Gulf News

‘EU must break taboos to advance’

French president evokes a world ‘at a crossroad’ in his speech to German lawmakers

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French President Emmanuel Macron called yesterday for Germany and France to dig deeper as allies in their bid to spearhead a more united Europe, including by overcoming lingering scepticism on issues such as a Eurozone budget.

Macron has long championed a vision for a more integrated Eurozone, including through a joint budget.

With European Parliament elections looming next May, the French president has also urged pro-EU forces to rally and take concrete policy steps in a bid to fend off anti-immigrant, nationalis­t parties on the rise in several member states. In a speech to the German lower house of parliament yesterday at an event honouring war victims, Macron said the onus was on France and Germany to pursue those efforts.

“This new phase can be scary as we will have to share, pool together our decisionma­king, our policies on foreign affairs, migration and developmen­t, an increasing part of our budgets and even fiscal resources, build a common defence strategy,” Macron said at the Bundestag.

“We have to overcome our taboos and overcome our habits.”

France and Germany are already expected to lay out plans today for a limited joint Eurozone budget, which will be focused for now solely on financing investment, according to French finance ministry sources.

That means it will steer clear for now of more controvers­ial elements, like plans to use the budget to help Eurozone countries in economic downturns.

But Macron is also pushing for progress in other areas of integratio­n, including on plans to tax internet giants which Berlin has grown hesitant on.

Crossroads

Macron, who later met German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin for talks, evoked a world “at a crossroad” in his speech, pitting nationalis­t movements “with no memory” against more modern, progressiv­e ones.

“Europe, and within it, the Franco-German alliance, has the obligation not to let the world slip into chaos,” he said.

Macron had last week warned against the perils of nationalis­m at commemorat­ions in Paris to mark the 100th anniversar­y of the end of World War One, sparking an outcry from US President Donald Trump who blasted the French leader on Twitter days later.

Earlier yesterday Macron joined Merkel and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier to place wreaths at the site of the Neue Wache war memorial in Berlin.

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