The “wind is back in Europe’s sails”, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker has said in his annual state of the union address.
He told the European Parliament there was a “window of opportunity” to build a stronger, more united union – but it “wouldn’t stay open forever”.
Mr Juncker said Europe’s economy was “bouncing back” and the EU had to move beyond Brexit.
He called for the union to embrace reforms and forge new trade deals.
- UK will soon regret Brexit – Juncker
Last year, the EU was “battered and bruised by a year that shook our very foundation”, Mr Juncker said – facing the challenges of Brexit, the migrant crisis and the rise of populism.
In his speech of more than an hour, during which he switched from English to French to German, Mr Juncker said member states “chose unity” and the union was “slowly but surely gathering momentum”.
‘Brexit isn’t everything’
Addressing the UK on its decision to leave the EU on 29 March 2019, he said that “we will always regret this” and, departing from his script, he added “and I think you will regret it soon, too”. “We will move on because Brexit isn’t everything. It isn’t the future of Europe – it’s not the be all and end all.”
He called for a summit in Romania on 30 March 2019 for decisions to be taken on a “more united, stronger and democratic Europe”.
The state of the union address gives the Commission’s president a chance to outline the political objectives of the EU executive for the immediate future and announce new policies.
Juncker’s speech: as it happened
Mr Juncker looked forward to a European Union beyond Brexit where membership of the banking union, eurozone and the Schengen border-free zone would be standard.
On trade, Mr Juncker hailed recent deals with Canada and Japan, and said deals with Mexico and South America were in the pipeline.
Trade talks should open with Australia and New Zealand, he said, and be completed by late 2019. But he said there had to be reciprocity in trade deals: “We have to get as much as we give.”
And he promised new openness in trade negotiations and – amid concern about Chinese investment in strategic European assets – said investors in the EU would be screened.
Mr Juncker praised Europe’s progress on migration, saying it protected its external borders in a more efficient manner. He highlighted Italy’s “perseverance and generosity” in helping to manage irregular migration from Africa.
But work needed to be done opening legal migration routes, ending “scandalous” conditions in Libya and investing in Africa.
The EU project
Mr Juncker said the EU must embrace the value of equality – between member states, workers and consumers.
Referring to growing controversy over different food standards across the union, Mr Juncker said he “would not accept that in some parts of Europe, people are sold food of lower quality than in other countries, despite the packaging and branding being identical”.
Europe had to pursue a “credible enlargement project to the countries of the western Balkans”, and it was high time for Romania and Bulgaria to be brought into the EU’s border-free Schengen zone, along with Croatia when it was ready, he said.
But he sternly reminded member states that final jurisdiction in the union belonged to the European Court of Justice, and said the rule of law was not optional. That might have been a tacit reference to countries such as Poland, which have defied judicial decisions from the EU on a number of issues.
In the EU “the rule of law, justice and fundamental rights” took priority, he said – and “that rules out EU membership for Turkey for the foreseeable future”.
He demanded that Ankara free imprisoned journalists and stop personal attacks on European leaders.
“Stop calling our leaders fascists and Nazis!” he demanded, to applause from the assembly.
Mr Juncker also called for a number of key reforms to the union’s organisation.
He suggested his own role of Commission president should be merged with that of the Council president, and elected following a “pan-European campaign”.
This proposal, he added, did not “target in any way” the work of his “excellent friend” Donald Tusk – the current incumbent of the Council presidency. Any attempt to merge the two roles would require a change to EU treaties.
The Commission leader also proposed the creation of a Europe-wide finance minister, enabling deeper integration of the eurozone.
In response, Denmark’s Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen said he agreed with Mr Juncker that there should not be treaty changes. “No new grand projects or institutional discussions,” he tweeted.
But the role of the Council president was important, he said, and needed as a voice of member states.