The EU Should NOT Accept New Members. Yet.

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  • čas přidán 4. 08. 2023
  • EU Reform goes hand-in-hand with accepting new EU members. Starting with the infamous VETO vote that stops the EU from moving forward. This video will look into the changes the EU needs to make before accepting new members to the block. EU accession is important, but some key EU reforms need to be made before the Western Balkans (Serbia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Albania), Ukraine, Moldova and Turkey join the block.
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    Sources:
    Source 1: Euractiv, EU Reform France and Germany www.euractiv.com/section/eu-r...
    Source 2: Wikipedia, Potential Enlargement of the European Union
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potenti....
    Source 3: Investigate Europe, Explainer Europe cuts off funds for hungary
    www.investigate-europe.eu/en/...
    Source 4: Carnegieeurope, is the EU ready for Further Enhancement?
    carnegieeurope.eu/strategiceu...
    Source 5: Euractiv, EU reform France and Germany:
    www.euractiv.com/section/eu-r...
    Source 6: European Parliament, As Hungary Blocks global tax deal
    www.europarl.europa.eu/news/e...
    Source 7: Reuters, EU Wrangles with Hungary over Ukraine
    www.reuters.com/world/europe/...
    Source 8: Euronews, Brussels Recommends freezing 7.5 billion in EU funds to Hungary
    www.investigate-europe.eu/en/...
    Source 9: Euractiv, German top aide: No EU-reform, no enlargement
    www.euractiv.com/section/poli...
    Source 10: Euractiv, Enlargement could work without Reform
    www.euractiv.com/section/poli...
    Source 11: Politico, European Union Membnership Enlargement www.politico.eu/article/europ...
    Source 12: Euronews, Hungary and Poland Allies Defend Vet Power in EU Foreign Policy www.euronews.com/my-europe/20...

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @vihanuyyuru6
    @vihanuyyuru6 Před 10 měsíci +264

    EU needs reform before they accept new members

  • @catalincrisan160
    @catalincrisan160 Před 4 měsíci +6

    Hungary should be kicked out of EU!

    • @NeroGaara7
      @NeroGaara7 Před 23 dny

      into the arms of brics now you thinking

  • @mariosathens1
    @mariosathens1 Před 10 měsíci +200

    So true..We have to reform the EU before we accept new members..
    The veto should stay only for issues that have to do with national security and Defence since the EU is not a military organization and also in many cases, some European states make decisions according to their national economic interests that might be against the national security of another member state.

    • @kikiwora
      @kikiwora Před 10 měsíci +14

      True, but due to veto EU can't do that quickly.
      And for Ukraine, quick EU integration is a question of life.
      While other candidates can wait, Ukraine cannot. And it shall not wait, because Ukraine is the one who defends Europe from russian invasion.

    • @13YTe
      @13YTe Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@kikiwora Ukraine can wait, I'm from Romania and for sure they don't deserve to be in EU.
      They have a lot of problems, including territories of Romania with majority Romanian ethnics that are oppressed. They claim democracy only when serves their interests and they don't respect other people.
      So NO Ukraine in the near future, I hope they will change their policy, they fight for territories received from Russia, but they still occupy territories occupied by force when Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was signed and that is null but they still don't return to Romania the historical territories BUGEAC, TINUTUL HERTA, BUCOVINA DE NORD, etc.

    • @gothicgolem2947
      @gothicgolem2947 Před 10 měsíci

      This doesn’t sound good to Scottish nationalists in the Uk

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Před 10 měsíci

      The EU is *also* a military organization. What do you think Borrell does? And what do you think DG DEFIS is?

    • @antifacho9294
      @antifacho9294 Před 10 měsíci +9

      This shit is literally telling you how to think. Everything is so wrong with the EU

  • @Nickster292
    @Nickster292 Před 10 měsíci +146

    As a person from a non-EU country, in Europe, I agree that we shouldn't join yet, it would be great for us in many ways but I'd rather us join when Europe is capable of letting us in than to join a Europe that WE will just use and not contribute to anything, we need to work together and we already are in many ways, half the people in my country already have EU citizenship and have proven that are worth their salt, but it needs to be more than that.

