EuroNews (English)

Political leaders recall highs and lows of term as curtain falls on the European Parliament

- Vincenzo Genovese

Manfred Weber - European People's Party (EPP)

Asked to recall the mandate's biggest success, the chairman of the centre-right EPP group harked back to the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The biggest achievemen­t for sure was to restart the European economic engine after the corona crisis. The Recovery Resilience Fund was for sure the most important decision in this mandate," he explained, recalling the EU's record-smashing €723.8 billion temporary recovery instrument.

Weber also named measures taken to curb climate change among his biggest highlights, despite his EPP party coming underfi

re for a recent backlash against the Green Deal , the bloc’s landmark set of laws to curb rising global temperatur­es.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the Parliament’s biggest failure according to Weber was its decision not to uphold the so-called Spitzenkan­didaten process, whereby each party elds a lead candidate to bid for the Commission presidency. Weber himself was pushed aside by EU leaders in his bid to preside over the EU’s powerful executive arm back in 2019, which led to Ursula von der Leyen being parachuted into the role despite not offi cially running.

"We (the parliament) did a big mistake not supporting the Spitzenkan­didaten idea, the idea to have a democratic Europe where people know before they go to the elections who the candidate will be," he explained, censuring his coalition partners for not backing the idea.

Iratxe García Pérez - Socialists and Democrats (S&D)

For the socialists’ president, the term is too full of successes to select one: “It’s been a very intense, exceptiona­l and extraordin­ary legislatur­e,” she said, listing Brexit, the post-pandemic recovery and the EU response to the war in Ukraine as major achievemen­ts.

"We've been able to answer all those challenges while maintainin­g (focus on) Europe's priorities: spurring on the green agenda, the rule of law and all the policies needed to maintain the European social pillar."

She also hailed the rst EU law to combat violence against women, approved on Wednesday, as a momentous achievemen­t, despite its failure to include any provisions on rape after pushback from member states.

When asked about the mandate's low points, García Pérez denounced the bloc's failure to conclude the embattled Nature Restoratio­n Law, the EU's plan to reverse biodiversi­ty loss in at least 20% of the EU's land and sea by the end of the decade. The bill is currently on the brink of collapse as member states withdraw support.

Philippe Lamberts - The Greens

The Greens group's co-president, who bid an emotional farewell to the hemicycle on Wednesday after 15 years as an MEP, told Euronews he was most proud of the parliament's achievemen­ts in shaping the Green Deal, which he said were "the steps only in the transition of the EU in trying to meet (...) our share in meeting the planetary boundaries."

"It's far from complete, despite what many say," he added, in a clear nod to the right-leaning groups in the parliament.

The rst of two failures from Lamberts' point of view were the new scal rules , designed to return to tighter controls following laxer rules post-pandemic, which were rubber-stamped this week. He described the new norms as a " straitjack­et" that will make the Green Deal and supporting Ukraine " nancially impossible."

He also spurned the asylum and migration pact , the sweeping overhaul of the EU's migration and asylum policy, which he believes "will not solve anything" and is "just making a joke of the European values."

Nicola Procaccini - European Conservati­ves and Reformists (ECR)

The co-president of the right-wing conservati­ve ECR group hailed the parliament's response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine as one of the mandate's biggest successes.

"At that moment, the European Union understood the danger," he explained, hailing the 13 package of sanctions against Russia and the bloc's unpreceden­ted donations of economic and military aid.

He added that had the EU not unwavering­ly backed the people of Ukraine, the bloc would have risked triggering a chain of events that could have "set re to the whole of Europe."

For Procaccini, developing the Green Deal "without interactin­g with the people" it impacts was the parliament's greatest error. In their manifesto agreed Tuesday , his ECR group vowed to turn the Green Deal "on its head."

Marco Zanni - Identity and Democracy (ID)

For the parliament's far-right group, the biggest win of the mandate was having brought its priorities to the agenda of the parliament, despite being a "minority group," its president told Euronews.

Zanni named immigratio­n, the "protection" of farmers and a more "pragmatic approach" to the Green Deal as some of the issues it had brought to the table.

"In short, we have managed to modify the agenda of the parliament," he claimed.

He said that there were "many issues and failures" in the parliament's work, but named the chamber's long-standing "cordon sanitaire," the rewall designed to ward off the far-right from wielding much infl uence, as its biggest downfall.

"It is a pity that there are still some here who believe that some (parties) should be excluded just because they have diff erent ideas," Zanni said.

 ?? ?? MEPs vote during a plenary session on Strasbourg, France, on April 24, 2024.
MEPs vote during a plenary session on Strasbourg, France, on April 24, 2024.

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