Germany's Merkel wants EU to take on more global responsibility
"The dramatic global consequences of the (coronavirus) pandemic demand that Europe takes on more global responsibility," German Chancellor Angela Merkel told the Bundestag lower house of parliament.
- World
- Reuters
- Published Date: 04:03 | 18 June 2020
- Modified Date: 06:08 | 18 June 2020
Chancellor Angela Merkel, setting out her objectives for Germany's presidency of the European Union in the second half of this year, said on Thursday the bloc must take on a more global role and speak with one voice to China to represent its values.
"The dramatic global consequences of the (coronavirus) pandemic demand that Europe takes on more global responsibility," Merkel told the Bundestag lower house of parliament.
"At this time, the world needs Europe's strong voice for the protection of human dignity, democracy and freedom," she added.
The coronavirus pandemic has exposed the weakness of the European Union, and Germany will use its presidency of the bloc to promote solidarity and economic prosperity among its 27 member states, Merkel said on Thursday.
In a speech to parliament, Merkel said the most immediate challenge facing the bloc reeling from more than 100,000 deaths linked to COVID-19 and facing its worst recession since World War Two was to agree on a multi-year budget and a recovery fund.
"The pandemic has revealed how fragile the European project still is," said Merkel, lamenting the "rather national and not European" initial response to the pandemic by EU governments, including her own. "Cohesion and solidarity have never been more important than today."
Germany takes over the EU presidency for six months on July 1 and Merkel said member states have high expectations of the bloc's largest economy, which is also its paymaster.
EU leaders will debate the European Commission's 750 billion euro ($842.93 billion) recovery plan for the first time on Friday, together with a 1.1 trillion euro proposal for the next EU budget for 2021-2027. The plan will need the approval of all member states.
Merkel said she expects an agreement on the spending plans at a physical meeting of EU leaders later this year, playing down the chances of a breakthrough at a videoconference summit on Friday.
"I will make the case that at the European Council we reach a decision about a multi-year financing deal and a recovery fund as quickly as possible," said Merkel.
The pandemic struck the bloc as it was struggling with other major challenges like finding a common strategy to counter China's stellar economic rise, dealing with a hostile U.S. administration and achieving technological and military sovereignty.