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The Brief – Von der Leyen's big budget moment ends in chaos
The Brief – Von der Leyen's big budget moment ends in chaos

Euractiv

time16-07-2025

  • Business
  • Euractiv

The Brief – Von der Leyen's big budget moment ends in chaos

A day of cancelled briefings, internal dissent, angry MEPs and confusion over the budget's biggest numbers: Commission President Ursula von der Leyen may very well have gone too far in her bold bid to re-think the EU project. Fed up with a never-changing EU spending plan under the multiannual financial framework and emboldened by a dual defence and competitiveness crisis, von der Leyen has mobilised all her political savvy to break the status quo and centre the EU project on herself and the European Commission. Since October , she has been socialising radical ideas for what the next EU budget could look like, and meticulously working behind closed doors on a setup to centralise power in a palatable form for key EU countries. She overplayed her hand. In the critical moment to make her pitch, von der Leyen faced rebellion within her own Commission and did not appear to present her budget overhaul herself. A proposal was initially expected this morning, with briefings in parliament throughout the day. Instead, they failed to land final numbers, six commissioners rebelled against her funding plan, and Parliament briefings were repeatedly delayed or cancelled throughout the day. 'I have literally no idea what is going on,' Siegfried Mureșan, Parliament's budget co-lead from von der Leyen's own party, told Euractiv at midday. At the time of writing, the Commission still hasn't provided its actual proposal, despite hours of speeches and presentations. The curse of unanimity Von der Leyen is asking a lot of the next budget. Breaking decades of precedent, the Commission wants to put around €900 billion into a megafund to use as leverage to implement EU-friendly reforms and a €410 billion European Competitiveness Fund for flexible industrial investments. Farmers and regions face serious cuts, wildly unpopular with major recipients of such funds like Poland, Italy and Spain. On top of that, the Commission announced new EU-wide taxes on tobacco, carbon emissions and large companies, which may disproportionately burden many of the same countries. Von der Leyen's play was bold, and she has already landed some wins. For starters, she's managed to get the two biggest players – Germany and France – to listen to her ideas. On top of this, she has succeeded in setting the terms of the debate. With Europe in the clutch of so many crises – and found wanting on so many fronts – aligning behind a vision for a competitive continent that can withstand existential economic and security threats is a must. But von der Leyen may have aimed too high. Not even managing to keep her own commissioners in check, she now faces a daunting task to get every single EU country and hundreds of MEPs onboard. Parliament doesn't even want to start negotiations with the proposed ideas. A parliament source told Euractiv that Commission bureaucrats are fed up with her radical proposals, and that they eagerly await a chance to pick her proposal apart. Ursula von der Leyen has successfully shaken up the budget debate. Now, we will see whether a Europe in crisis is ready to succumb to her vision, or if they reject her for going too far. (jp, cp) Roundup The moment we've all been waiting for: The European Commission proposed the largest long-term EU budget in its history Wednesday, merging historically separate farming and regional spending programmes into country-specific national plans and creating a €400+ billion fund to boost ailing industry, totalling just under €2 trillion, or 1.26% of the bloc's gross national income. The Šefčovič shuffle: The EU's top trade negotiator Maroš Šefčovič is jetting to Washington on Wednesday for talks with his US counterparts in a renewed push to settle the transatlantic tariffs stand-off. The trip follows Trump's threat of a 30% levy on European goods from 1 August. Meta fine: The European Commission is still considering whether to impose further fines on Meta over its advertising model under the Digital Markets Act following a €200 million decision against the social media giant's pay-or-consent ad practices earlier this year, citing remaining issues that the company has yet to clean up. Across Europe Must the show go on? – Valery Gergiev, the world-renowned orchestra conductor and known Putin backer, prepares to perform at a state-backed music festival in southern Italy on 27 July despite mounting concern over his performance – though the region's governor supports the show. My likeness, not yours – The Danish presidency is set to push for EU-wide protection for people's identities, especially to prevent the usage of personal attributes in AI deepfake generation – the law would allow for citizens to require social media companies to take down AI images that imitate them. Out-of-prime minister runs again – French conservative Michel Barnier of Les Républicains, the EU's former chief Brexit negotiator and briefly serving French prime minister in 2024, has announced his candidacy in a September Paris parliamentary election following the annulment of a Macron-aligned candidate's 2024 victory.

