EU
countries clash over how to share migration load
Many
governments want to pay rather than take in more asylum-seekers.
October
15, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Sam
Clark
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-countries-migration-law-european-commission-funding-migrants/
LUXEMBOURG
— Europe’s new migration rules hit early turbulence Tuesday, with countries
split over who should shoulder how much responsibility.
Migration
and home affairs ministers met in Luxembourg to hash out the technicalities of
a new proposal on so-called return hubs and cross-border deportation powers.
But on the sidelines, the political implications of who has the capacity to
accept more asylum-seekers dominated.
The
European Commission was due to say on Wednesday which countries are struggling
with migration and what help they should receive, though that’s now delayed.
As set
out in the new EU law governing asylum and migration — agreed in 2023, with an
implementation deadline of June next year — the Commission will say which
countries are under “migratory pressure.” The other governments can then choose
to either accept migrants from those countries or support them with funding and
staff.
But
countries seem far more willing to part with cash than open their doors.
Belgian
Migration Minister Anneleen Van Bossuyt said on the sidelines of the meeting it
will give financial contributions, as its system for accepting asylum seekers
is “full.” Finnish Interior Minister Mari Rantanen, of the far-right Finns
Party, said her country will “obviously” not take migrants from other EU member
countries.
Government
policy in the Netherlands is to pay rather than receive people. Sweden’s
Migration Minister Johan Forssell strongly hinted his country is not keen to
take in any more migrants, with Forssell complaining it has already received
“so many” asylum-seekers in the last decade.
Comments
like those foreshadow an obvious problem: That every country will be willing to
spend cash, but not take in migrants. In that scenario, a complex system of
“offsets” could kick in — and they would instead handle some asylum claims for
the countries that need help, rather than receiving people who’ve been
relocated.
The track
record of Italy and Greece — likely to be designated as recipients of that
support — has not helped matters. Last year, the two countries handled only a
tiny percentage of the migration cases they were supposed to as set out by the
so-called Dublin rules, which stipulate which country should handle asylum
applications (typically the applicant’s country of entry to the EU).
Governments
were also unable to agree on a system of mandatory recognition of asylum
decisions taken in other EU countries, Danish Migration Minister Rasmus
Stoklund, who’s currently leading discussions, said in Luxembourg. Denmark
proposed a change to the Commission’s original draft, but national governments
remain “too divided,” he said.
Magnus
Brunner, the EU commissioner for migration, said there is “a lot of
cooperation” and desire among countries to reform the system. He added that
“time is of the essence” — an unsurprising comment in light of a call last year
by EU leaders for “determined action” on deportations and a June deadline
looming.
Failure
could also come with grave political costs for the EU’s center ground.
A
situation where member countries refuse to implement the rules they agreed in
the EU’s flagship migration pact would “fundamentally undermine the credibility
of the common European asylum system,” said Alberto-Horst Neidhardt, senior
policy analyst at the European Policy Centre.
“If that
happens, as an immediate result, you would have internal border controls
reinstated across the Schengen area, you would have systematic pushbacks at the
external borders … the systemic implications of this would certainly threaten
the Union and … there would be certainly a political spiral because the far
right would claim vindication,” Neidhardt said.
That’s a
worst-case scenario, but this is a “very different political context” than in
2015, when the EU faced its last migration crisis, he said. “National
governments are much more self-interested.”

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