European leaders seek show of unity in wake of Trump victory
 EPC summit in Budapest to discuss Ukraine, migration and global trade may reveal stark divisions within bloc  
European leaders are gathering in Budapest for 
top-level talks that should give an indication of how united the 
continent can remain in response to Donald Trump’s second term as US 
president, but could also reveal its divisions.
Hosted by Hungary’s authoritarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán,
 a Trump ally who has enthusiastically hailed the Republican candidate’s
 re-election, the EU 27’s leaders are being joined on Thursday by the 
Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the British prime minister, 
Keir Starmer, the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, and Ukraine’s 
president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
On
 the agenda for the two-day meeting of the European Political Community 
were support for Ukraine, migration, global trade and economic security,
 with an informal EU leaders’ summit on Friday due to focus on the 
bloc’s declining competitiveness, laid bare in a report by the former Italian leader Mario Draghi.
Leaders
 were upbeat as they arrived for the long-scheduled event, stressing the
 need for a strong Europe and effective transatlantic cooperation with 
Trump, whose return to the White House could herald an abrupt halt to US
 support for Ukraine and a potentially damaging trade war.  
Europe aimed to be a “respected partner” and 
deepen its ties with the US, the president of the European council, 
Charles Michel, said, while recognising “some differences”. The 
commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, said the bloc must maintain unity.
“We
 have shown Europe can take responsibility by standing together – we 
showed it during the pandemic and the energy crisis,” she said. “If we 
are facing challenges, no country can handle them alone but by standing 
together we can overcome them.”
Von der Leyen 
said she was looking forward to working with Trump again “in a good 
manner … to strengthen the transatlantic bond” based on a clear-headed 
analysis of shared interests. “The future of Europe is in our hands.”
Finland’s
 prime minister, Petteri Orpo, said a clear message on Ukraine was 
vital. “We need to say that Europe will support Ukraine as long as 
necessary,” Orpo said.
Rutte congratulated Trump on his victory. The Nato
 chief said he was aiming to work with the US president-elect, noting 
that it was strong pressure from Trump during his previous presidency 
that had pushed members of Nato to significantly boost their defence 
spending.  
He said
Russia was 
“delivering the latest [weapons] technology into North Korea in return 
for North Korean help with the war against Ukraine”, a threat “not only 
to the European part of Nato, but also to the US”, he said, adding that 
he was looking forward to discussing with Trump “how we face these 
threats collectively”.
Analysts have expressed
 doubts that Europe’s leaders will be able to unite around common 
projects to meet the potential challenges of an isolationist, “America 
first” presidency, including much-needed new funding tools for defence 
and economic innovation.
Eurointelligence 
analysts said: “Contrary to claims, Europe is not prepared for the 
economic impact of higher tariffs, the likely U-turn on Ukraine, and 
defence spending ultimatums – we expect the EU to divide on similar 
lines to the US itself.”
Sébastien Maillard, 
of the Jacques Delors Institute, said Europeans “really have a knife at 
their throat … The US election result forces the EU to open its eyes.” 
But perhaps, he added, “it’s in situations like these that things can 
actually happen”. 
The bloc has been weakened by the domestic political difficulties of its two biggest members: the French president, Emmanuel Macron,
 has been severely hobbled by his lack of a parliamentary majority and 
the coalition of German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, collapsed this week.
Paris
 and Berlin have also been increasingly at odds on issues ranging from 
how to fund increased defence spending and industrial investment to 
trade policy, and in particular tariffs on China’s electric cars.
Scholz faced calls on Thursday
 for an immediate vote of confidence after firing his finance minister 
on Wednesday, triggering the collapse of his ruling three-party 
coalition. Germany might be in political limbo until fresh elections in 
March.
“Without those two, the rest will find 
it extremely difficult to really advance on anything,” said Guntram 
Wolff, of the Bruegel thinktank, adding that he did not think Europe was
 “really prepared for this”. 
Moreover, Europe’s advancing – and increasingly 
disruptive – far-right parties, led by Orbàn, are likely to be further 
emboldened by Trump’s victory.
Orbán, could 
find backing from Slovakia’s populist prime minister, Robert Fico, 
particularly on calls for a swift end to the war in Ukraine.