Macron urges Germany to step up at ‘historic moment’ for EU
AACHEN, Germany: France’s President Emmanuel Macron urged Germany to take on the mantle as a leading force reforming Europe at a ‘ historic moment’ for the bloc, hours before he was due to receive a key award Thursday for his efforts in boosting EU cohesion.
With Berlin so far proving resistant to his flagship reform proposals for the European Union such as a common finance minister or budget, Macron stressed the importance for the bloc to speak with one voice.
At a time when the United States is going its own way in ditching the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate accord, as well as threatening allies with punitive trade tariffs, Macron said Europe stands at a critical juncture.
“We stand today at a historic moment for Europe – Europe is in charge of guaranteeing the multilateral order that we created at the end of World War II and which today is sometimes being shaken,” Macron told German broadcasters in an interview.
To do so, Europe needs to be strong, said the French leader.
He acknowledged that Germany needed time to regroup after an indecisive election in September left Chancellor Angela Merkel in months of political limbo before she scraped together a coalition.
But it is now time for “Germany to draw up its response by June” on proposed European reforms, Macron said.
“I very much hope that the chancellor and her government will live up to their responsibilities at this historic moment.
“We need to do everything to make Europe stronger, more united, more sovereign, more democratic,” stressed Macron.
He was speaking in the western German city of Aachen where he was to receive the Charlemagne Prize for his “contagious enthusiasm” for strengthening EU cohesion and integration.
But analysts say the Charlemagne award may be premature, since those lofty goals – a key element of the 40-year- old centrist’s pitch to French voters last year – have failed to gain much traction.
Macron has made little headway to date on a range of ambitious projects, most notably a common eurozone budget and finance minister, a joint military ‘rapid reaction force’ or an EU tax on the revenues of technology giants.
Most recently, Macron led the charge by European leaders to try to convince Donald Trump to stick with the deal curbing Iran’s nuclear programme, hoping to profit from close ties developed with the mercurial US president.
But his arguments fell on deaf ears and Europe now faces a key test of its influence, unity and diplomatic heft as it tries to keep the deal alive.
“Macron has made some excellent speeches on what Europe needs, but it’s hard to see anything concrete coming from it,” said Bertrand Badie, a veteran specialist on international relations at France’s Sciences Po university. — AFP