Money talks: What the EU-27 want from the next budget
Money talks: What the EU-27 want from the next budget

Euractiv

time14-07-2025

  • Business
  • Euractiv

Money talks: What the EU-27 want from the next budget

The European Commission is set to present its big pitch for the EU's 2028–2034 budget on Wednesday, promising to drastically 'simplify' and completely rethink how the bloc spends money. The current €1.2 trillion amount is locked in for seven years, divided into 16 different clusters and over 50 budget lines. Roughly a third goes to farmers via the Common Agricultural Policy, another to regional development in Cohesion funds, and the rest to research, foreign policy, industry, and administration. But any overhaul is not up to Brussels alone. Every spending line in the so-called 'multi-year financial framework' (MFF) requires unanimous sign-off from both the Parliament and national capitals. Euractiv asked all 27 governments and combed through position papers to get their views on five crunch questions: Size: Should the budget be increased? Own resources: Should new EU-level income sources, like a carbon tax or joint debt, be introduced? National envelopes: Should the funds reserved for farmers (CAP, two parts) and lagging regions (cohesion, four parts) merge into national cash pots? Reform-for-cash: Should EU countries or regions be forced to make EU-friendly reforms to access EU funds? CAP/Cohesion cuts? Should CAP and cohesion funds be reduced? Five fights that will shape the EU's next €1.2 trillion budget There is a broad consensus that the EU needs a more agile budget but the bloc is a heavy machine – and always at risk of taking the path of least friction. In a nutshell: Thirteen countries, including France, support a bigger budget. Seven countries, including Germany, oppose an increase. Twelve countries, including France and Germany, support introducing 'new own' resources. Six countries are sceptical. Nineteen countries, including France and Germany, reject an outright merger of cohesion and CAP. But they may still favour a move in that direction, as long as their favourite programmes survive in some shape or form. countries, including France and Germany, reject an outright merger of cohesion and CAP. But they may still favour a move in that direction, as long as their favourite programmes survive in some shape or form. Thirteen countries, including Germany and France, are in favour of increased cash-for-reforms in the next budget. Nine are against. countries, including Germany and France, are in favour of increased cash-for-reforms in the next budget. Nine are against. Fifteen countries reject cuts to cohesion and CAP. The budget needs to be approved unanimously. Austria The government's position has not yet been finalised, officials told Euractiv. Belgium Bigger budget: Lean no. 'EU-level spending should remain focused on areas where it clearly delivers added value,' Deputy Prime Minister Van Peteghem told Euractiv in a statement. Own resources: Lean no. ' Belgium has not yet adopted fixed positions' but expects EU institutions to 'pursue greater efficiency and fiscal discipline in budget execution.' National envelopes: No. 'Belgium believes CAP should remain a separate instrument,' with its own internal distribution key. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. 'Belgium supports a performance-based approach' if it doesn't increase administrative burdens and respects the regional administration architecture of member countries. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No position. Bulgaria Bigger budget: Yes. The next MFF should 'at least' equal the current one and the EU's €650 billion Covid recovery fund together (RFF), reads a position non-paper seen by Euractiv. Own resources: Lean yes. 'We remain open to introducing genuine new own resources,' the paper reads. National envelopes: No. CAP should have a dedicated budget and retain its two-pillar structure, but Bulgaria supports more flexibility between the two pillars. Reform-for-cash: No. The Cohesion Fund should be preserved in its current form, with funding not tied to reform commitments. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Both areas are important. Croatia Bigger budget: Yes. "Croatia advocates an ambitious and robust budget," the government told Euractiv. Own resources: No position. National envelopes and reform-for-cash: Lean no. Greece is among the 14 countries that rallied against making regional funding conditional on national reforms in early July. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Zagreb wants a budget that "ensures a strong cohesion and CAP policy." Cyprus Cyprus did not respond to Euractiv's request in time for publication. Czechia Bigger budget: Lean yes. Czechia 'is ready to discuss a limited increase of the long-term EU budget,' the government told Euractiv. New own resources: Lean no. ' Czechia is in general reserved towards the introduction of new own resources.' National envelopes: No. 'We strongly support maintaining a separate CAP fund.' Czechia is 'cautious towards the possible in-depth reforms' for cohesion. Reform-for-cash: Lean no. Czechia is 'cautious' about greater focus on reforms. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. Cohesion is described as a crucial investment tool. No position given on CAP. Denmark Bigger budget: Lean yes. Despite being traditionally frugal, Denmark is open to a bigger budget. New own resources: Lean yes. 'You're not going hear us say... that we exclude sources of financing such as common debt from the beginning,' Copenhagen's ambassador to the EU said. All other questions: No position. Denmark does not want to share any position, citing its role in leading Council budget negotiations during its presidency, officials told Euractiv. Estonia Bigger budget: Yes. Estonia supports a larger EU budget and is ready to contribute more, along with other EU countries, reads a position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. ' New sources of revenue could be considered if they offer added value' and don't disproportionally burden poorer countries, reads the paper. National envelopes: Lean yes. Estonia favours streamlining funds and 'avoiding overlaps', but prefers adapting existing instruments to creating new ones. Reform-for-cash: Yes. Cohesion 'must continue to support the implementation of structural reforms' and should be aligned with country-specific recommendations. