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LEAK: EU Commission wants digital euro accessible to everyone

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 07:14
The European Commission wants to implement a digital euro that is accessible to all retail users for free, in an effort to strengthen financial inclusion and competition in digital payments, according to a leaked draft proposal seen by EURACTIV.
Categories: European Union

Anger against EU on the rise after migrant shipwreck off Greek coast

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 07:14
Greece’s caretaker government declared three days of mourning after a boat reportedly carrying hundreds of migrants sank off the coast, killing at least 79 people. All scheduled pre-election party events were cancelled while public anger for the lack of a...
Categories: European Union

We have to avoid ‘war fatigue’, warns Czech President

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 07:11
Democratic countries must avoid war fatigue and continue to support Ukraine with the same determination that Ukrainians are fighting, said Czech President Petr Pavel at the European Values Summit in Prague on Wednesday. Pavel also recalled the upcoming NATO summit...
Categories: European Union

Estonia set to become first ex-Soviet state to back gay marriage

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 07:04
Estonia's liberal coalition government is only two months old and has moved swiftly on a draft bill legalizing same-sex marriage, among other measures, to distance itself from neighbouring Russia.
Categories: European Union

Sweden aims to break deadlock on EU’s renewable energy law

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 07:00
The Swedish EU Presidency plans to resolve the impasse on the renewable energy directive, with a new add-on to the text aimed at easing French concerns over nuclear power.
Categories: European Union

Portugal among most affected by wildfires in 2022

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:53
Portugal was the second-worst affected country in Europe by forest fires in 2022, with 153 wildfires burning an area of 949 km2, according to a report published by the European Environment Agency on Wednesday.
Categories: European Union

Swedish NATO negotiations underway but far from goal

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:53
Sweden’s NATO membership was discussed between representatives from Sweden, Finland and Turkey in Ankara on Wednesday to help move the process forward, but Sweden is far from reaching that goal, according to Swedish NATO negotiator Oscar Stenström. According to Stenström,...
Categories: European Union

Iranian mayor’s visit to Brussels causes stir

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:52
Tehran’s mayor Alireza Zakani – an ultra-radical of the Iranian regime – has been invited to attend the Brussels Urban Summit, and even though he is not on the sanctions list, his presence in Brussels was questioned, notably in light...
Categories: European Union

Czech government approves plan seeking EU recovery fund loan

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:51
The Czech centre-right Cabinet on Wednesday (14 June) approved seeking a 137 billion crown (€5.75 billion) loan from the European Union's post-COVID recovery funds, part of efforts to boost its energy transformation while cutting dependence on Russian fuels.
Categories: European Union

Austria’s proposed conversion therapy ban faces roadblock over transgender rights

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:51
The proposed ban on conversion therapies faces a significant hurdle as the conservative-Green government had different opinions on whether the ban should extend to treatments for transgender individuals. The Austrian conservative-Green government intended to propose in parliament on Wednesday a...
Categories: European Union

Spain’s labour minister proposes tax reform, boost ‘social economy’

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:41
Large Spanish companies and wealthy people should pay more taxes and contribute to building a social and fairer economy, Labour Minister and new left-wing party Sumar leader Yolanda Díaz announced Wednesday. Díaz announced an in-depth reform of the Spanish corporate...
Categories: European Union

Bulgaria accuses Russian ambassador of spreading disinformation

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:38
Bulgaria’s Foreign Affairs Ministry accused Russian Ambassador Eleonora Mitrofanova on Monday of spreading disinformation when she said that sending Bulgarian soldiers to Ukraine would negatively impact the dialogue between Moscow and Sofia. In her address on Russia Day, she stated:...
Categories: European Union

Poles less willing to help Ukrainian refugees: poll

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:37
About 55% of Poles believe their country should not offer more help to Ukraine, a stark contrast to the 28% who believe more support can be given, according to poll results by researchers from Warsaw University and the University of...
Categories: European Union

How the EU Council presidency fell victim to Spain’s electoral games

Euractiv.com - Thu, 15/06/2023 - 06:36
The electoral battle between majority parties PSOE (S&D) and Partido Popular (EPP) is taking a toll on the upcoming Spanish EU Council presidency – which will start on 1 July – as it becomes part of their offensive campaign. Sánchez...
Categories: European Union

Scientists condemn 'misinformation' used to attack EU nature reforms

Euobserver.com - Wed, 14/06/2023 - 21:13
As Europe prepares to vote on flagship green laws, over 3,000 academics condemn "lack of scientific evidence" in arguments used by opponents.
Categories: European Union

Erdoğan tells Swedish police to stop protests

Euobserver.com - Wed, 14/06/2023 - 20:47
Turkey says Sweden's police must halt pro-Kurdish protests if it wants to join Nato, as talks intensify ahead of a Western summit in July.
Categories: European Union

Going to Windsor

Ideas on Europe Blog - Wed, 14/06/2023 - 16:52
Today on “Ideas on Europe” we are going to Windsor. Not to visit the new King, but to talk about whether this spring’s deal on Northern Ireland means a new start for relations between the EU and the UK. To discuss this further, we welcome back the chair of our partner UACES, Simon Usherwood, professor at the Open University.

