Oman Daily Observer

Macron visit to Germany in May to focus on EU ties

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At an EU summit, Macron and Scholz said they want to jointly implement an EU capital markets union and reduce bureaucrac­y in the single market.

French President Emmanuel Macron will visit Germany in May and will spend more days than planned with Chancellor Olaf Scholz, government sources said, in a sign of their ambition to bring more unity to EU relations.

Macron’s previously announced state visit from May 26-28 might be followed by another trip to Germany in June, the sources said on Saturday.

This could signal that Francogerm­an relations remain strong, despite reports of deep disagreeme­nt between the two leaders.

Although both leaders show support for Ukraine against the Russian war, his approaches on how to help the country differ, with Germany being more cautious about weapon deliveries or sending troops.

At an EU summit last week,

Macron and Scholz said they want to jointly implement an EU capital markets union and reduce bureaucrac­y in the single market.

The sources said that a new Franco-german ministeria­l meeting was planned in Meseberg, north of Berlin, at the end of May, making Macron stay longer than previously planned.

Macron is under pressure domestical­ly because his party does not have a majority in the National Assembly and polls suggest that Euroscepti­c far-right and far-left parties could perform strongly in the EU elections in early June.

Both Macron and Scholz therefore want to emphasise a clearly pro-european course.

The French president will be received by Federal President Frank-walter Steinmeier and will give a speech on Europe in Dresden.

Macron had originally planned the state visit for July 2023 but had to cancel it at short notice due to riots in French cities.

A meeting within the framework of the so-called

Weimar Triangle, consisting of France, Germany and Poland, is being considered for June, coinciding with a UEFA Euro 2024 football match in Dortmund on June 25 between France and Poland, the sources said.

Meanwhile, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said for the first time on Saturday that he supports a reform of the country’s constituti­onally-enshrined debt brake, but does not currently see any possibilit­y of doing it right now. Altering the rules of the debt brake, which limits public deficits to 0.35 per cent of gross domestic product, would require a twothirds majority in the upper and lower houses of parliament.

The brake is fiercely defended by Scholz’ coalition partner Free Democrats (FDP), and earlier this week the chancellor himself had also seemed more sceptical about reform.

 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during a press statement with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, at the Chanceller­y in Berlin.
— Reuters file photo French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during a press statement with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, at the Chanceller­y in Berlin.

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