Von der
Leyen vows to punish Israel’s ‘extremist ministers’ and pause payments
“What is
happening in Gaza is unacceptable,” EU Commission president tells a noisy
European Parliament during State of the Union address.
September
10, 2025 10:40 am CET
By Sarah
Wheaton, Max Griera, Antonia Zimmermann and Gabriel Gavin
President
Ursula von der Leyen used her annual State of the Union speech to announce the
European Commission will take a tougher approach on Israel ― drawing applause
and jeers from a divided European Parliament.
The EU’s
executive will sanction “extremist ministers” and violent settlers, and pause
bilateral payments to Israel, von der Leyen said, as she seeks to blast through
gridlock in the bloc’s response to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
The
announcement triggered a furious response in Israel, where Foreign Minister
Gideon Sa’ar hit back: “The President of the European Commission’s comments
this morning are regrettable. Some of them are also tainted by echoing the
false propaganda of Hamas and its partners.”
The
Commission will also propose a partial suspension of trade aspects of the
EU-Israel Association Agreement — even though these are measures that are
likely to be stalled by persistent divisions among the capitals over how to
restrain the Israeli government’s response to the attacks by Hamas on Oct. 7,
2023.
“What is
happening in Gaza is unacceptable,” von der Leyen told the Parliament in
Strasbourg. “We will propose sanctions on the extremist ministers and on
violent settlers.”
Von der
Leyen acknowledged that disagreement among national governments had blocked
more concrete action — including suspending EU research funding — and said that
was fueling public anger.
“We will
put our bilateral support to Israel on hold,” she said, adding that funding for
the Holocaust museum Yad Vashem and Israeli civil society would not be
affected. She gave no further details than that.
Referring
to “man-made famine,” she said: “For the sake of humanity, this must stop.”
In his
response, Sa’ar added: “The President of the Commission errs in yielding to the
pressures of elements that seek to undermine Israel–Europe relations. This
trend is contrary to the interests of the European states themselves. And
mainly: this is not acceptable conduct between partners.”
Largest
trading partner
The
announcement that the EU will sanction key Israeli officials and settlers drew
applause and heckles from across the chamber.
Many
lawmakers, some of whom were wearing red in solidarity with Gaza, welcomed the
announcement. But it sparked uproar on the right-hand side of the chamber where
some members, including from Germany’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD),
shouted interruptions, prompting attendants and MEPs to tell them to be quiet.
The EU is
Israel’s largest trading partner, accounting for 32 percent of its total trade
in 2024, so any possible suspension will have a major effect on the Israeli
economy. The EU exports machinery and transport equipment, chemicals and other
manufactured goods to Israel, with total exports amounting to €26.7 billion in
2024.
In long,
behind-closed-doors negotiations between the main political groups ahead of von
der Leyen’s speech, the Parliament failed to agree on a joint stance on Gaza.
Von der Leyen’s center-right European People’s Party (EPP) walked out of a deal
as they disagreed with the content of the final text, which means the
resolution will not pass Thursday’s vote, three officials, granted anonymity to
speak freely, said.
The
toughened stance of the Commission president’s speech, however, has opened
hopes among center-left political groups that the EPP will change course to
reflect von der Leyen, their highest-ranking member.
“I
continue to receive mixed signals from the EPP regarding their support for the
Gaza resolution,” liberal Renew lawmaker Hilde Vautmans, negotiating the Gaza
resolution, told POLITICO. “But this morning, there was a clear shift in
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s position by proposing sanctions on
Israel and the suspension of the trade pillar of the EU–Israel Association
Agreement. She has set a new and important direction.
“I hope
this momentum will positively influence EPP support for the resolution,” she
added.
A
suspension of the trade aspects of the association agreement with Israel would
not amount to targeted sanctions or an EU-wide arms embargo — steps that civil
society and some member countries have also called for to exert economic
pressure on Israel — but would instead reimpose tariffs.
Still,
reaching the necessary qualified majority to suspend that wouldn’t be easy.
While a majority of countries voted in favor of reviewing the EU’s association
agreement with Israel, that doesn’t mean all of them will vote in favor of
suspending its trade part. The Commission’s previous proposal to suspend the
country’s participation in the research and innovation fund Horizon did not
gather enough support among member countries. Large critical countries — such
as Italy and Germany — would need to support the suspension. And close Israel
allies such as Hungary, Czechia, Austria and Poland are also unlikely to waver
in their support.
This
article has been updated.

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