With its
scapegoat gone, Europe is forced to finally get honest with itself
Life
after Viktor Orbán means that, in the future, leaders will have no one to blame
but themselves.
April 24,
2026 7:57 pm CET
By
Sebastian Starcevic
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-leaders-cyprus-summit-divisions-ukraine-energy-budget-talks/
NICOSIA,
Cyprus — When EU leaders arrived in Cyprus for two days of talks, the mood was
as sunny as the Mediterranean island itself. The absence of Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orbán, who skipped the summit after losing an election — for 16
years the person who caused his counterparts problems — guaranteed that.
But after
intensive discussions about the bloc’s mutual defense clause, energy policy and
its €1.8 trillion seven-year budget, Europe’s heads of state and government
finally had to be honest with themselves: Their problems — and their
differences of opinion — are a lot bigger than one man.
“Orbán
was in certain aspects probably the fall guy everybody … was standing behind,”
Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal told POLITICO in an interview on the
sidelines of the summit. In the future, leaders would have “to be vocal and
honest about their intention.”
And
across the two-day talking shop, the honesty gradually seeped out.
The first
cracks appeared on Ukraine. While some leaders spoke in favor of Kyiv rapidly
joining the bloc, others were quick to hit the brakes. Croatian Prime Minister
Andrej Plenković offered Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy — who was in
attendance on day one in Ayia Napa — a reality check, telling reporters Kyiv
becoming a member of the EU anytime soon was simply not “realistic,” if
Zagreb’s years of wrangling to get into the club are anything to go by.
Then
there was energy. EU leaders discussed “short-term measures” to weather the
global energy shock caused by the war in the Middle East at Thursday night’s
talks, but ultimately agreed to punt them down the road, Cypriot President
Nikos Christodoulides said, tasking finance ministers to meet and come up with
“very specific proposals” in a month or so.
“We hope
that we are going to have a general approach agreement by June,” he added.
But the
continent is already facing jet fuel shortages, with Transport Commissioner
Apostolos Tzitzikostas warning on Tuesday that countries may have to share
their emergency reserves.
“Extremely
difficult negotiation”
That was
just the first day. If day one was the shot — security, energy and the
always-thorny topic of EU enlargement — day two was the chaser: budget
discussions. But while it might seem a comparatively softer subject than hard
geopolitics, it ended up being no less contentious.
Dutch
Prime Minister Rob Jetten told reporters on the way into the day two talks that
Brussels’ long-term budget needed “modernization” and that the “size of the
budget needs to substantially go down.” He was backed up by Germany’s Friedrich
Merz.
That puts
them at odds with other member countries, such as Poland, who want to fill up
the EU cash pot, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who
made an impassioned case for a big budget.
“It’s
either higher national contributions or it’s lower spending capacity. That’s
the only options that are there,” she told reporters at a press conference
after the meeting was over. And, she argued, “Lower spending capacities would
mean less Europe exactly when more Europe is needed.”
Italy’s
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni (C) speaks with Cyprus’ President Nikos
Christodoulides (L) and European Council President Antonio Costa (2nd L) after
the European Council on April 24, 2026. | Nicolas Tucat/AFP via Getty Images
Italian
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni summed up the situation, telling reporters the
budget is an “extremely difficult negotiation.”
An EU
official, granted anonymity to discuss the sensitive negotiations, told
POLITICO there was also disagreement among leaders in the room on Friday about
when to start repaying the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF), the main
chunk of the EU’s post-pandemic recovery plan.
And there
was no Orbán needed for that.
Honeymoon’s
over
That’s
not to say they didn’t find some common ground. A few voiced optimism about the
EU’s chances of finding consensus without the pugnacious Hungarian premier.
“For the
first time in years there are no Russians in the room,” Polish Prime Minister
Donald Tusk posted on social media, alluding to Orbán’s closeness to President
Vladimir Putin. “Huge relief.”
Michal,
the Estonian prime minister, told POLITICO that without Orbán in the room,
leaders were going through a honeymoon period.
“You can
feel the positive energy,” he said. “Viktor Orbán was a symbol somewhat —
nothing personal — but the symbol was that he was inside the European Union,
enjoying everything that is inside the EU … but at the same time, fighting
against the European Union.
“And now
that legacy is outside the room, I would say yes, you can feel it. Everybody’s
talking about what will happen in Europe next.”
What
happens next depends on whether leaders can get over their differences on
everything from Ukraine’s membership to the bloc’s finances. As an “informal”
gathering of leaders, EU jargon for a meeting without a collective statement at
the end, the two-day talks in Cyprus were never going to be a summit where big
decisions got made.
That will
happen at a formal summit on June 18, about two months away, in the far less
glamorous setting of Brussels.
By then,
the glow produced by Orban’s departure will really be over, and leaders will
need more honesty than ever.
Jacopo
Barigazzi, Giorgio Leali, Nektaria Stamouli and Gabriel Gavin contributed
reporting from Cyprus.

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