    • @RaduRadonys
      @RaduRadonys Před 10 měsíci +11

      Moldova?

    • @mathewvanostin7118
      @mathewvanostin7118 Před 10 měsíci

      European union is not the incredible european union of the 1990s 2000s 2010s anymore
      Because the administration got highjacked by some kind of weird activist hippie high tax too much rules forcing rules on everyone lobby
      So careful about joining

    • @nextinstitute7824
      @nextinstitute7824 Před 10 měsíci +4

      UK?

    • @TheAllMightyGodofCod
      @TheAllMightyGodofCod Před 10 měsíci +2

      And we can still be friends and cooperate, even if your country doesn't join.

    • @AdeyBlox
      @AdeyBlox Před 9 měsíci +7

      serbia, i know its serbia

  • @olicair
    @olicair Před 10 měsíci +13

    we don't even want to enter the EU.
    Greetings from Macedonia

    • @user-si8cf2we5w
      @user-si8cf2we5w Před 9 měsíci +3

      good then stay out of Eu and stop begging to join

    • @olicair
      @olicair Před 9 měsíci

      @@user-si8cf2we5w Очигледно е дека си неписмен или незнаеш англиски. Никого не молиме да влеземе во Еу. Напротив несакаме во тој клуб на педери и педофили.

    • @Robbiewa-bg4lu
      @Robbiewa-bg4lu Před 28 dny +1

      As a Brit I don’t blame you.

  • @carli2302
    @carli2302 Před 9 měsíci +8

    We don't need EU, we're going in BRICS, greetings from Macedonia

    • @nashbridges-cu6dy
      @nashbridges-cu6dy Před 9 měsíci +1

      To care! Pozdrav iz Beograda

    • @mile_381
      @mile_381 Před 9 měsíci

      🤡

    • @carli2302
      @carli2302 Před 9 měsíci

      Really? Then why so many EU top diplomats and leaders (Merkel, Teresa May, Von der Layen...) have paraded in the capital Skopje trying hard to push the country in NATO? We (the people) certainly did not want to be part of the so called western alliance and preffered to be left alone. Oh yeah....and who gives a shit what you think?@@a.m.4148

    • @JanJelinekHB
      @JanJelinekHB Před 2 měsíci

      it will be better for everyone.

  • @melkor3496
    @melkor3496 Před 10 měsíci +53

    Great video I definitely agree that the veto needs to go away and change with the suggestions you showed.
    Sadly to change this requires everyone to agree which won’t happen. The EU is kinda broken in this field.

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +4

      thank you!

    • @user-kg4fr9jr7v
      @user-kg4fr9jr7v Před 10 měsíci +5

      ​@@EUMadeSimple maybe real democracies can check-mate those who oppose supermajority system. Simply all 26 countries left the current EU as organization and collectively organize a new one with new set of rules. Hungary may fill free to stay alone in older one EU without any other countries in. It would be interesting to see Orban's face

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier Před 10 měsíci +2

      Removing the veto would be the single biggest mistake we can make, despite how Hungry and Poland is abusing it...

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier Před 10 měsíci +4

      ​@@user-kg4fr9jr7vTrue.
      We need a EU constitution that *mandates* democracy and allows the EU legal system to punish snd kick out members that doesn't fulfill democratic minimum standards.
      But other then that removing the veto for anything applying to *all* members needs to stay.
      Indeed the veto isn't enough...

    • @vault13dweller15
      @vault13dweller15 Před 10 měsíci +2

      The thing is, that EU is not a country but an union of independent countries. If veto goes away countries effectively lose independence. This is especially bad for smaller countries.

