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EU faces crisis as Hungary says it will veto seven-year budget

The EU is facing a crisis after Hungary’s rightwing prime minister, Viktor Orbán said he would veto the bloc’s historic €1.8tn (£1.6tn) budget and coronavirus recovery plan over attempts to link funding to respect for democratic norms.

The announcement on Monday morning unravels months of negotiations over the scale and terms of the EU’s spending and sets the stage for a stormy videoconference meeting of the bloc’s leaders on Thursday.

Without a consensus among the 27 governments, projects financed by the bloc’s seven-year budget will go without funds and the €750bn plan to rebuild Europe’s shattered economy will not be activated.

“I think we have a crisis again,” a senior EU diplomat said. “We’re back in crisis.”

Hungary’s decision came shortly before ambassadors for the EU’s member states met on Monday.

The capitals’ representatives were due to sign off on the total financial package, requiring unanimity, and on the details of a mechanism to link the provision of funds with continued respect for the rule of law, requiring the support of a qualified majority of member states.

With Hungary only able to count on Poland to vote against the rule of law mechanism, Orbán’s government said it would block the whole spending agreement. Poland’s government indicated that it was also likely to vote with Hungary.

In a previous warning to fellow governments, Orbán, whose government has been accused of becoming increasingly authoritarian in style and substance, had written that he could not agree to a “proposed sanction mechanism … based on legally vague definitions such as ‘violation of the rule of law’”. “Such difficult-to-define concepts create opportunities for political abuses and violate the requirement of legal certainty,” he wrote.

The 27 EU heads of state and government signed off on the broad spending package and the inclusion of a link to respect for the rule of law in July, after days of hard debate.

The details of the deal were then subject to further negotiations between the member states represented by the German presidency of the EU and the European parliament. Those talks resulted in the spending total increasing by about €15bn to be funded by new EU taxes.

There was also provisional agreement between the two sides on procedure to block funds from rogue EU governments found to be putting the rule of law or the independence of judges at risk.

The mechanism would allow a qualified majority of member states to impose sanctions where governments fail to maintain democratic standards.

Its inclusion followed the ill-fated launch of procedures under article 7 of the EU treaties against Poland in 2017 and Hungary in 2018 over alleged attempts by the governments to undermine the independence of their judges.

The article 7 procedure requires unanimity among the member states before sanctions, such as the removal of voting rights in Brussels, can be imposed. Both Poland and Hungary had said they would protect each other from such measures, leaving it ineffective.

Under the new mechanism, there would be greater accountability over EU payments through removal of that veto.

A suspension of payments from the bloc’s seven-year budget and coronavirus recovery fund could be enforced in response to “breaches of the principles of the rule of law in a member state” or where governments “seriously risk affecting the sound financial management of the EU budget or the protection of the financial interests of the EU”.

A senior diplomat said the European commission and German presidency of the EU would need to “take stock” before deciding on the next steps.

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Rasmus Andresen, a Green MEP who was part of the European parliament’s negotiation team, said: “The resistance of Orbán and the Polish government is irresponsible. Orbán is afraid that the new rule of law mechanism will harm his autocratic regime. He is trying to take Europe and Covid hostage for his failed policies.

“Hungary and Poland risk plunging the EU into a deep crisis. If the EU budget and the recovery package are blocked, the economic crisis in the EU will intensify and the Hungarian and Polish economies will suffer massively as a result.”

“The European parliament has made compromises. Now we expect the council to do its job to secure majorities for the agreement. Chancellor Merkel must now take the lead. False compromises are now out of place. Now it is becoming a problem that the chancellor has so far done little to interfere in the negotiations.”

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