Hungary and Poland complicate takeoff by vetoing recovery fund
The relationship between values and interests is complex, and the EU often had to act beyond its borders. The partners now face this old problem. Hungary and Poland blocked this Monday the approval of the European mega stimulus in the face of the crisis caused by covid-19.
The reason is their rejection of the new mechanism of the Rule of Law that it includes. That can lead to the suspension of European funds in cases of corruption or problems with the independence of justice. The issue is the arrival of 1.81 billion euros, including the community’s multi-annual budget for the next seven years and the recovery fund of 750,000 million euros.
Europe seeks an urgent solution to unlock European aid
The Member States are now looking for a solution urgently so that Hungarians and Poles lift their veto, given the need to have the funds as soon as possible. Disarming it would mean a new victory especially for the Hungarian Government of Viktor Orban. He has eroded the rule of law in his country during the last decade under the European gaze.
The solutions being considered are various, from a declaration that offers guarantees to both countries, to granting them additional community funds. Some go through even more extreme ones such as leaving them out of the recovery fund, creating a special financial instrument. But the underlying message from either side is the same: there is no time to lose.
The work to find the solution is underway at various levels, according to diplomatic sources. It will arrive at the videoconference of the leaders this Thursday. However, it will hardly be fixed then.
The blockade of these two countries was already discussed on Tuesday in the General Affairs Council. Once again, Hungary and Poland defended their blockade and painted themselves as victims of the new mechanism. Hungarian Justice Minister Judit Varga described the mechanism as an arbitrary and unwarranted procedure.
The German Minister of European Affairs, Michael Roth, was hopeful with being able to achieve a solution in the next few days. And with his eyes on Budapest and Warsaw, he recalled that all European leaders had to give in to move forward with the historic July agreement. According to it, the great stimulus was approved against the pandemic with the adhered mechanism.
Northern partners and the European Parliament oppose a solution that weakens the agreed mechanism. Italy and Spain, the worst hit by the pandemic, warned that the debate should be in terms of urgency.