06/11/24View in Browser
Who in Europe can see eye to eye with Donald Trump?

By Théo Bourgery-Gonse

The sweeping victory of Donald Trump is a wake-up call for EU leaders. Will any of them stand out as a respected European figure who can engage with the 47th president of the United States?

Some dreamt of it; for others, it was their worst nightmare.

As the number of electoral votes trickled down until the wee hours of the morning (6 November), reality started sinking in for European leaders. Their most important ally, its security guarantor and crucial economic partner, the United States of America, will be under Trumpian governance for another four years.

Trump's victory, happening on a platform of deregulation, isolationism and authoritarian leadership, is without precedent in modern American history.

"Promises made, promises kept," Trump said in his victory speech on Wednesday morning. Should this hold true, the very idea that Europe and the US are tied by a shared identity and common interests may soon belong to the past.

Stakes are high: US support for Ukraine is expected to wane under Trump, if not disappear outright, and he also threatened to slam EU goods exported to the US with a blanket 20% tariff.

So far, public reactions from EU leaders suggest they are willing and ready to engage with the new administration – rather than outright oppose it.

"Ready to work together," France's President Emmanuel Macron said. "I look forward to our cooperation," Poland's Donald Tusk added.

Yet, underneath a veneer of unity lies a heavily divided Europe, with once-leading figures facing grave crises at home and populist forces on the rise.

 

Continue reading...
Map of the day
Results for some states will take several days to be known. However, Donald Trump achieved the majority of 270 electoral college votes already. 
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The Roundup

The European parliamentary commissioner-designate hearings are entering their third day, read the latest from our journalists on our live blog.

Anti-Brussels firebrand Orbán hosts European leaders in Hungary. The European Political Community (EPC) summit on Thursday (7 October), followed by an informal EU leaders meeting on Friday.

Magnus Brunner gets Parliament's backing for the EU migration job. The Austrian managed to secure support from socialist MEPs, despite that group’s opposition to President von der Leyen’s migration agenda.

Romanian Commissioner pick cleared of controversy after secret hearing with national MPs. But opposition liberal representatives criticised the hearing as a “farce”.

Borissov is ready to sacrifice the premiership in Bulgaria. The country could be heading for its eighth general election in three years in February 2025.

MEPs grill Portugal’s Albuquerque on CMU, central supervision, deposit protection. They will look for clues as to whether her public or private-sector experience prevails.

Portuguese FM slams UN chief for attending BRICS summit in Russia. “It would have been good if there had also been such a gesture with Ukraine,” he added.

Italy’s Prime Minister Georgi Meloni and NATO chief Rutte discuss strengthening the alliance. She said the invasion of Ukraine had a big destabilising effect internationally.

Spain unveils €10.6bn flood relief package, but some opposition politicians are using the tragedy to sow political discord.

 

Look out for
  • The Parliamentary confirmation hearing of Wopke Bastiaan Hoekstra, commissioner-designate for Climate, Net-Zero and Clean Growth. (9.00)
  • The Parliamentary confirmation hearing of Marta Kos, European commissioner-designate for Enlargement. (9.00am).
  • The Parliamentary confirmation hearing of Piotr Serain, European commissioner-designate for Budget, Anti-Fraud and Public Administration (14.30)
  • The Parliamentary confirmation hearing of Valdis Dombrovskis, commissioner-designate, Economy and Productivity, Implementation and Simplification. (14.30)
  • European leaders will meet for the European Political Community in Budapest, Hungary.
  • The European Court of Justice will release a ruling regarding the compensation to victims of violent intentional crimes.
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