Prime minister says ‘complex’ EU budget may not be agreed

Prime minister Mark Rutte warned on Thursday he is not sure European leaders will reach agreement on the EU’s next multi-year budget, saying the talks will be a ‘real battle’.


‘We want a budget which is modern and sober, and, as the Netherlands, to keep the rebate we have,’ Rutte told reporters on his arrival in Brussels.
The Dutch parliament sent Rutte to the crucial two-day EU summit with two mandates: to cap the EU’s spending plans and ensure the €1bn Dutch rebate continues.
Spending increase
The European Commission wants to increase the EU’s budget by 5% or €1bn, but the Netherlands, Britain and other western European countries are opposed to this.
Parliament on Wednesday debated the Dutch approach to Europe, with a majority of MPs calling for a reduction in the EU’s multi-year spending plans. They say at a time when EU countries are being forced to make painful spending cuts, it is hard to justify an increase in the budget for Brussels.
MPs also want the prime minister to press for the Dutch contribution rebate of €1bn to continue. The measure was agreed in 2005 but is due to expire in 2014, when the EU’s new seven-year budget comes into force.
Loaded gun
Asked what he thought of British prime minister David Cameron’s threat to use his veto, Rutte said he believed ‘you should keep a loaded gun in your pocket’. ‘If you put it on the table, you will put the talks under such pressure that you won’t get anywhere, Rutte said.
‘I do not know if we will reach an agreement now. It is very complex,’ Rutte said. ‘But I have stressed to my European colleagues that if we can’t manage it in one go, we must not allow the atmosphere between us to degenerate… let us keep calm and start again in January.’

More on this
BBC Q&A on the two-day summit
Your thoughts on the EU budget? Use the comment box below.

Thank you for donating to DutchNews.nl.

We could not provide the Dutch News service, and keep it free of charge, without the generous support of our readers. Your donations allow us to report on issues you tell us matter, and provide you with a summary of the most important Dutch news each day.

Make a donation