 

Listen to the podcast on eu!radio.

 

So, is everything happy again between the British and Brussels?

As much as you might hope that was the case, sadly it’s not quite that simple.

You will remember that ever since the EU agreed on the terms of the UK’s withdrawal from the organisation at the very start of 2020, the British have been talking about how unhappy they are with the arrangements, contained in the Northern Ireland Protocol.

In essence, those arrangements keep Northern Ireland inside the EU’s single market, as a way of avoiding having to have border controls between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. This was something that has been a key part of the settlement of the violence there in the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement, which has just had its 25th anniversary.

The problem is that not having those so-called North-South controls has meant having controls instead between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK; or East-West checks, as we refer to them.

For London, that was taken as an infringement of British sovereignty and the integrity of the UK, and Boris Johnson, the then Prime Minister, kept on making moves to get out of the Protocol.

Now in the world of international law, not sticking to your treaty obligations is a Bad Thing and so the EU has spent the last three years being deeply concerned about this. Most obviously, it has meant that any other topic of potential cooperation between the two has been made conditional by the Union on resolving this problem.

 

But Johnson has left Number 10 Downing Street. Are things improving now?

If we ignore the brief period with Liz Truss, the current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak saw an opportunity to cut through this impasse, simultaneously reopening options with the EU and demonstrating his ‘can-do’ approach ahead of the next British general election.

The deal reached in February this year provides for some reductions in East-West checks and the application of EU rules in Northern Ireland, but these details are less important than the politics of the situation.

By signing up to this, and by getting broad support from his party at the same time, Sunak has started to repair the damage done to trust in relations and has, in effect, committed the Conservative party to work to honour its commitments under the Protocol.

 

So where does Windsor come into all this?

This was part of the cunning second aspect of the deal: getting Northern Ireland’s government up and running again.

The main unionist party, the DUP, has refused to join any government for the past couple of years, because of the Protocol.

Choosing the name of Windsor Framework for the new deal with the EU was a very calculated attempt to dress up the changes in the rhetoric of unionism: it’s hard to think of other places that are quite so invested in the images and symbols of the United Kingdom.

However, that symbolic push hasn’t worked out and we still don’t have a government in operation in Northern Ireland; something that doesn’t look like it’ll change soon.

 

Has it at least removed some of the tensions between London and Brussels?

It hasn’t been a complete reset, I’m afraid.

On Northern Ireland itself, there are still numerous points of practical implementation that are causing difficulties and where the UK has still to show that it is doing the things it said it would.

In Parliament, we have a couple of pieces of legislation being pushed through that could well break other treaty obligations made by the UK to the EU.

And while we have seen new talks about British participation in various EU activities – like research funding – those haven’t yet produced agreements.

Indeed, the main point we might take from all of this is that while trust is really important as a basic condition for working together, it’s not enough by itself. Things like finances, legal differences and day-to-day party politics also count for a lot too.

 

So should we be cheerful, or pessimistic right now?

Good question! And one that’s very hard to answer at this stage. Maybe the best we can say is that Windsor has been a positive step, but only one step in a long journey to the British finding a relationship with the EU that everyone is comfortable with.

 

Many thanks, for sharing your analysis with us. I recall you are professor at the Open University.

 

Entretien réalisé par Laurence Aubron.

 

 

The post Going to Windsor appeared first on Ideas on Europe.

Categories: European Union

Labour unrest expected to fuel summer travel chaos

Euobserver.com - Wed, 14/06/2023 - 14:09
With summer approaching and travel demand expected to increase, is the aviation industry prepared to avoid last year's chaos?
Categories: European Union

Press release - MEPs call for new rules to avoid the exploitation of trainees across the EU

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 14/06/2023 - 13:13
Parliament urges the Commission to propose legislation to ensure the quality of traineeships across the EU.
Committee on Employment and Social Affairs

Source : © European Union, 2023 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - MEPs call for new rules to avoid the exploitation of trainees across the EU

European Parliament - Wed, 14/06/2023 - 13:13
Parliament urges the Commission to propose legislation to ensure the quality of traineeships across the EU.
Committee on Employment and Social Affairs

Source : © European Union, 2023 - EP
Categories: European Union

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