July 19, 2020
By Kate Abnett and Gabriela Baczynska
BRUSSELS
(Reuters) – European Union leaders toiled in search of a coronavirus
stimulus deal for a third day on Sunday but German Chancellor Angela
Merkel said that the mounting acrimony over the level of spending might
not easily be overcome.
Germany and France, the EU’s powerbrokers,
are seeking a deal on a 1.8 trillion euro ($2.06 trillion) economic
recovery package to rescue the bloc’s economies that are facing their
worst recession since World War Two.
Sticking points are the size of the new recovery fund and what
proportion should be in grants and loans, with some “frugal” richer
states led by the Netherlands pushing to limit it, underscoring the
depth of the EU’s north-south split.
Separately, the summit faces
difficulties in agreeing the scale of EU budget rebates for richer
countries, as well as a dispute over a proposed new rule of law
mechanism, which could freeze EU funding to countries flouting
democratic principles.
Greece’s Prime Minister Kyriakos
Mitsotakis, whose country was only just recovering from its 10-year debt
crisis when the pandemic hit, made a plea for unity, saying the EU
could not afford to look “divided or weak”.
“I sincerely hope that today we can break the deadlock,” he told reporters as he arrived at the Europa building in Brussels.
Leaders wearing face masks have called the summit a ‘make-or-break’
moment for nearly 70 years of European integration and failure to agree
amid an unprecedented health and economic crisis would raise serious
questions about the viability of the bloc, officials and experts say.
“There
is a lot of goodwill, but also many positions. I will make every effort
but it is possible that there is no result,” Merkel said.
Speculation
was rife among EU diplomats that talks could run into Monday and
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said he was willing to stay in
Brussels all week, but another summit later in July was more likely in
the event of no deal.
With consultations going on, the formal start of the summit plenary with all 27 leaders was delayed indefinitely.
“RUTTE HATES ME”
Late on Saturday, Merkel and French President
Emmanuel Macron left the day’s final stretch of informal talks early,
refusing to accept that the level of free grants to ailing economies in
the package fall below 400 billion euros.
Italian Prime Minister
Giuseppe Conte had earlier accused the Netherlands and its allies
Austria, Sweden, Denmark and Finland of “blackmail”. Stockholm proposes
to cut grants to 155 billion euros.
Macron said there was a
willingness to compromise, but it should not deter “from the legitimate
ambition that we need to have,” referring to the level of money
available in the planned 750 billion euro recovery fund, which is to be
funded by money raised on capital markets.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who faces parliamentary elections by
March 2021, was frank about the divisions with France and Germany on
Saturday night. “They walked away annoyed,” Rutte said of Merkel and
Macron.
Meanwhile, Hungary, backed by its eurosceptic ally Poland,
has threatened to veto the package over the rule of law mechanism,
supported by the Dutch.
Orban said Rutte had a personal grudge against him. Rutte’s office was not immediately available for comment.
“I
don’t know what is the personal reason for the Dutch prime minister to
hate me or Hungary, but he is attacking so harshly … I don’t like blame
games but the Dutchman is the real responsible man for the whole mess,”
Orban told reporters.
https://www.oann.com/germanys-merkel-warns-of-summit-failure-on-eu-recovery-fund/