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. New priorities 'cannot be carried out at the expense of a significant reduction in existing areas.' Finland Bigger budget: No. 'The future MFF must be kept at a reasonable level,' reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. The proposals to divert funds from carbon levies (CBAM and ETS 2) are promising, Finland says. National envelopes: Lean yes. ' Finland is open to different models for reforming the future CAP' but insists that farmers' income support must remain a coherent whole. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Finland is 'open to a performance-based approach' but it should not be modelled after the EU's Covid recovery loan. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Yes. 'Cohesion funding should be decreased' and national co-financing of direct payments to farmers can be explored. France Bigger budget: Yes. Macron previously floated the idea of doubling the budget, and a French position paper from March reads that 'it is essential to invest in European priorities by scaling up.' New own resources: Yes. 'The introduction of new own resources is a sine qua non condition for an agreement,' reads the paper. National envelopes: Lean no. France is open to merging cohesion funds, but CAP should have a dedicated budget and 'maintain the two pillars.' Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Strengthening the performance-based approach with a role for national plans is a 'potentially interesting avenue.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. The EU needs a CAP with the 'ambition and resources commensurate with the stakes involved.' Germany Bigger budget: No. There is "no basis for increasing the volume of the MFF in relation to economic strength,' reads a German position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Germany will 'constructively examine' proposals for new EU income sources. National envelopes: No. CAP and Cohesion should remain distinct policy areas, with rural development kept as an 'integral' element of CAP. Reform-for-cash: Yes. Cohesion should 'provide stronger incentives for national reform measures.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. CAP should have an 'appropriate budget' to meet high demands. Cohesion funds should be adjusted to be 'more suitable' for future needs. Greece Bigger budget: No position. New own resources: No position. National envelopes and reform-for-cash: Lean no. Greece is among the 14 countries that rallied against making regional funding conditional on national reforms in early July. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. CAP and cohesion are the top Greek priorities, a source close to the matter told Euractiv. Hungary Bigger budget: No. Budapest does not support the proposed changes to the budget or new revenue sources, reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: No. Hungary supports the current system without any modification. National envelopes: No. A flexible MFF 'with fewer budgetary headings and spending programmes" would, in Budapest's view, shift too much power to the Commission at the expense of member countries. Reform-for-cash: No. It would be 'the exact opposite of what is actually needed: greater flexibility for member states,' not the Commission. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. Cohesion should have a 'dedicated and robust' budget, and CAP should be 'at least on the same level.' Ireland Bigger budget: No. Ireland is 'committed to financing our fair share,' according to a position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean no. Dublin is 'willing to consider proposals for genuine new own resources,' but opposes the proposed EU income based on corporate profits. National envelopes: No. CAP should remain separate from national plans, with its two-pillar structure and independent governing structure. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Ireland sees a role for performance-based EU funding to deliver EU objectives. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. 'Ireland calls for a robustly funded CAP.' Italy Bigger budget: No position. New own resources: No position. National envelopes: No. Italy will fight to maintain both CAP and cohesion in their current form, European Minister Tommaso Foti said on 6 July. Reform-for-cash: No. Common objectives would drastically reduce Italy's ability to design its own interventions, Foti argued. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Latvia Bigger budget: Yes. Latvia supports an increased MFF, the government told Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Riga is open to discussing various options, including new own resources and joint borrowing. National envelopes: Lean no. 'Latvia is in principle open' but sceptical of 'over-simplification... Cohesion and CAP should remain separate allocations.' Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. But 'the focus should be on reforms that contribute to the effectiveness of the planned investments.' CAP/Cohesion cuts: No position. Lithuania Bigger budget: Lean yes . 'There is a need to discuss increasing the volume of the EU budget', reads a Lithuania position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean no. A larger budget could be financed with the current system or by introducing new income sources. National envelopes: No. It is appropriate with 'some adjustments,' but drastic reforms should be avoided. The core principles of cohesion should be maintained. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. But the Covid loan model should not be extended to policy areas unrelated to national reform agendas, such as CAP. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. Vilnius calls for 'adequate funding' for CAP and 'sufficient cohesion budget for all EU regions. Luxembourg Bigger budget: Lean yes. 'The MFF is a vital instrument' and 'it is essential to take into account new realities when defining future budgetary priorities', Luxembourg's government responded. All other questions: No position. Malta Bigger budget: No position. ' Malta's position on the size of the MFF will be determined by the composition of the EU budget as a whole,' reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Valletta is open to the proposed Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) but strongly opposes any move for EU-level taxation or company profits-based income. National envelopes: Lean no. 