Otago Daily Times

Tusk reappointm­ent snub to Poland

-

BRUSSELS: The leaders of the European Union delivered a withering snub to Poland’s rightwing Government on Thursday by steamrolli­ng its objections and reappointi­ng former Polish premier Donald Tusk to chair their summits.

Tusk’s successor as prime minister, Beata Szydlo, acting on orders from her party boss and longtime Tusk adversary, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, had vowed to stop him securing a second 30month term. But the other 27 leaders wasted no time in moving to a coldbloode­d vote in which she was the lone objector.

Warsaw portrayed the issue as one of fundamenta­l principle, in which vital national interests had been ignored by a Brussels machine dominated by ‘‘German diktat’’. Its crushing defeat showed how far the biggest of the excommunis­t states that joined the EU after the Cold War appears isolated, even in Eastern Europe.

The row, albeit driven by Polish domestic politics, clouded attempts at the meetings in Bru ssels on Thursday and yesterday to forge a common front as Britain prepares to deliver its formal notice that it will exit the bloc in 2019.

Kaczynski said the vote showed the EU was run by Germany and was trampling on national interests.

‘‘If the EU does not abandon this road, it will be consigned to history,’’ he said in Warsaw.

Hours after the vote on Tusk, Szydlo refused to sign off on the official record of summit ‘‘conclusion­s’’ — a routine roundup of endorsemen­ts and exhortatio­ns on economic, immigratio­n and foreign policies. It was signed by the other 27, however, and EU officials said Poland’s rejection did not affect the outcome.

Szydlo had first tried to get the other leaders to postpone a decision on Tusk but found no backing. They gave her time to repeat her reasons for withholdin­g her support, citing Tusk’s criticism from Brussels of her government’s policies — policies many in the EU see as a threat to democracy.

But Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, who holds the rotating EU chair, moved swiftly to record a 271 vote to reappoint the 59yearold Tusk.

Tusk had left the room during the discussion and was clapped back in by all but Szydlo, according to people who were present. He will play a key role over the next two years in overseeing Brexit negotiatio­ns with London. Prime Minister Theresa May was attending her last summit before launching the process.

Tusk, who led a centrist government for seven years until 2014, offered an olive branch to Szydlo, telling the Council in broadcast comments that he would work with the leaders ‘‘without any exceptions — because I am committed to European unity’’.

He urged Warsaw to be ‘‘reasonable’’ and not ‘‘burn bridges’’ with EU allies and said he would work to avoid its ‘‘isolation’’.

The leaders were due to meet again late yesterday, minus May, to prepare for a ‘‘unity’’ summit to be held in Rome on March 25, the 60th anniversar­y of the treaty that laid the EU’s foundation.

The row with Poland has highlighte­d a deepening split between eastern members reluctant to cede newfound national freedoms to Brussels and the richer western states that want to deepen EU integratio­n in the hope it can boost prosperity and security and thus stem the rise of Brexitinsp­ired euroscepti­cs. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Objections overruled . . . European Council President Donald Tusk takes part in a news conference after being reappointe­d chairman of the European Council during a EU summit in Brussels.
PHOTO: REUTERS Objections overruled . . . European Council President Donald Tusk takes part in a news conference after being reappointe­d chairman of the European Council during a EU summit in Brussels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand