11/07/24View in Browser

One for the money, two for the show

By Georgi Gotev

Blame and reprimands followed Viktor Orbán’s “Ukraine peace tour” to Moscow and Beijing, which he started as soon as Hungary took over the Presidency of the Council of the EU on 1 July.

Orbán is misleading many by suggesting that he represents the entire EU in this initiative.

Of course, Orbán doesn’t represent the EU. The role of the Council presidency is of a much more technical nature. For example, the country assuming the presidency chairs meetings of the different Council configurations, with the important exception of the Foreign Affairs Council.

For the same precaution, the so-called “trio of presidencies” was institutionalised – to shoulder a weaker, inexperienced or problematic member state into fulfilling its duties without rocking the boat.

This was one of the safeguards after the big bang enlargement of 2004-2007.

Those who decided on the rules of the Lisbon Treaty wanted to limit the powers of individual countries assuming the presidency role. Their fear was precisely the hypothesis that regimes like Orbán’s could one day be tasked with the EU presidency.

They were right.

The Lisbon treaty entered into force in December 2009. Orbán took power in May 2010 and ever since, he has taken measures to secure his power forever.  Who knows what the future holds for him and the EU.

As regards his “peace tour”, we believe Orbán is misleading the public opinion, in Hungary and abroad. The general public doesn’t read the Maastricht and the Lisbon treaties.

But we don’t think he can mislead his foreign counterparts. Any regime, be it in Russia or Beijing, has professional advisers who know the EU inside out. One of their jobs is precisely to identify its weaknesses and make use of them.

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Photo of the day

Foreign Ministers or representatives (L-R) Annalena Baerbock of Germany, Takehiro Funakoshi of Japan, Antonio Tajani of Italy, Melanie Joly of Canada, Frederic Mondoloni of France, Antony Blinken of the USA, Josep Borrell of the EU, and David Lammy of Britain sit on a round table during the G7 Foreign Ministers' Meeting on the occasion of the NATO Summit in Washington D.C., USA, 11 July 2024. The 75th Anniversary NATO Summit is taking place in Washington, DC, from 09 to 11 July 2024. EPA-EFE/ALESSANDRO DI MEO

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The Roundup

Today and tomorrow (11 and 12 July) the Hungarian Presidency will host an informal meeting of Environment Ministers in Budapest, where they will discuss COP29, the circular economy’s potential to boost competitiveness and water scarcity.

The Conference of Presidents is set to discuss Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s recent controversial trips to Kyiv, Moscow, and Beijing in a meeting on Thursday (11 July), even considering possible repercussions, Euractiv has learned.

Monika Beňová, a Slovak MEP for Robert Fico’s Smer-SD (NI) party, proposed ending negotiations with the Party of European Socialists (PES), which suspended the party’s membership last year, claiming she would instead present a “different plan” to her colleagues.

Germany plans to largely exclude Chinese components such as those from Huawei and ZTE from its 5G mobile network by 2029, with an interim step in 2026, according to a media report.

With the right in flux, increasing fragmentation of the political landscape in member states, and the need for von der Leyen to secure a governing majority in the European Parliament, group formation has never looked so messy. See our latest infographics on how the formation of the new European Parliament party groups are going.

Look out for…

  • Informal meeting of environment ministers in Budapest, 11-12 July 2024
  • European Commission Vice President Vĕra Jourová speaks at the Common Law Society 2024 Summer School, in Czechia.
  • European Commission Vice President Maroš Šefčovič meets with Andrej Plenković, Prime Minister of Croatia, in Zagreb.
  • European Commissioner Didier Reynders participates via videoconference in the Eurojust and U.S. Department of Justice Meeting on Stopping the Illicit Flow of Sensitive Technology, in Brussels.
  • The European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) is holding a conference titled “Leaving No One Behind: European Commitment to Rare Diseases” in Brussels.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Rajnish Singh/Alice Taylor]

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