EU EU summit collapses as leaders struggle to fill €75bn Brexit hole - It's between the "Frugals" vs the "Friends of Cohesion"

EU summit collapses as leaders struggle to fill €75bn Brexit hole
States deeply divided over budget as big contributors reject plan for them to pay more
Daniel Boffey in Brussels
Fri 21 Feb 2020 19.31 GMTFirst published on Fri 21 Feb 2020 11.25 GMT

Angela Merkel, Emmanuel Macron and Charles Michel
Angela Merkel, Emmanuel Macron and Charles Michel at the EU summit. Photograph: Yves Herman/AP

A summit of EU leaders seeking to fill a €75bn hole in the bloc’s budget left by Brexit dramatically collapsed after Angela Merkel led major contributors in rejecting a proposal that would have left them paying billions more.
The meeting in Brussels was brought to an abrupt end on Friday evening with the leaders deeply divided, leaving the European council president, Charles Michel, to admit: “We need more time.”
The UK’s departure has left EU states struggling to fund plans over the next seven years to tackle the climate emergency, aid poorer regions and continue to subsidise farmers through the common agricultural policy.
The 27 heads of state and government must agree on a budget for the next seven years, and the European parliament must give its endorsement, before the end of 2020, to avoid the EU’s spending programmes grinding to a halt. “We are super, super late,” admitted one EU official.
Michel, a former prime minister of Belgium, came under fire during the summit, which started on Thursday afternoon, for aiming “far too high” with a proposed budget of 1.074% of the bloc’s gross national income (€1.094tn).
Four member states, known as the “frugals” – the Netherlands, Denmark, Austria and Sweden – have insisted that the EU budget amounts to no more than 1% of the bloc’s gross national income.

They received the support of Merkel, the German chancellor, in opposing proposals that would slash the rebates they receive on their contributions, designed to ensure that the biggest contributors do not overpay.
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EU leaders express concern over filling €75bn Brexit shortfall – video
One EU diplomat said of Michel: “He wanted enough cash to buy a Range Rover; we only have the money for a Volkswagen – and worst of all he asked Mutti [Merkel] to pay for the Range Rover.”

Responding to claims from reporters that the summit had been a failure, Michel insisted that the issue had to be debated at the “highest political level” and that he now better understood the member states’ positions. “As my grandmother used to say, ‘In order to succeed we have to at least try,’” Michel said.
A late suggestion on Friday tabled by the European commission proposed to reduce the size of the additional burden on the the biggest payers, including Germany, through significant cuts in the EU’s science and research programmes. The compromise proposal would trim €10bn off a budget put forward by Michel.
Under the new plan, the four “frugal” member states and Germany would retain their rebates. France would also see increased cash for its farmers through the common agricultural policy.
The proposal failed to secure the unanimous support of the leaders, however. “That is democracy,” the European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said at a press conference at the end of the summit. “It is a good tradition in democracy to debate on the different views, the different emphases … We are not there yet, but we are in a good way.”
Merkel told reporters: “The differences were simply too big.”
Diplomats from the self-styled “friends of cohesion” grouping, consisting of the net recipients of EU cash, put the failure down to a lack of solidarity among the richest member states.
The rightwing nationalist prime minister of Hungary, Viktor Orbán, who has built much of his success on attacking Brussels, told reporters: “Our ambition isn’t only to be very strong friends of the cohesion policy, but to also be very strong friends that work together for a strong EU, and for a strong EU budget for the next period.”
During the last round of budget negotiations, it took the European council two summits to reach an agreement on the EU’s long-term spending, known as the multi-financial framework. A second summit is expected in March.

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Looks like they have their work cut out for them. Bodes badly for the intimidate future of EU, I think.
 
Incidentally, does anyone know a good way to make your eyes light up red without relying on post-production video effects?
I dunno, ask uncle Biden
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Macron's demands that his share of the EU pie not be shrunk and how he won't accept any "excuses" for why it should be is the most French thing I've seen in a while.

Of course, the fact he realizes that cushy subsidies are the only thing keeping the farmers from joining everyone else in the streets right now probably crossed his mind.
 
How in the hell can the Krauts pay more for this? I just don't get who's driving this giant economy. Seems like there are only so many brands on the market and damn near everything is made in china and taiwan. They have a few automarken, high end watches, overpriced rifles, razors? Uh...I'm assuming they farm something in their lush bavarian hills. Where's this euro money coming from? Maybe there are a lot of domestic things I haven't seen, but even when I've travelled abroad it seemed like anything foreign was Asian with at best, a holding company or brand name in bavaria.
They house the central bank that prints the currency. Money isn't a good. It's an idea.
 
Macron's demands that his share of the EU pie not be shrunk and how he won't accept any "excuses" for why it should be is the most French thing I've seen in a while.

Of course, the fact he realizes that cushy subsidies are the only thing keeping the farmers from joining everyone else in the streets right now probably crossed his mind.

He is also demanding complete access to UK fishing waters which if he doesn't get he then also has a lot of unemployed fishermen burning Paris on top of everyone else.
 
Macron's delusions in the talks is understandable as those wishing to riot in Paris right now have to take a number and wait their turn, desperate men don't make sane and rational decisions.

But Spain, also in no position to make demands due to internal political strife, is saying they won't vote for a UK trade deal unless they get Gibraltar.....which isn't going to happen. The last guy who thought he had a chance at taking Gibraltar from the UK ended up strung up in front of a gas station..... and he had and army and navy of some reputability. A legacy empire that only gets heard because they have a seat at the fancy table doesn't scare anyone.

I wonder. Are they making these unreasonable and deal-sinking demands because:

A. They are so deluded from living in their Brussels bubble of hyper-bureaucracy and inflated importance for so long they can't see the demands are unreasonable? (They don't know they won't get it)

B. They are so immature that their natural reaction to not getting what they want is scolding, pouting and hollow "look tough" posturing? (they know they won't get it, but it's the optics that matter)

C. They know it's unreasonable, they are purposely inserting deal-breakers into the talks because they want the trade deal sunk? (So the UK economy will have (hopefully) such a hard go of it they'll come crawling back with hat in hand?)

Answers on a post card.
 
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Macron's demands that his share of the EU pie not be shrunk and how he won't accept any "excuses" for why it should be is the most French thing I've seen in a while.

Of course, the fact he realizes that cushy subsidies are the only thing keeping the farmers from joining everyone else in the streets right now probably crossed his mind.
He is also demanding complete access to UK fishing waters which if he doesn't get he then also has a lot of unemployed fishermen burning Paris on top of everyone else.

Why does it sound like France's economy is held together with duct tape and prayers?

You mean fourth?

I was speaking of "World Wars." WW 3 because Germany had enough of every other country owing them money and not paying them back.

I am unsure which war you would be referring to.
 
Why does it sound like France's economy is held together with duct tape and prayers?
France was really banking on the UK not following through with leaving, and they're primed to get fucked over with so many different losses from the UK. The year-long GJ riots haven't helped things either, and Macron knows he can't afford any more groups getting pissed with him.
 
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