Good piece by @MatinaStevis in NYT today detailing how EU is exporting millions of vaccines while US & UK are exporting none.
"While US kept doses for itself, the EU shipped 651,000 vaccines to US last month and made vaccines that immunized its neighbors" nytimes.com/2021/03/10/wor…
Many are questioning why EU is exporting millions of doses to countries that will not return the favor, while struggling to vaccinate its own citizens.
German MEP Christian Ehler said this morning the EU expected US & UK to behave better. Was it naive?
Should Germany have had a 'Europe first' clause with BioNTech like apparently UK has with AstraZeneca and US has with Johnson & Johnson?
Ehler still believes no. "If we just think about our territory we might have a political benefit in the moment but that won't work for long".
I'm curious to get peoples' take on this.
Should Germany have included a 'Europe First' clause in its funding agreement with BioNTech, similar to 'Britain First' clause in UK's funding agreement with Oxford?
Would have meant a de facto EU Pfizer export ban in 1st months.
Tonight the controversial US ambassador to Belgium Bill White was supposed to speak on a Film & Politics panel about European dependence.
He apparently pulled out on short notice. So the moderator @Sanchelen, editor-in-chief of EU Observer, asked the panellists what they would have said to him if he was there.
Latvian MEP @MStakis (former mayor of Riga) said "I would warn him that he is losing the people's hearts and minds in Europe dramatically. It could be quite dangerous. And it's happening so quickly"
"For a country like mine which was the biggest fan of the US in Europe, the friends around me now feel completely differently."
Erika Staël von Holstein from the think tank @ReImagineEuropa said that if the US Ambassador had turned up, "I would have said thank you for bringing us together and making us stronger. And it would have annoyed him."
"This is the strategic risk they fail to see. Europe is going to get stronger from this, and the US will get weaker. It takes decades to build trust, and it's being lost rapidly."
"The sense of the American dream which was so powerful for so long, is gone. But what is the european dream? We don't know yet."
Isabelle Schwarz from the European Cultural Foundation warned that Europe's previous relationship with America is now gone.
"Nostalgia is not a strategy, it will not come back," she said.
"The danger is that through this succumbing to the desires of others, we risk losing not just power but the greatest strategic risk is losing Europeans."
#EUCO summit over. Council chair Costa giving closing presser. No national briefings.
"We believe that relations between partners and allies should be managed in a cordial and respectful way," he says. "Europe and the US have a shared interest in the security of the arctic"
"I want to be very clear: the Kingdom of Denmark and Greenland have the full support of the European Union," says @eucopresident.
"Only 🇩🇰🇬🇱 can decide on matters concerning 🇩🇰🇬🇱."
Costa welcomes Trump backing off on his tariff threats.
"Our focus must now be on moving forward on the implementation of that deal" he says. "The goal remains the effective stabilisation of the trade relatons between the EU & US."
"At the same time the EU will continue to stand up for its interests, and will defend itself, its' member states, its citizens and its companies against any form of coercion. It has the power and the tools to do so, and will do so if and when necessary."
The EU lawmaker who was in charge of digital affairs during 🇪🇺President von der Leyen's 1st term has been banned from the US, because the 🇺🇸 tech giants and government don't like the EU's tech laws.
🇪🇺President VDL notoriously loathes her former digital commissioner. But if she and Macron let stand that the US can ban EU lawmakers simply because the government doesn't like EU laws, that is a watershed moment in European servility. unherd.com/newsroom/von-d…
Still no response yet from 🇪🇺President @VonDerLeyen to 🇺🇸government following through on its threat to sanction 🇪🇺lawmakers over digital laws.
But Commission put out an official reaction and the Council chair Antonio Costa put this out 20 minutes ago:
In ten minutes Viktor Orban begins his debate with the 🇪🇺Parliament.
MEPS are expected to demand that he unequivocally states he will accept the result of the 🇺🇸election. Concerns have been raised after he reminded in a press conference yesterday that he's planning to use the Council presidency to host an informal meeting of EU prime ministers and presidents in Budapest 3 days after the 🇺🇸election - at a time when it is very likely Trump will be challenging the result if Harris wins.
"We will open several bottles of champagne if Trump is back," Orban told journalists.
In 2020, Orban and his ally Janez Jansa from Slovenia initially refused to recognise Biden's win.
Orban has entered the chamber.
Parliament speaker Roberta Metsola says introducing him: "The Hungarian presidency arrives at an important moment of institutional change [start of new term after 🇪🇺election] - a new mandate here brings new challenges and opportunities."
"Europe may not be perfect, and while we must be honest where we can do better, we must also not shy away from celebrating our successes," says 🇪🇺Parliament speaker Metsola.
"Prime minister, many of us recall the very lively debate [with you] 6 years ago here in the chamber. I expect no less today. Because in this house of democracy, as in Europe where the rule of law and freedom of expression are sacrosanct, we may not always agree but we will always give space for the respectful sharing of views."
Breaking: The European Commission is opening an 'excessive deficit procedure' against France for the first time.
This should have happened long ago, but France's power in Brussels for years made the Commission look away.
How will this impact the 🇫🇷legislative election?
Procedure also started for 🇮🇹🇵🇱🇧🇪🇭🇺🇲🇹🇸🇰
Romania currently the only country already under the excessive deficit procedure. Commission announces it will stay there.
The rules are meant to prevent a repeat of the 💶debt crisis, making countries tighten fiscal policy or face fines.
🇫🇷 had the 2nd-highest deficit (5.5%) in🇪🇺 in 2023, after 🇮🇹
For years EU officials openly acknowledged that France was getting special treatment, with 🇪🇺President Juncker famously explaining why France wasn't being put under the procedure by saying: "Parce que c'est la France"