EU states, MEPs agree bloc's long-term budget

11 Nov, 2020

BRUSSELS: The EU parliament and member states struck a deal Tuesday to pass the bloc's trillion-euro 2021-2027 budget, MEPs and diplomats said, unblocking another 750 billion euros in coronavirus recovery funds. The accord caps four months of intense wrangling over spending priorities agreed at a marathon leaders' summit in July.

"The agreement has been reached following intensive consultations with the Parliament and the Commission that have been underway since the end of August," the European Council said in a statement.

A spokesman for Germany, which negotiated on behalf of member states in its role holding the bloc's rotating presidency, tweeted that it was "a deal for Europe" that boosted some EU programmes "while respecting EUCO (the EU summit's) conclusions".

The head of the EU executive, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, welcomed the deal but called for the recovery plan to be implemented quickly. Although EU leaders had signed off on the combined package at the summit, MEPs - whose approval is needed for it to be passed - dug in their heels over two issues.

The biggest was on making spending from the coronavirus fund, which is a mix of grants and loans, conditional on the EU member states receiving funds adhering to rule of law and democratic principles.

That was overcome last week when the parliament and German negotiators reached a "provisional agreement" on the issue - an agreement that Hungary Prime Minister Viktor Orban is still resisting. The other obstacle was MEPs insisting that the EU return to former pledges - that had been overturned during the long summit horsetrading - to inject extra funding into programmes such as health, education and research. Money allocated for those areas in the 1.07-trillion-euro seven-year budget was adjusted down at the summit to get approval for the coronavirus package.

Under the agreement reached Tuesday, EU states agreed to kick in an extra 15 billion euros for those programmes, the European Council statement said. Most of the money would come from fines levied on companies breaching EU competition laws, diplomats said. The final compromise amount was far short of the 100-plus-billion-euros the MEPs had initially called for, but in the end they accepted the additional spending as a win.

"More money for flagship programmes," tweeted the European Parliament's biggest political group, the centre-right European People's Party. It also hailed the "rule of law conditionality" that had been introduced.

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