Europe might call Putin
European leaders and Ukraine should be prepared to engage directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin if US-led peace talks fail, French President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday, signalling a potential shift in the bloc’s role in negotiations to end the war, my colleague Aurélie Pugnet reports.
If the US-led peace talks break down, “we will have to, in the coming weeks, find ways for Europeans to re-engage in a full-fledged dialogue with Russia, in full transparency with Ukraine,” Macron said. He added that negotiations could move forward in the “next hours.”
The situation is “not ideal,” Macron added. “It will soon be useful again to talk to Vladimir Putin.”
Merco-later
Von der Leyen told EU leaders on Thursday that the signing of the controversial EU-Mercosur trade agreement, originally planned for Saturday in Brazil, will be postponed until January, my colleagues Sofía Sánchez Manzanaro and Alice Bergoënd reported. An EU diplomat said the plan is now to sign the deal in Paraguay on 12 January.
The setback extends a saga 25 years in the making. The agreement remains stalled and has become a flashpoint for some of the EU quarter’s most violent protests in months, forcing officials to evacuate buildings on Thursday as farmers’ anger boiled over.
“Delaying the deal for a few weeks while serious issues affecting beef farmers are worked out could be worth it in the end,” Ireland’s Europe Minister Thomas Byrne told Euractiv. Ireland is among the countries hesitant to back the deal, citing risks to its cattle sector.
Former EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström said it was “sad,” adding that the bloc “missed an opportunity to show strength and unity today. By again postponing the EU-Mercosur agreement, it is losing credibility.”
Von der Leyen cited difficulties in meeting the demands of two countries. France and Italy have led calls for more time, arguing that safeguards designed to protect EU farmers from market distortions caused by imports are not yet finalised or implemented.
Várhelyi’s chips act
EU Health Commissioner Olivér Várhelyi has sought to play down backlash against his proposal for a new levy on food products, after at least four Commission departments issued negative opinions, according to documents seen by Euractiv last month.
The plan would introduce charges on so-called ultra-processed foods, as well as products high in fat, sugar and salt. Speaking to my colleagues Brenda Strohmaier and Sarantis Michalopoulos in a sit-down interview, Várhelyi insisted the measure was modest in scope.
“I would not call it a tax; I would call it a micro-levy,” he said. “Roughly, we have an idea of 5 cents on a bag of chips. So nothing punitive.”
EU’s to-do list
The EU’s three institutions on Thursday agreed on their legislative priorities for 2026, offering a snapshot of where Brussels sees its main pressure points.
Defence and security top the agenda, with plans to ramp up procurement, industrial capacity and military mobility by 2030, alongside renewed efforts to phase Russian oil and gas out of the energy mix. Competitiveness follows closely behind, driven by a broad simplification push, lower energy costs, deeper capital markets, and a fast-tracked Energy Union.
Migration policy also features, with an emphasis on returns and border control, while social policy receives a lighter touch through initiatives on housing and labour mobility.
Christmas comes early for Parliament staff
European Parliament staff will get an extra day of holiday this Christmas, after Secretary-General Alessandro Chiocchetti informed officials that offices will be closed on Tuesday 23 December.
“Annual leave already granted for that day will be automatically annulled,” Chiocchetti wrote. A Parliament spokesperson told Rapporteur the move reflected an “old tradition” of granting an additional day off over the winter break when the calendar allows. Parliament will also be closed from 24 December until 2 January.
Frontex can’t dodge pushback liability
The EU’s top court has ruled that the bloc’s border agency, Frontex, can be held liable for rights violations during pushbacks, easing the burden of proof on victims.
In a landmark judgment, the Court of Justice overturned a lower-court ruling, finding that asylum seekers cannot be expected to provide “conclusive proof” when key evidence is controlled by the agency itself.
The case, brought by a Syrian asylum seeker over an alleged pushback in the Aegean in 2020, will now return to the lower EU court. Green MEP Tineke Strik said she would summon Frontex and the European Commission to explain the ruling’s implications.
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