The Columbus Dispatch

European Parliament votes to alter visa rules of Americans

- By James Kanter

BRUSSELS — The European Parliament has passed a nonbinding resolution calling for the reintroduc­tion of visa requiremen­ts for U.S. citizens, raising the stakes in a longrunnin­g battle over the United States’ refusal to grant visafree access to citizens of five European Union countries.

In the vote on Thursday, European lawmakers played tit-for-tat in their dispute with the United States, demanding restrictio­ns on American travelers unless the Trump administra­tion lifts travel requiremen­ts for citizens of Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Poland and Romania.

“You’re talking about citizens from countries, like Poland, with a major diaspora” in the United States, said Claude Moraes, the British lawmaker who leads the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs in the European Parliament, in a telephone interview Friday. “You’re really seeing frustratio­n and anger, and without any timetable, this is becoming increasing­ly seen as secondclas­s treatment.”

The resolution, while nonbinding, was an important political signal, and it increases pressure on the European Commission, the bloc’s executive body, to confront the new administra­tion in Washington, even though it may prove to be as intransige­nt on the matter as the Obama administra­tion, if not more.

The European Parliament also warned that it could take the further step of bringing the European Commission to court if it continues not to stand up to Washington.

“Only when the U.S. fully gets that the European Commission is going to act are we going to get any kind of timetable from the United States,” Moraes said. “At the moment, the U.S. just believes the commission is not going to act but stick with the pragmatic argument that doing so would create damage that’s just too great.”

He continued, referring to Washington, “There’s no denying heightened concern about the current administra­tion, but that’s more about uncertaint­y about who’s in charge and how the State Department is working.”

Moraes said the civil liberties committee could still recommend within two months that a case against the commission’s failure to act be brought to the bloc’s highest tribunal, the Court of Justice of the European Union.

“It’s a question of using what options are open to us,” he said, explaining the possible resort to litigation.

In the vote Thursday, the Parliament gave the European Commission two months to take legal measures to impose visas for American travelers to the EU unless the United States offered reciprocit­y to all citizens from the bloc.

European officials in Brussels have balked at making travel to Europe more difficult for Americans, saying doing so would have an economic cost and would most likely not even resolve the hurdles facing citizens of the five affected countries.

Parliament’s measure was approved in a show of hands and was not expected to worsen the standoff with the United States. But in the event that the court in Luxembourg were to rule in favor of Parliament, the commission might be forced to impose visa requiremen­ts on Americans.

The Trump administra­tion, finding itself in a tit-for-tat battle over access, would then almost certainly do the same for travelers from the EU.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States