Dáil debates

Thursday, 25 January 2024

Ceisteanna Eile - Other Questions

EU Enlargement

9:50 am

Photo of Micheál MartinMicheál Martin (Cork South Central, Fianna Fail) | Oireachtas source

I propose to take Questions Nos. 7 and 74 together.

Ireland is a strong supporter of EU enlargement, provided that candidate countries meet the necessary conditions for membership. The enlargement of the European Union has taken on renewed significance and urgency since Russia's further illegal invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and has re-emerged as one of the EU's most important means of consolidating security and prosperity across the Continent and countering malign actors. The invasion of Ukraine has also highlighted the clear need for continuing and ever-closer co-operation between the EU and its partners in the western Balkans and eastern partnership regions.

EU accession negotiations featured heavily in December's General Affairs Council, which reiterated the Council's commitment to an enlargement model centred on fair and rigorous conditionality, as well as the principle of own merits and reversibility. The General Affairs Council called on aspiring members to step up their reform efforts, notably in the areas of rule of law, fundamental rights and justice reform, in line with the merit-based nature of the accession process and with the assistance of the European Union. Council members underlined the crucial importance of further deepening co-operation on foreign policy issues, and the Union's expectation of partners to align fully with the European Union's Common Foreign and Security Policy. They also stressed the importance of the Union, in parallel, laying the necessary internal groundwork and reforms to facilitate an enlarged European Union. In this context, the Council took note of the Commission's communication on the recently proposed new growth plan for the western Balkans which aims to accelerate socioeconomic convergence between the western Balkans and the European Union.

The subsequent December European Council meeting saw historic decisions to open accession negotiations with Ukraine and Moldova and grant candidate status to Georgia, as well as a clear signal that the European Union is ready to open accession negotiations with Bosnia and Herzegovina once the necessary degree of compliance with the membership criteria has been met. These were the correct decisions, based on the Commission's recommendations published in its annual package of enlargement reports. The Commission has committed itself to undertake further reporting in March on each country's continued progress as regards European Union reforms. It is my hope that this will facilitate additional steps in each country's European Union perspective.

The Granada declaration adopted by leaders on 6 October 2023 noted that the European Union needs to prepare in parallel with candidates for enlargement. Ireland's position is that we see the value of greater use of qualified majority voting, QMV, for decision-making in certain limited circumstances where it would make decision-making more efficient and where the treaties make allowance for it. Further, there are current mechanisms that could be used to streamline decision-making while preserving the national interests of member states without necessitating treaty change, such as constructive abstentionism, the Passerelle Clauses, the emergency brake procedure and the Ioannina mechanism. The intention of the Commission to undertake a series of pre-enlargement policy reviews is welcome to see how the European Union's policies, budgets and institutions may need to be adapted to a larger Union. This will be an important exercise to inform this future discussion.

It is important that any changes in European Union institutional arrangements serve to facilitate EU enlargement and not to impede it. Likewise, it is important that candidate countries seize the current momentum on enlargement by continuing to make rapid and meaningful progress on accession reforms. Ireland will continue to support the enlargement process strongly and offer any practical assistance it can to candidate countries engaged in accession negotiations.

Comments

No comments

Log in or join to post a public comment.