The Stress Test of the European Union Continues
European Council President Donald Tusk recently described Britainâs departure from the EU the community's "toughest stress test." Unfortunately, it is not the only one.
Clearly, the Brexit talks are heading for the âno dealâ cliff everybody was so worried about all along. Since the United Kingdom is still not willing to talk about the divorce bill in earnest, the EU is now beginning to draw up contingency plans for the possible collapse of Britainâs departure talks. The clock is ticking and a breakthrough is nowhere in sight.
Meanwhile, the chauvinism that fanned the desire of so many Britons to leave the EU is igniting other parts of Europe as well. In the Czech Republic, populist billionaire Andrej Babis won that countryâs general election after campaigning on an anti-establishment and Eurosceptic platform. In Austria, conservative leader Sebastian Kurz has invited the far-right Freedom Party for talks to form a coalition government.
This weekend, some sixty thousand nationalist demonstrators marched through Warsaw to mark Polandâs independence day, carrying banners with slogans such as âwhite Europe of brotherly nationsâ. Demonstrators chanted âPure Poland, white Poland!â and âRefugees get out!â, in what experts say was one of the biggest gathering of far-right activists in Europe in recent years. One demonstrator interviewed by Polish state television said he was on the march to âremove Jewry from powerâ.
This is not the Europe Robert Schuman, Helmut Kohl, and Jacques Delors had in mind.
A petty nationalism of a different kind is unfolding in Spain. Hundreds of thousands of Catalan independence supporters clogged central Barcelona on Saturday to demand the release of separatist leaders held in prison for their roles in the region's banned independence drive. When the regional parliament declared independence from Spain in October, Madrid responded by suspending the regionâs autonomy and imposing direct rule.
This is a crisis the European Union really doesnât need at the moment and Brussels cannot even do anything about it because it is an internal affair of a member state. Europe needs more unity based on shared democratic values, not more separatism based on nationalism.