'While flexibility is an essential element of any budget, it must not come at the expense of the stability and predictability of investment programmes,' reads the non-paper. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Malta is in favour under certain circumstances. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Yes/no. Malta wants CAP direct payments to be co-financed by national budgets to 'free up EU budgetary resources.' But increased spending on priorities like defence 'must not come at the expense' of cohesion policy. Netherlands Bigger budget: No. Ambitious EU policy is possible within current budgetary parameters and we should 'also look at what the EU could do less of,' a Dutch position paper from March reads. New own resources: Lean yes. The Netherlands is open to new EU income sources and notes that emissions-related tools like CBAM and ETS are less costly for Dutch taxpayers than traditional GNI-based contributions. National envelopes: Lean yes. The government is 'receptive' to the idea of a national plan for distributing funds. Reforms-for-cash: Lean yes. The Netherlands is 'open to exploring' more performance-based budgeting and 'considers it important that member states implement reforms that strengthen their economies' and the bloc. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean yes. The Netherlands prefers to limit spending in general, but wants more for competitiveness and defence. Poland Bigger budget: Yes. Warsaw says the EU's financial ambitions should be 'significantly higher than before,' according to a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Poland supports the debate on new EU-level revenue sources, but insists on expanding the budget rather than replacing existing funding. This also must not overly burden less affluent countries. National envelopes: No. CAP should keep its own dedicated budget, based on its 'well-established and proven' two-pillar structure. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Some inspiration can be taken from the EU's Covid recovery loan, but must have a 'thematically closer link' to the cash, and reforms 'should not contribute to excessive centralisation and merging of instruments.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. The share of the budget allocated to CAP and cohesion should not be reduced. Portugal Bigger budget: Yes. The EU budget must go 'well beyond the current GNI threshold,' according to a Portuguese position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Yes. New EU-level revenue is 'vital' to relieve pressure on the spending side of the budget. National envelopes: No. 'Cohesion and CAP funds should remain autonomous,' the paper reads, with CAP 'built upon its two-pillar structure.' Reform-for-cash: No. Portugal wants to keep core cohesion principles. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. Portugal defends CAP and cohesion as crucial for the EU project. Romania Bigger budget: No position. New own resources: No position. National envelopes and reform-for-cash: Lean no. Romania is among the 14 countries that rallied against making regional funding conditional on national reforms in early July. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No position. Romania did not respond to Euractiv's request for comments. Slovakia Bigger budget: No position Own resources: No position National envelopes: No. 'It is essential to maintain a dedicated EU cohesion policy' and 'we fundamentally reject the centralisation of EU cohesion policy,' reads a Slovak position paper on cohesion policy seen by Euractiv. Reform-for-cash: Yes. Slovakia 'supports the modernisation of EU cohesion policy' and "strengthening the link between cohesion policy and the European Semester," an EU framework for coordinating economic and social policies. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Cohesion should remain a "major European investment policy with an adequate budget" Slovenia Bigger budget: Yes. Slovenia wants a budget 'comparable in size' to the current budget and the €650 billion Covid loan combined, reads a position paper seen by Euractiv. Own resources: Yes. 'All possible options should be explored,' the paper reads. National envelopes: No. 'Specificities of individual thematic areas included in the programme should be recognised.' Reform-for-cash: Lean no. 'Subsidiarity and Member States' ownership of the reforms should be ensured.' CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. The next MFF should ensure that CAP and cohesion funds have 'comparable levels of financing'. Spain Bigger budget: Yes. The EU budget should be 'at least 2% of the EU's annual GDP,' reads a Spanish non-paper, dated February, seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Yes. Spain supports new 'genuine' EU own resources, meaning that they should contribute to increasing the budget rather than replacing direct contributions. National envelopes: Lean no. National envelopes encompassing a number of EU policies 'may not be the most effective way to achieve a simpler and more focused budget', and CAP should maintain its two-pillar structure. Reform-for-cash: No position. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. Spain 'firmly believes in the importance of Cohesion' and CAP must have a 'sufficient and adequate' budget. Sweden Bigger budget: No. Sweden's budget restrictive stance remains firm: 'The EU budget as a share of GNI for regular expenditure should continue to be around 1%,' reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: No. Sweden sees no need for – and is critical of – new EU-level resources. National envelopes: Lean yes. Stockholm wants the EU budget to have a simpler structure and fewer thematic areas and programmes. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. ' Sweden supports, in principle, an implementation model based on performance-based budgeting.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean yes. 'Investments in existing or new areas need to be matched by cuts in other areas.' Eddy Wax, Nicoletta Ionta, Charles Szumski, Aurélie Pugnet, and Barbara Zmušková contributed to reporting. (mm)

