursday, brought forward by 74 right-wing MEPs belonging to the Patriots for Europe and ECR groups.
But the motion lost momentum as Meloni's allies were divided on whether to get behind the campaign and it transpired that an eventual plenary vote would likely be unsuccessful.
Want to get The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly in your inbox? Subscribe to The Brief.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euractiv
12 hours ago
- Euractiv
Trump suggests EU's digital rules are on the table in trade talks
Donald Trump suggested on Friday that the EU's enforcement of its Big Tech laws is on the table in ongoing trade talks that could see the EU make concessions in order to avoid certain tariffs. The US president announced the immediate suspension of trade talks with Canada via a post on his Truth Social platform over their tax on US technology companies. In enforcing their digital services tax, Canada was "obviously copying the European Union, which has done the same thing, and is currently under discussion with us," he said. The EU does not tax US tech firms specifically, but Trump has previously criticised the bloc's laws to rein in anticompetitive behaviour by those firms and moderate the content they publish – the Digital Markets Act and the Digital Services Act, respectively. These rules include fines for non-compliance following investigations. Trump's Friday post is a suggestion that EU negotiators may be discussing how those laws are enforced against US firms in their talks on a deal to lower tariffs on European exports across the Atlantic. The European Commission denied Trump's suggestion. "We have been very clear on the sovereignty of our decision-making process, including our digital laws, they are untouchable," a spokesperson said. "We are still fully and deeply engaged in negotiations," they added. Trump's comments come just a day after EU leaders were divided on whether to accept a baseline 10% tariff on exports to the US – while possibly imposing their own retaliatory 10% tariff – at their summit in Brussels on Thursday. The Wall Street Journal , citing a leaked draft agreement, reported last week that the EU and US could enter into a formal dialogue on the Digital Markets Act following the trade deal – with US firms exempted from enforcement during those talks. That prompted a strong denial from the Commission's top US trade official, Matthias Jorgensen, who told MEPs this week that putting "the EU's regulatory autonomy on the table" was "not an option for us'. At this week's G7 summit in Canada, Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Trump agreed to find a solution to the trade spat before 9 July. Von der Leyen told EU leaders on Thursday that she had received the latest counterproposal from the US.


Euractiv
15 hours ago
- Euractiv
‘Bleak' mid-year meeting suggests UN climate action framework in crisis
Nikolaus J. Kurmayer Euractiv Jun 27, 2025 15:27 3 min. read News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Want to keep reading? Get a subscription on Euractiv Pro and elevate your political insight! Discover Euractiv Pro For corporations Already have an account? Log in


Euractiv
15 hours ago
- Euractiv
Council agrees to charge handling fees to curb low-value parcel surge in EU
Anupriya Datta Euractiv Jun 27, 2025 14:33 1 min. read News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Want to keep reading? Get a subscription on Euractiv Pro and elevate your political insight! Discover Euractiv Pro For corporations Already have an account? Log in