Ukraine prepares to join the EU club — but
Brussels doesn’t want to talk about it
The bloc has a lot of work to do before adding new
members, but would rather get the European election out of the way first.
MARCH 19,
2024 4:49 AM CET
BY BARBARA
MOENS AND JAKOB HANKE VELA
https://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-eu-farm-protests-ursula-von-der-leyen-voloymyr-zelenskyy/
BRUSSELS —
Which is more important to the European Union: Ukraine joining the bloc or
Europe’s farmers?
The EU
doesn’t want to say much in public about admitting new members amid a backdrop
of angry farmers staging sometimes violent protests across the continent.
The farmers
say they are stuck in a losing battle of competing with cheap imports from
outside the bloc, many of which come from Ukraine. They also say they are
rattled by higher-than-normal fuel costs as well as environmental regulations
from Brussels.
So for now,
European leaders are handing out concessions to keep angry farmers happy. Late
Monday, EU countries agreed to impose restrictions on Ukrainian agricultural
sales, dealing a significant blow to its exports. At a meeting of the 27
government envoys, France came out in support of Poland, asking for a limit on
imports of Ukrainian poultry, eggs, sugar and wheat, two people briefed on the
discussion told Brussels Playbook.
Asked why
they caved in, senior officials blamed their leaders’ fear that the farmers’
protests could fuel new populist parties, such as the BBB in the Netherlands.
Meanwhile,
European leaders are keeping enlargement talk to a minimum, especially with
just three months to go before the EU election.
And some EU
officials told POLITICO they preferred to keep the work being done to prepare
for the eventual integration of Ukraine, Moldova, and a number of Western
Balkan countries under wraps — especially the knock-on effects that would have
for farmers.
“Let’s be
honest: nobody wants to talk about this [enlargement] before the European
elections,” said one EU official, granted, like others in this piece, anonymity
to speak freely.
“Talking
about less subsidies for European farmers is not something you’d want to put on
your campaign slogans — or give as electoral ammunition for the far right,” the
official added, referring to the European Parliamentary election in June.
Still,
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen — who is running for a
second term — has promised to get the bloc ready for Ukraine. In her State of
the Union speech last September, von der Leyen said this must be addressed
“today if we want to be ready for tomorrow.”
She added:
“It is time for Europe to once again think big and write our own destiny.”
The task
ahead on enlargement for the EU is Herculean, particularly on the issue of
Ukraine.
War-devastated
Ukraine, with nearly 44 million people, would be the largest landmass in the
bloc. Given its population, Kyiv would wield considerable influence in the
European Parliament and the Council of the EU.
Ukraine,
once an EU member, will have one of the lowest GDPs. That would put massive
strain on the bloc’s cohesion policy — funding that flows from richer regions
to poorer areas. Integrating Ukraine into the bloc could mean some €186 billion
in EU funds flowing to the country over seven years, according to an internal
note from the Council of the EU last fall.
Future
enlargement would mean all current EU countries “will have to pay more and
receive less,” the document spelled out in no uncertain terms. The bloc decided
preparations for the eventual integration of Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, and six
Western Balkan countries should be carried out internally, not in the public
eye.
After all,
welcoming new members to the EU without intra-European reforms is impossible,
said Kai-Olaf Lang of the German Institute for International and Security
Affairs, a think tank.
That’s not
something Europe’s farmers, who will descend onto Brussels for another round of
protests as the 27 EU heads of government meet in Brussels this Thursday, want
to hear.
For now,
they won’t have to worry.
When
European leaders meet this week to discuss enlargement — among other things —
at their summit, they will barely touch on their internal homework on
enlargement. EU leaders are set to simply “take stock” of what needs to be
done, according to the latest draft of meeting conclusions seen by POLITICO.
Nervousness in the Commission ranks
The
Commission was set to publish a communication on pre-enlargement reform at the
end of February. That didn’t happen and the draft has been heavily watered
down, said three other EU officials.
Several
countries asked the Commission to focus less on the financial implications and
future institutional reforms, one EU diplomat added.
The
communication is now set to be published on Wednesday — the day after ministers
of European affairs were supposed to discuss it.
“You can
feel a lot of nervousness about this document within the Commission ranks,” the
diplomat above said. “Of course, the pre-electoral period doesn’t help.”
The
European Parliament election complicates the issue, Lang said. “Those in favor
of enlargement might fear that they will initiate a debate about reforms …
which could mobilize adversaries of a more tightly knit EU,” referring to
Hungary.
Hungary has
blocked conversations around EU support for Ukraine in exchange for unfreezing
cash. Only when Prime Minister Viktor Orbán left the room during December’s EU
Council, were the 26 other leaders able to take steps on Ukraine’s initial
accession steps.
Some
countries are growing impatient, calling for more to be done on enlargement,
especially as the Commission took a step in March towards opening up the bloc
to potential new members, like Bosnia and Herzegovina.
“Enlargement
and internal reform processes must go hand in hand,” said Tiago Antunes, the
Portuguese secretary of state for European Affairs, whose country has been
pushing for intra-EU reform.
“We are
indeed awaiting this communication from the Commission and we have great
expectations. It is much-needed to discuss the reforms that are needed to
prepare for the new member states to join the Union.”
But the
real debate is set to happen after the European election, the diplomats and
officials said.
At the end
of June, European leaders will sign off on a so-called strategic agenda for the
next European Commission, and in particular, intra-European reform.
The
expectation is that Poland, which will take over the rotating presidency of the
Council of the EU in 2025, will start to lay the groundwork for enlargement.
“We have
time,” said another EU diplomat. “It’s not that Ukraine is joining the EU
tomorrow.”
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