Where all EU countries stand on the next long-term EU budget
Where all EU countries stand on the next long-term EU budget

Euractiv

time14-07-2025

  • Business
  • Euractiv

Where all EU countries stand on the next long-term EU budget

The Commission is set to present its big pitch for the EU's 2028–2034 budget (MFF) on Wednesday, promising to drastically 'simplify' and completely rethink how the bloc spends money. The current €1.2 trillion amount is locked in for seven years, divided into 16 different clusters and over 50 budget lines. Roughly a third goes to farmers via the Common Agricultural Policy, another to regional development in Cohesion funds, and the rest to research, foreign policy, industry, and administration. But any overhaul is not up to Brussels alone. Every spending line needs unanimous sign-off from both the Parliament and national capitals. Euractiv asked all 27 governments and combed through position papers to get their views on five crunch questions: Size: Should the budget be increased? Own resources: Should new EU-level income sources, like a carbon tax or joint debt, be introduced? National envelopes: Should the funds reserved for farmers (CAP, two parts) and lagging regions (cohesion, four parts) merge into national cash pots? Reform-for-cash: Should EU countries or regions be forced to make EU-friendly reforms to access EU funds? CAP/Cohesion cuts? Should CAP and cohesion funds be reduced? In a nutshell: Thirteen countries, including France, support a bigger budget. Seven countries, including Germany, oppose an increase. Twelve countries, including France and Germany, support introducing 'new own' resources. Six countries are sceptical. Nineteen countries, including France and Germany, reject an outright merger of cohesion and CAP. But they may still favour a move in that direction, as long as their favourite programmes survive in some shape or form. countries, including France and Germany, reject an outright merger of cohesion and CAP. But they may still favour a move in that direction, as long as their favourite programmes survive in some shape or form. Thirteen countries, including Germany and France, are in favour of increased cash-for-reforms in the next budget. Nine are against. countries, including Germany and France, are in favour of increased cash-for-reforms in the next budget. Nine are against. Fifteen countries reject cuts to cohesion and CAP. The budget needs to be approved unanimously. Austria The government's position has not yet been finalised, officials told Euractiv. Belgium Bigger budget: Lean no. 'EU-level spending should remain focused on areas where it clearly delivers added value,' Deputy Prime Minister Van Peteghem told Euractiv in a statement. Own resources: Lean no. ' Belgium has not yet adopted fixed positions' but expects EU institutions to 'pursue greater efficiency and fiscal discipline in budget execution.' National envelopes: No. 'Belgium believes CAP should remain a separate instrument,' with its own internal distribution key. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. 'Belgium supports a performance-based approach' if it doesn't increase administrative burdens and respects the regional administration architecture of member countries. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No position. Bulgaria Bigger budget: Yes. The next MFF should 'at least' equal the current one and the EU's €650 billion Covid recovery fund together (RFF), reads a position non-paper seen by Euractiv. Own resources: Lean yes. 'We remain open to introducing genuine new own resources,' the paper reads. National envelopes: No. CAP should have a dedicated budget and retain its two-pillar structure, but Bulgaria supports more flexibility between the two pillars. Reform-for-cash: No. The Cohesion Fund should be preserved in its current form, with funding not tied to reform commitments. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Both areas are important. Croatia Bigger budget: Yes. "Croatia advocates an ambitious and robust budget," the government told Euractiv. Own resources: No position. National envelopes and reform-for-cash: Lean no. Greece is among the 14 countries that rallied against making regional funding conditional on national reforms in early July. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Zagreb wants a budget that "ensures a strong cohesion and CAP policy." Cyprus Cyprus did not respond to Euractiv's request in time for publication. Czechia Bigger budget: Lean yes. Czechia 'is ready to discuss a limited increase of the long-term EU budget,' the government told Euractiv. New own resources: Lean no. ' Czechia is in general reserved towards the introduction of new own resources.' National envelopes: No. 'We strongly support maintaining a separate CAP fund.' Czechia is 'cautious towards the possible in-depth reforms' for cohesion. Reform-for-cash: Lean no. Czechia is 'cautious' about greater focus on reforms. