EU budget talks in Brussels begin

European leaders have begun official negotiations on the European Union budget, following a delay of more than five hours, as…

Taoiseach Enda Kenny: conceded there are 'tough negotiations' ahead. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA Wire
Taoiseach Enda Kenny: conceded there are 'tough negotiations' ahead. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA Wire

European leaders have begun official negotiations on the European Union budget, following a delay of more than five hours, as political leaders took part in a series of last-minute bilateral meetings ahead of a two-day summit in Brussels.

The leaders of the 27-member European Union have gathered for talks on the multi-annual financial framework (MFF) – the seven year budgetary plan for the European Union, having failed to reach agreement in November.

The meeting, which had been scheduled to start at 3.30pm, finally commenced shortly before 9pm (8pm Irish time), following a series of late afternoon meetings between heads of state.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny was the last to arrive into the summit chamber, having addressed the Dáil in Dublin in the afternoon on the promissory note deal.

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British Prime Minister David Cameron met with his Swedish, Dutch and Danish counterparts ahead of the summit, while Mr Cameron briefly met with Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel, French president Francois Hollande and European Council president Herman Van Rompuy according to a senior EU official.

Pressure to secure a negotiating mandate between the three big players intensified today, amid signs of increasing polarisation between France and Britain.

David Cameron, under pressure from his Conservative party to secure a cut to the EU budget, called for further cuts to the EU budget on arrival in Brussels.

France is strongly against more cuts. “I realise the need to economise, but we don’t want to weaken the economy,” French president Francois Hollande said on his way into the summit.

“It’s possible to have an accord. If some aren’t being reasonable, I’ll try to reason with them, but only up to a certain point.”

European Council head Herman Van Rompuy had proposed a budget figure of €973 billion in November, before talks collapsed without agreement. This compares to the original European Commission proposal for an overall ceiling of €1,033 billion.

Sources indicated last night that a figure of around €960 billion could be achievable.

While this figure refers to budget commitments pledged by the EU, David Cameron is arguing that a more accurate figure would be the lower budget ‘payments’ figure, which refers to the actual amount spent. This would equate to about €913 billion.

Negotiations are now likely to centre on where the expenditure will be reduced. The spending cuts negotiated for the Common Agricultural Policy and Structural Funds in November – still the European Union’s biggest outlay — are not expected to be challenged at this week’s summit.

A reduction in the cost of running the European institutions, projected to represent around 6 per cent of the new MFF, is expected to be debated, while expenditure in research and innovation, the portfolio of Irish Commissioner Maire Geoghegan- Quinn, may also be cut.

If agreed, the MFF still needs the support of the European Parliament in order to be passed into law. It falls to Ireland, in its capacity of president of the European Council, to negotiate the passage of the MFF agreement into legislation.

A failure to agree the budget this week could lead to a delay of several months in negotiating the budget, putting a range of European Union spending programmes on hold. Negotiations on the reform of the Common Agricultural Policy, currently underway, also depend on the successful completion of the budget talks.

The Common Agricultural Policy still dominates Ireland’s EU receipts, representing around 85 per cent of income from the European Union. Ireland received around €900 million in structural funds between 2007 and 2013, and is expected to receive a similar amount between 2014 and 2020.

Suzanne Lynch

Suzanne Lynch

Suzanne Lynch, a former Irish Times journalist, was Washington correspondent and, before that, Europe correspondent