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Donald Tusk re-elected as European council president | Donald Tusk re-elected as European council president |
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Donald Tusk has won a second term as European council leader, overcoming bitter opposition from Poland that has soured the mood of an EU summit underway in Brussels. | |
Tusk, a former Polish prime minister, was re-elected with overwhelming support to lead the European council, the body that organises EU leaders’ meetings, for a second two and a half year term. His reappointment until the end of 2019 means he will play a crucial role in Britain’s negotiations to leave the the EU. | |
The Polish leader, from the pro-European centre-right Civic Platform party, overcame opposition from his own government, led by the eurosceptic Law and Justice party. The outcome was never in doubt, but is a blow for Poland. Warsaw was left isolated, as governments lined up to back Tusk, a popular choice to guide the EU through difficult Brexit talks ahead and tense debates on migration. | |
News of his re-election was broken by Belgium’s prime minister, Charles Michel, who tweeted his congratulations less than two hours after the meeting had started. Ahead of the meeting it was expected 27 of the EU’s 28 governments would support Tusk. | |
Poland had hoped Hungary’s Viktor Orbán would join them against Tusk, but the Hungarian prime minister declined to desert a party ally. Orbán is a member of the centre-right European People’s Party, the centre-right group that includes Tusk. | |
Orbán had tried and failed to forge a compromise between Poland and members of the European Council, his chief of staff, Janos Lazar, told reporters. | |
Beata Szydło, the Polish prime minister, was also disappointed by Theresa May. The British Conservatives sit with the PiS in the European parliament, a result of David Cameron’s decision to quit the mainstream centre-right grouping in one of his first acts as party leader in 2009. Although the British prime minister did not raise her voice to support Tusk, the British prime minister sided with the majority. | |
Poland was never expected to unseat Tusk, but the row threatens to fracture the unity European leaders are searching for ahead of the EU’s 60th birthday celebrations at the end of the month and choppy waters of Brexit talks. | |
The Polish government made a last-ditch attempt to unseat Tusk, by proposing Polish MEP Jacek Saryusz-Wolski for the post. Saryusz-Wolski, a member of Tusk’s centre-right Civic Platform party, helped bring Poland into the EU, but has never served as prime minister - the usual qualification for the post. His candidacy was never taken seriously by other countries. On Monday he was expelled from the European parliament’s centre-right grouping for his “disloyalty and disrespect” against Tusk, the party candidate. | |
Following their candidate’s flop, Warsaw argued at the summit the decision should be delayed. But other leaders insisted there was no reason to hesitate. | |
The Polish government has accused Tusk of using his EU position to interfere in domestic politics, continuing a long-running PiS campaign against their arch political rival. Tusk is also blamed by Warsaw for siding with Brussels against the Polish government in a simmering row over the rule of law in Poland. | |
The bitterest conflict centres on a plane crash in Smolensk in 2010 that claimed the lives of scores of Polish dignitaries. PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski blames Tusk for the disaster, which killed his brother, former president Lech Kaczynski. A government inquiry concluded that pilot error and bad weather were to blame, but Law and Justice has always pointed the finger at the government Tusk led at the time. The dispute has become poisonous with Law and Justice supporters calling Tusk the “German candidate”, in an attempt to cast doubt on his loyalties. | |
Analysts believe that PiS is motivated by hoping to spoil Tusk’s chances for a run at the presidency in 2020, once his EU job ends in 2019. | |
Tusk is only the second person to hold the position of European council president, which was created in 2009 to boost EU leadership, so the bloc no longer needed to rely on a rotating cast of prime ministers and presidents. | |
Tusk was prime minister of Poland between 2007-14, the only one to have been re-elected since the fall of communism. A German speaker, he has good relations with Chancellor Angela Merkel. | |
Although a natural ally of the UK government, he is also credited for his calm response on the morning after Britain’s historic vote to leave the European Union. He was one of the first EU leaders to set out the mantra of ‘no negotiations without notification’. In a city known for acronyms and dreary cliches, he is not afraid to make punchy public statements. He mocked Boris Johnson’s desire to have his Brexit cake and eat it. More recently, he classed the unpredictable behaviour of Donald Trump as one of the biggest threats facing Europe. | |
Following his re-election, EU leaders will discuss rising tensions in the western Balkans and the state of the EU economy. | |
The summit will reconvene on Friday, without May, as the 27 leaders look to the future of the EU without Britain. |