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. Cohesion is described as a crucial investment tool. No position given on CAP. Denmark Bigger budget: Lean yes. Despite being traditionally frugal, Denmark is open to a bigger budget. New own resources: Lean yes. 'You're not going hear us say... that we exclude sources of financing such as common debt from the beginning,' Copenhagen's ambassador to the EU said. All other questions: No position. Denmark does not want to share any position, citing its role in leading Council budget negotiations during its presidency, officials told Euractiv. Estonia Bigger budget: Yes. Estonia supports a larger EU budget and is ready to contribute more, along with other EU countries, reads a position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. ' New sources of revenue could be considered if they offer added value' and don't disproportionally burden poorer countries, reads the paper. National envelopes: Lean yes. Estonia favours streamlining funds and 'avoiding overlaps', but prefers adapting existing instruments to creating new ones. Reform-for-cash: Yes. Cohesion 'must continue to support the implementation of structural reforms' and should be aligned with country-specific recommendations. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. New priorities 'cannot be carried out at the expense of a significant reduction in existing areas.' Finland Bigger budget: No. 'The future MFF must be kept at a reasonable level,' reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. The proposals to divert funds from carbon levies (CBAM and ETS 2) are promising, Finland says. National envelopes: Lean yes. ' Finland is open to different models for reforming the future CAP' but insists that farmers' income support must remain a coherent whole. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Finland is 'open to a performance-based approach' but it should not be modelled after the EU's Covid recovery loan. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Yes. 'Cohesion funding should be decreased' and national co-financing of direct payments to farmers can be explored. France Bigger budget: Yes. Macron previously floated the idea of doubling the budget, and a French position paper from March reads that 'it is essential to invest in European priorities by scaling up.' New own resources: Yes. 'The introduction of new own resources is a sine qua non condition for an agreement,' reads the paper. National envelopes: Lean no. France is open to merging cohesion funds, but CAP should have a dedicated budget and 'maintain the two pillars.' Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Strengthening the performance-based approach with a role for national plans is a 'potentially interesting avenue.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. The EU needs a CAP with the 'ambition and resources commensurate with the stakes involved.' Germany Bigger budget: No. There is "no basis for increasing the volume of the MFF in relation to economic strength,' reads a German position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Germany will 'constructively examine' proposals for new EU income sources. National envelopes: No. CAP and Cohesion should remain distinct policy areas, with rural development kept as an 'integral' element of CAP. Reform-for-cash: Yes. Cohesion should 'provide stronger incentives for national reform measures.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. CAP should have an 'appropriate budget' to meet high demands. Cohesion funds should be adjusted to be 'more suitable' for future needs. Greece Bigger budget: No position. New own resources: No position. National envelopes and reform-for-cash: Lean no. Greece is among the 14 countries that rallied against making regional funding conditional on national reforms in early July. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. CAP and cohesion are the top Greek priorities, a source close to the matter told Euractiv. Hungary Bigger budget: No. Budapest does not support the proposed changes to the budget or new revenue sources, reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: No. Hungary supports the current system without any modification. National envelopes: No. A flexible MFF 'with fewer budgetary headings and spending programmes" would, in Budapest's view, shift too much power to the Commission at the expense of member countries. Reform-for-cash: No. It would be 'the exact opposite of what is actually needed: greater flexibility for member states,' not the Commission. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. Cohesion should have a 'dedicated and robust' budget, and CAP should be 'at least on the same level.' Ireland Bigger budget: No. Ireland is 'committed to financing our fair share,' according to a position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean no. Dublin is 'willing to consider proposals for genuine new own resources,' but opposes the proposed EU income based on corporate profits. National envelopes: No. CAP should remain separate from national plans, with its two-pillar structure and independent governing structure. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Ireland sees a role for performance-based EU funding to deliver EU objectives. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. 'Ireland calls for a robustly funded CAP.' Italy Bigger budget: No position. New own resources: No position. National envelopes: No. Italy will fight to maintain both CAP and cohesion in their current form, European Minister Tommaso Foti said on 6 July. Reform-for-cash: No. Common objectives would drastically reduce Italy's ability to design its own interventions, Foti argued. Latvia Bigger budget: Yes. Latvia supports an increased MFF, the government told Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Riga is open to discussing various options, including new own resources and joint borrowing. National envelopes: Lean no. 'Latvia is in principle open' but sceptical of 'over-simplification... Cohesion and CAP should remain separate allocations.' Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. But 'the focus should be on reforms that contribute to the effectiveness of the planned investments.' CAP/Cohesion cuts: No position. Lithuania Bigger budget: Lean yes . 'There is a need to discuss increasing the volume of the EU budget', reads a Lithuania position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean no. A larger budget could be financed with the current system or by introducing new income sources. National envelopes: No. It is appropriate with 'some adjustments,' but drastic reforms should be avoided. The core principles of cohesion should be maintained. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. But the Covid loan model should not be extended to policy areas unrelated to national reform agendas, such as CAP. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. Vilnius calls for 'adequate funding' for CAP and 'sufficient cohesion budget for all EU regions. Luxembourg Bigger budget: Lean yes. 'The MFF is a vital instrument' and 'it is essential to take into account new realities when defining future budgetary priorities', Luxembourg's government responded. All other questions: No position. Malta Bigger budget: No position. ' Malta's position on the size of the MFF will be determined by the composition of the EU budget as a whole,' reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Valletta is open to the proposed Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) but strongly opposes any move for EU-level taxation or company profits-based income. National envelopes: Lean no. 'While flexibility is an essential element of any budget, it must not come at the expense of the stability and predictability of investment programmes,' reads the non-paper. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Malta is in favour under certain circumstances. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Yes/no. Malta wants CAP direct payments to be co-financed by national budgets to 'free up EU budgetary resources.' But increased spending on priorities like defence 'must not come at the expense' of cohesion policy. Netherlands Bigger budget: No. Ambitious EU policy is possible within current budgetary parameters and we should 'also look at what the EU could do less of,' a Dutch position paper from March reads. New own resources: Lean yes. The Netherlands is open to new EU income sources and notes that emissions-related tools like CBAM and ETS are less costly for Dutch taxpayers than traditional GNI-based contributions. National envelopes: Lean yes. The government is 'receptive' to the idea of a national plan for distributing funds. Reforms-for-cash: Lean yes. The Netherlands is 'open to exploring' more performance-based budgeting and 'considers it important that member states implement reforms that strengthen their economies' and the bloc. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean yes. The Netherlands prefers to limit spending in general, but wants more for competitiveness and defence. Poland Bigger budget: Yes. Warsaw says the EU's financial ambitions should be 'significantly higher than before,' according to a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Lean yes. Poland supports the debate on new EU-level revenue sources, but insists on expanding the budget rather than replacing existing funding. This also must not overly burden less affluent countries. National envelopes: No. CAP should keep its own dedicated budget, based on its 'well-established and proven' two-pillar structure. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. Some inspiration can be taken from the EU's Covid recovery loan, but must have a 'thematically closer link' to the cash, and reforms 'should not contribute to excessive centralisation and merging of instruments.