FRONT PAGE  I   EUROPEAN JOURNAL THE OTHER SITE   EUROPE MAIN PAGE  I  EUROPE ENTERTAINMENT I  EUROPE CULTURE &  ARTS  I  POLITIC  I PEOPLE I  I  EVENTS   CONTACT US  I

EURO GLOBE The European Journal.                 

EUROPE POLITIC

EU Eyes Budget Deal as Britain Offers New Rebate Cut

Chirac said the EU summit was heading towards a budget deal.

Britain offered Friday to slash a 10.5 billion euros ($12.57 billion) off its cherished EU rebate, sources said, raising hopes of a breakthrough to a fierce standoff over the bloc's future budget. French President Jacques Chirac, who has demanded an outright end to the British budget cheque, immediately said EU leaders appeared to be heading "little by little" toward a deal on the 2007-2013 funding plans. "Not everything is resolved but we are heading little by little towards a solution ... which would allow us to get out of this difficulty, this impasse," he said as a crunch summit headed into its final hours. Talks on the European Union's 2007-2013 budget have been stalled due to Britain's refusal to give further ground on its long-cherished rebate, and France's resistance to reform of the bloc's disputed farm subsidy system. A European source said that in its latest proposal Friday, Britain offered to cut an extra 2.5 billion euros off its EU rebate, from which it had already proposed slashing 8 billion euros over the seven-year period. The new offer was presented to EU leaders on the second evening of a summit dominated by the budget wrangle. The other key problem has been French resistance to reforming the bloc's generous farm subsidy system. Chirac voiced cautious optimism of a deal. "I haven't got an answer at this moment to the question: will there be an agreement? The discussions are fairly positive," he told reporters, but added that the state of negotiations was "fairly positive." Meanwhile an EU source added that Britain was proposing a total EU budget for 2007-2013 of 862.5 billion euros, increasing its previous proposal by 13.2 billion euros. If confirmed, it would match a proposal by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country has long been the EU's biggest net contributor.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel appears to have been one of the chief reasons the EU managed to agree on a budget deal during two days of haggling at a Brussels summit.

Photo: Merkel has started making a name for herself in Brussels.

 

The EU finally announced it had found a compromise on the bloc's 2007 to 2013 budget in the early hours of Saturday morning. Britain said it would cut 10.5 billion euros ($12.57 billion) off its jealously-guarded budget rebate, with funds being shifted towards the poorer mainly former communist countries that joined the EU last year. France agreed to drop resistance to a spending review that could reduce its agricultural subsidies. The 25 member states also decided to boost budget by nearly 862.4 billion euros. "The long wait was worth it," said Germany's Merkel. It was her first EU summit as chancellor and, many officials said she played a key mediating role. "I am convinced ... we have concluded a good agreement for Europe's future, a signal of hope for European development," she added. "Merkel played an extraordinarily important role behind the scenes," said Austrian Chacnellor Wolfgang Schüssel. "She has acted calm, sober and very professional." Romanian President Traian Basescu said: "She brokered the deal from start to finish. She was the first to break the deadlock with a proposal."  Merkel has played a very constructive role," a European diplomat told Reuters. "

hébergements mutualisés php mysql linuxThe absence of (former German Chancellor Gerhard) Schröder and his unquestioning support of Chirac has meant the French president has to be more careful." Germany compromises, too: But Merkel gave way too, announcing Germany would be prepared to do without 100 million euros which would instead come to the aid of Poland's poorest regions.  Polish Prime Minister Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz described Merkel's actions as the "a wonderful gesture of solidarity" as he celebrated the deal. "The taste of victory is as good as the finest French champagne," he pronounced. "Every fifth euro will be spent on Poland," he told journalists. British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who was charged with brokering the deal in his role as EU president, also lauded the plans. "This is an agreement that allows Europe to move forward," he said. "If we believe in enlargement, we had to do this deal now. If we'd failed to reach an agreement at all, I think that Europe would have been in a very severe crisis." His comments were echoed by French President Jacques Chirac, his perennial summit sparring partner, who also said the deal was "a good accord for Europe, which gives it the means necessary to fund its ambitions." "Once again, the crisis has been resolved," Chirac added, saying the deal had met French requirements. "Europe is now marching forward again," he said. Accord on the budget plans had been blocked chiefly by Britain's refusal to give more ground on the EU rebate which then-prime minister Margaret Thatcher famously secured in 1984. The other main sticking point was France's resistance to calls for a major reform of the EU's long-disputed farm subsidy system, of which it is the main beneficiary. Another apparent mediator, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, said that unlike during his country's turn at the presidency, which failed in June to get an accord, "this time all delegations attending the meeting were ready to take a decision." European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso admitted that the deal, which represents 1.045 percent of EU-wide gross national income, was not as big as the budget initially sought by his EU executive team. But he too hailed the extra money for the new members. "Without solidarity there is no union," he said.

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

LES FOLIES BERGERE

 

Variété et chanson françaises du 09/12/2005 au 05/01/2006.

LES FOLIES BERGERE 32, rue Richer 75009 PARIS

 

 

.

 

 

 

SOL EN CIRQUE

Les Aventuriers de la Pierre Molle Musique/concert pour enfants du 07/12/2005 au 08/01/2006.
LE BATACLAN 50, Bld Voltaire 75011 PARIS

 

 

 

 

 

* required fields
* *
*  
* *
* *

Please check this box if you do not wish to be contacted by Financial Times group with details of products and services we offer. By clicking ‘Send my 4 Week Trial’ you have read and agree to our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

  Offer details: