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Good morning from Brussels

Increasing calls for better external border protection and improving the returns of irregular migrants suggest an enhanced role for Frontex, the EU’s Border and Coast Guard Agency. 

Commissioner-designate for Internal Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner’s recent written responses to the EU Parliament’s LIBE committee show that he would back the proposal to triple Frontex's standing corps to 30,000.

Brunner wants Frontex to better assist member states with returns, become more heavily involved in operations in third countries, and give a “stronger” response to hybrid threats at EU borders.

All of these would need an amendment to the Frontex regulation.

However, Anastasia Karatzas, a policy analyst at the European Policy Center, told Euractiv’s Nicoletta Ionta that a financial boost of the organisation should be accompanied by sufficient oversight mechanisms too.

But the agency has to face a string of accusations, including involvement in illegal pushbacks, ignoring those in distress, complicity in abusive and arbitrary detention, and more. 

When recently asked by Euractiv whether safeguards had been put in place to protect against further issues of this kind, a Commission spokesperson refused to be drawn.

While its former director and now MEP Fabrice Leggeri was forced to resign in 2022, concerns remain over the continuance of these issues and what an enhanced role and more boots on the ground could mean in practice.

How Putin’s grip on the east could influence EU’s Enlargement Package

In this episode, host Giada Santana and policy analyst Teona Lavrelashvili, discuss the successes and failures of EU enlargement policy amid Eastern Europe’s shifting political landscape. Listen here.
Bubbling in Brussels
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Member states are now debating which industries should qualify for the EU Defence Industry Programme (EDIP) funding, as ongoing negotiations on the long-term scheme to boost defence industrial capacity via joint procurement have brought the definition of the EU defence industry back to the table.

Moreover, the European Commission on Tuesday confirmed tariffs of up to 35.3% on Chinese-made electric cars, wrapping up a consultation period launched in October last year to establish whether Beijing's subsidies had undercut European competition.

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Western Europe
Click on the picture to read the story | Photo by [Carsten Koall/picture alliance via Getty Images]

BERLIN

Leaders of the parties making up Germany's coalition government have launched parallel and uncoordinated summits with business leaders, signalling a shift from governing mode to election mode ahead of next year's vote. Read more

UK

LONDON

EU and UK agree to cooperate in antitrust investigations. The European Commission on Tuesday said it had finalised discussions with Britain on an agreement that would allow both sides to cooperate directly in antitrust investigations. Read more

Nordics
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HELSINKI

Finland's former president, Sauli Niinistö, will unveil a set of proposals on Wednesday for the EU to bolster its defences against threats ranging from Russia to natural disasters. Read more.

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STOCKHOLM

Sweden criticised by Nordic Council neighbours over criminality spillover. The spillover of Swedish gang criminality to neighbouring countries was met with thinly veiled criticism at the 2024 Nordic Council in Reykjavik on Tuesday. Read more.

Europe's south

ROME

Meloni keeps up her North Africa cooperation mission with her fourth visit to Libya. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has visited Libya for the fourth time since taking office, underlining her government's desire to deepen strategic ties with Tripoli and North Africa, focusing on economic cooperation and migration control  Read more.

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MADRID

Spanish Supreme Court urged to investigate SALF leader. Spain’s Supreme Court should investigate the leader of the far-right SALF party for an alleged crime of public disorder during a violent demonstration outside the Socialist Party headquarters in the Spanish capital last year, a Madrid judge said on Tuesday. Read more.

Spain cancels multimillion ammunition deal with Israel following media leak. Spain is cancelling a €6.5 million contract with an Israeli military company to buy ammunition for the country’s militarised police, the Interior Ministry said after the case was revealed in the media. Read more.

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LISBON    

Companies must pay the EU fine for non-recycled plastic packaging, says Portuguese NGO. Portugal will pay an EU fine of €200 million next year for non-recycled plastic packaging on the market, but environmental group Zero says those who put it on the market should be the ones to pay. Read more

Eastern Europe
Click on the picture to read the story | Photo by [Shutterstock/paparazzza]

WARSAW

The Polish government is considering issuing defence bonds because, contrary to earlier hopes, defence spending will not be exempted from the EU's excessive deficit procedure, Finance Minister Andrzej Domański (PO, EPP) said. Read more.

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BUDAPEST

In the Georgian capital, Orbán says election was fair. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said on Tuesday that the election in Georgia won by the ruling party was free and democratic, and he congratulated his Georgian counterpart Irakli Kobakhidze during a visit to Tbilisi. Read more.

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PRAGUE  

Czechia’s ČEZ and Rolls-Royce team up for modular nuclear reactors. Czechia’sstate-owned energy company ČEZ has partnered with Rolls-Royce SMR to drive the development of small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs), buying a 20% stake in the British company and planning to launch the first reactor by the early 2030s. Read more.

The Balkans

SOFIA

Radical pro-Russian party challenges Bulgarian snap election results. The radical pro-Russian Velichie (Greatness) party will demand that the election results be annulled, it announced on Tuesday, after it emerged it was 30 votes short of entering parliament.  Read more.

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BUCHAREST | OSLO

Norway to help Romania acquire a Patriot missile system. Romania’s Defence Ministry on Tuesday welcomed Norway's initiative to help the country acquire an advanced Patriot surface-to-air missile system, following its recent supply of a similar system to Ukraine. Read more.

Agenda
  • EU: Commission President Ursula von der Leyen chairs College of Commissioners meeting; Hosts President-elect of the European Council António Costa; Meets with Confederation of German Employers' Associations (BDA) Managing Director Steffen Kam-Peter;
  • Agriculture Commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski meets Minister for Trade Budi Santoso, in Jakarta, Indonesia;

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[Edited by Sarantis Michalopoulos, Daniel Eck, Alice Taylor-Braçe]

The Capitals is brought to you by Sarantis MichalopoulosAlice Taylor, Daniel Eck and Charles Szumski
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