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. The share of the budget allocated to CAP and cohesion should not be reduced. Portugal Bigger budget: Yes. The EU budget must go 'well beyond the current GNI threshold,' according to a Portuguese position paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Yes. New EU-level revenue is 'vital' to relieve pressure on the spending side of the budget. National envelopes: No. 'Cohesion and CAP funds should remain autonomous,' the paper reads, with CAP 'built upon its two-pillar structure.' Reform-for-cash: No. Portugal wants to keep core cohesion principles. CAP/Cohesion cuts? No. Portugal defends CAP and cohesion as crucial for the EU project. Romania Bigger budget: No position. New own resources: No position. National envelopes and reform-for-cash: Lean no. Romania is among the 14 countries that rallied against making regional funding conditional on national reforms in early July. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No position. Romania did not respond to Euractiv's request for comments. Slovakia Bigger budget: No position Own resources: No position National envelopes: No. 'It is essential to maintain a dedicated EU cohesion policy' and 'we fundamentally reject the centralisation of EU cohesion policy,' reads a Slovak position paper on cohesion policy seen by Euractiv. Reform-for-cash: Yes. Slovakia 'supports the modernisation of EU cohesion policy' and "strengthening the link between cohesion policy and the European Semester," an EU framework for coordinating economic and social policies. CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. Cohesion should remain a "major European investment policy with an adequate budget" Slovenia Bigger budget: Yes. Slovenia wants a budget 'comparable in size' to the current budget and the €650 billion Covid loan combined, reads a position paper seen by Euractiv. Own resources: Yes. 'All possible options should be explored,' the paper reads. National envelopes: No. 'Specificities of individual thematic areas included in the programme should be recognised.' Reform-for-cash: Lean no. 'Subsidiarity and Member States' ownership of the reforms should be ensured.' CAP/Cohesion cuts: No. The next MFF should ensure that CAP and cohesion funds have 'comparable levels of financing'. Spain Bigger budget: Yes. The EU budget should be 'at least 2% of the EU's annual GDP,' reads a Spanish non-paper, dated February, seen by Euractiv. New own resources: Yes. Spain supports new 'genuine' EU own resources, meaning that they should contribute to increasing the budget rather than replacing direct contributions. National envelopes: Lean no. National envelopes encompassing a number of EU policies 'may not be the most effective way to achieve a simpler and more focused budget', and CAP should maintain its two-pillar structure. Reform-for-cash: No position. CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean no. Spain 'firmly believes in the importance of Cohesion' and CAP must have a 'sufficient and adequate' budget. Sweden Bigger budget: No. Sweden's budget restrictive stance remains firm: 'The EU budget as a share of GNI for regular expenditure should continue to be around 1%,' reads a non-paper seen by Euractiv. New own resources: No. Sweden sees no need for – and is critical of – new EU-level resources. National envelopes: Lean yes. Stockholm wants the EU budget to have a simpler structure and fewer thematic areas and programmes. Reform-for-cash: Lean yes. ' Sweden supports, in principle, an implementation model based on performance-based budgeting.' CAP/Cohesion cuts? Lean yes. 'Investments in existing or new areas need to be matched by cuts in other areas.' Eddy Wax, Nicoletta Ionta, Charles Szumski, Aurélie Pugnet, and Barbara Zmušková contributed to reporting. (mm)

Poland vote: Pro-EU Trzaskowski wins first round – DW – 05/19/2025

DW

time19-05-2025

  • Politics
  • DW

Poland vote: Pro-EU Trzaskowski wins first round – DW – 05/19/2025

Skip next section Official results show narrow win for pro-EU candidate Trzaskowski 05/19/2025 May 19, 2025 Official results show narrow win for pro-EU candidate Trzaskowski Warsaw's pro-EU mayor Rafal Trzaskowski narrowly came out on top in the first round of voting in Poland'spresidential election. With all ballots counted, Trzaskowski won 31.36% of the vote. His main opponent, national-conservative candidate Karol Nawrocki, came in at 29.54, the national election commission said Monday. With less than 2 percentage points separating the front runners, a runoff vote is set for June 1. A key factor for round two could be voters who supported far-right candidates that were eliminated in the first round. However, the two far-right candidates had a strong showing, receiving a combined 21.15%. Trzaskowski is from Prime Minister Donald Tusk's centrist Civic Coalition, and a win would allow Tusk more space to push his EU-friendly reform agenda that has been held up by the current nationalist president. The opposition, the right-wing Law and Justice party (PiS) of current President Andrzej Duda is backing Nawrocki.

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