13/05/24View in Browser

The EU election punching bag

By Georgi Gotev

Regards from Sofia, where the author of this Brief has witnessed the first days of the European election campaign and concluded the following: The number one election punching bag is the European Green Deal, and it’s no different in many other EU countries.

Let’s not mince our words – the European elections were invented with another goal in mind, but today, the election campaign is increasingly becoming an excuse to bash the EU.

In a democracy, all relevant political players should have the floor in election campaigns where they can make their case before we decide who to vote for.

In Bulgaria, there are 20 political parties and 11 coalitions, and most of these political players are entitled to state funding through media packages. Traditionally, funds for media advertising are the main expense in election campaigns, and political entities are free to choose where to advertise.

This said, some media, including Euractiv Bulgaria, refuse to take money for political advertising.

But most media take the money gladly, and state broadcasters, radio and TV, are legally obliged to give equal advertising space to all political players. It matters little if out of 20 parties, only five can realistically make it to Parliament – all are equally benefitting from the media to voice their messages.

The result is that whether you switch on your TV or your radio, there is always a politician, often from fringe parties without any chance of getting into parliament, happily taking advantage of their media time to hammer at the EU as if it were the world’s biggest evil.

The average citizen is subject to such an overdose of anti-EU rhetoric that it is a miracle that some voters still opt for political forces who don’t want to raze the EU to the ground.

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Sweden's Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson (2-R) welcomes the prime ministers of the Nordic countries (L-R) Iceland's Bjarni Benediktsson, Denmark's Mette Frederiksen, Norway's Jonas Gahr Store and Finland's Petteri Orpo at Skeppsholmen island in Stockholm, Sweden, 13 May 2024, ahead of a two-day Nordic summit on security and competitiveness. EPA-EFE/Pontus Lundahl

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The Roundup

The EU should assess how Georgia’s foreign agent law will impact the country’s accession process before the parliament’s final vote, twelve EU foreign ministers said in a letter addressed to the bloc’s chief diplomat Josep Borrell and Enlargement Commissioner Olivér Várhelyi.

North Macedonia’s election-winning nationalist VMRO-DPMNE party has sparked reactions across Europe and from its own EU family, the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP), after President Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova refused to use the country’s official name during her inauguration on Sunday.

The European Commission announced on Monday the designation of Booking, the parent company of online travel giant Booking.com, as a gatekeeper under the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and initiated a market investigation of social media platform X.

The EU Council gave its final green light on Monday to a relaxation of the environmental rules under the bloc’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), which will apply until the end of the current period in 2027 despite vocal protests from green NGOs.

European Conservatives and Reformists do not intend to promise support for Ursula von der Leyen to continue as head of the European Commission, Czech MEP Alexandr Vondra told Euractiv Czechia in an exclusive interview.

France achieved a 22.2% share of renewable energy in its gross final energy consumption in 2023, according to the French Ecological Ministry figures from 7 May, but the trend is not sufficient for the country to reach a target of at least 44% renewable energy by 2030, as set by EU law.

Negotiations for a new pandemic treaty, originally slated to conclude on Friday before the annual World Health Assembly (WHA) on 27 May, are set to continue both in person and in a hybrid format in hopes of producing a new text soon.

Look out for…

  • Education, Youth, Culture and Sport Council on Monday-Tuesday.
  • Economic and Financial Affairs Council (Ecofin) on Tuesday.
  • Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni participates in the Economic and Financial Dialogue between the EU and Western Balkans, Turkey, Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine on Tuesday.
  • Agriculture Commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski in Romania on Tuesday.

Views are the author’s

 

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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