The Guardian (USA)

EU leaders seal deal on spending and €750bn Covid-19 recovery plans

- Daniel Boffey and Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

EU leaders have reached a historic agreement on a €750bn coronaviru­s pandemic recovery fund and their longterm spending plans following days of acrimoniou­s debate at the bloc’s longest summit in nearly two decades.

As the meeting reached its fifth day, the 27 exhausted heads of state and government finally gave their seal of approval to a plan for the EU to jointly borrow debt to be disbursed through grants on an unpreceden­ted scale, in the face of an economic downturn not seen since the Great Depression.

The end of the tortuous process was announced by the European council president, Charles Michel, who had been chairing the leaders’ long debates, with a single word on Twitter: “Deal!”

The euro rose against the dollar on the news to stand at $1.145. France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, described it as a “historic day for Europe”.

Ursula von der Leyen, the European commission president, said the negotiatio­ns, lasting more than 90 hours, had been “worth it” and that the EU could not be accused this time of doing “too little, too late”.

Talks for the hard-won deal pitted north against south and east against west as government­s haggled over the terms of both the bloc’s seven-year budget and a one-off economic stimulus.

The summit, stretching from Friday morning into the early hours of Tuesday, was so prolonged that two leaders, Xavier Bettel of Luxembourg and Ireland’s Micheál Martin, briefly returned home before coming back to Brussels.

Despite initial opposition from the so-called frugal states of the Netherland­s, Austria, Sweden and Denmark, agreement was finally found, following a final 5.15am session of the 27 on Tuesday

morning, to disburse vast sums in the form of non-repayable grants to countries most stricken by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The breakthrou­gh followed a new proposal from Michel for the EU to pay out €390bn in grants and €360bn in loans from the new economic reconstruc­tion fund.

The “frugal” states had been pushing for the original proposal by the European commission for €500bn in grants to be reduced to €350bn, to the evident frustratio­n of Macron and the German chancellor, Angela Merkel.

Italy’s prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, had at one stage warned his Dutch counterpar­t, Mark Rutte, who led the way on reducing the level of grants, that he might become a hero at home but that he faced being blamed by the rest of Europe for his lack of solidarity.

But Michel’s new formulatio­n, emerging out of hours of bilateral talks with the leaders on both sides of the debate outside of the full plenary sessions, finally received the unanimous support it required.

“This recovery fund is indeed a historic change and a historic step for Europe,” said Macron, in a joint press conference with Merkel.

At one point during the badtempere­d negotiatio­ns Macron had thumped the table in frustratio­n and likened those thwarting his spending plans to the ill-fated British in previous budget negotiatio­ns.

The final outcome is a messy bundle of compromise­s. As part of the deal, the “frugals” will receive significan­t increases in the rebates they receive on their budget contributi­ons, a throwback from 1984 when Margaret Thatcher secured discounts on the UK’s outsized budget contributi­ons.

Merkel said the British departure had changed the balance among the remaining 27 members and created a new dynamic.

Michel also watered down his initial proposal for holding up the disburseme­nt of funds both where there are concerns over either a lack of promised economic reform or the state of the rule of law in a country.

Where there are fears that reforms are not being implemente­d by member states in receipt of money, any one EU leader can halt the disburseme­nt to allow the European council of the 27 heads of state and government to “exhaustive­ly” debate the situation.

On the rule of law, France, Germany and other countries had wanted a link to EU funds but Hungary and Poland’s government­s, who have been previously accused of underminin­g judicial independen­ce and minority rights, rejected this plan.

The compromise agreed by the leaders instead puts off designing a rule of law mechanism for another day with agreement to be made by a qualified majority of member states.

The final deal also swung in Poland’s favour by watering down a demand to link green transition funds to signing up to the 2050 climate target to the consternat­ion of activist groups and senior MEPs.

Poland, which stands to gain €37bn in grants from the fund, plus potentiall­y billions more from a “just transition fund” to move away from coal, is the only EU member state not to have made the 2050 pledge.

While EU leaders agreed to increase the core recovery fund, the so-called recovery and resilience facility, they cut proposed funding for a specific climate programme, as well as research and health - all priorities for the “frugal” four.

The recovery and resilience facility, the main economic stimulus to the coronaviru­s recession, is intended to help fund the EU transition to a net zero carbon economy by 2050, but environmen­talists have criticised the vagueness of that promise. A specific fund to help countries ditch coal, the just transition fund, saw its budget slashed to €17.5bn down from a proposed €37.5bn.

Beyond a debate about the size of the recovery fund for countries hit hardest by the coronaviru­s pandemic, leaders had to haggle over the EU’s seven-year budget, which is due to start next year.

Michel secured agreement on €1.074tn on EU programmes although the leaders will face severe opposition in the European parliament to its reduced size when it is brought to the chamber for MEPs’ agreement.

The Brussels summit, the first inperson meeting of the leaders for five months, was just a few minutes shorter than the record-holding meeting in Nice 20 years ago when leaders debated EU enlargemen­t.

 ??  ?? French president Emmanuel Macron and German chancellor Angela Merkel. Macron described it as a ‘historic day for Europe’. Photograph: Reuters
French president Emmanuel Macron and German chancellor Angela Merkel. Macron described it as a ‘historic day for Europe’. Photograph: Reuters

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