  • @andrigeogiou8420
    @andrigeogiou8420 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Definitely ,there is no place for Turkey

  • @rccasual7525
    @rccasual7525 Před 10 měsíci +20

    I am from Türkiye and as I see things EU countries have to sort out their problems first and start accepting new members later because EU must be strong and stable so that members can benefit from it. New members will add to the chaos not to the stability of the union.
    But to keep candidates close, EU must continue membership process, even it is slow to keep things stable and in order. For Turkish this became an emotional process more than economical and democratic process. Turkish democracy can thrive under the influence of EU countries and depends on the relations. You all know how quickly Türkiye can slide away from democracy and far from EU and western alliance of people feel rejected. While people here feel that EU dream is over it is not too late to win them back. Erdogan will not be here forever and I think Türkiye will contribute much to union as well as union influence on Turkish democracy will be so great. It will be a politically wise decision to try to pull Türkiye towards EU rather than forcing procedures. I have lived through membership process and the Turkish decline in the last part. We need EU standards that’s for sure.
    As I said before EU must stay strong and stable, for the good of the members as well as for the good of the candidates therefore EU should decide for the best way even if it means prolonging the membership process.
    New members should not have veto rights for a time defined by major EU countries or they fulfill the criteria again defined by major members. You cannot just accept a member and give them full control over decisions. It should be done according to the EU’s best interest since candidates want membership because EU is governed right and it is the reason they want to join. Keep the club clean people and respect the older members. Remember that EU is the shining beacon of democracy and prosperity and should be preserved at all costs.
    Also please find a way to regulate immigration. This a real problem that is hindering all work towards progress and happiness of the people of EU.
    When it comes to Ukraine, remember these people are fighting and bleeding for a better future which is connected to west so they should be evaluated accordingly and fair.

    • @joschmo4497
      @joschmo4497 Před 10 měsíci

      Turkey will never be in EU, you don't belong.

    • @serbianwarrior385
      @serbianwarrior385 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Idk how to say this but...Turkey aint joining EU ever my man😂

    • @rccasual7525
      @rccasual7525 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@serbianwarrior385 yes we know that. We are finished with this theme around 2000s. It was related to the video.

    • @fatihersayn7877
      @fatihersayn7877 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@rccasual7525
      Dont be a simp...

    • @fatihersayn7877
      @fatihersayn7877 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@serbianwarrior385
      Most of us do not care. And also Serbia is not in a very different position.

  • @swazzercool9060
    @swazzercool9060 Před 10 měsíci +14

    Then you’ll loose those countries to China, or even Russia even. They already lost Turkey basically

    • @ivani3237
      @ivani3237 Před 10 měsíci

      turkey , ha-ha

    • @angelomezzini7849
      @angelomezzini7849 Před 10 měsíci

      Cosa c'entra la Turchia con l'europa.persa la Turchia?? Personalmente non aprirei ad altri paesi dell'est eur.da italiano trovo che certi paesi es.ungheria e Polonia facciano solo i loro interessi e sui migranti ti dicono cavoli vostri

    • @u47mkbg
      @u47mkbg Před 9 měsíci +1

      Turkey is big , Islamic country. Nothing to do with European culture and civilization . Turkey will Never join EU.

  • @swital9508
    @swital9508 Před 10 měsíci +102

    As a Pole I can say that even being liberal and proeu myself, there should be a gate for a block of countries to veto decisions, for example at least 5 countries despite their size, that way the biggest countries would have to agree couse they are able to build these blocks .Strategic decisions like bringing back russia to european politics to prewar extent couldnt be done wiyhout eastern eu feeling secure with it for example.

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +38

      I think the problem lies with just 1 country having that power.

    • @melkor3496
      @melkor3496 Před 10 měsíci +28

      @@EUMadeSimple Yeah when 1 country can dictate what 26 other countries want to do something is majorly wrong I think.

    • @TheAstrobiologistOW
      @TheAstrobiologistOW Před 10 měsíci +16

      I suppose right now all we can do is hope that sooner rather than later there are more Poles like you and less "LGBTQ exclusion zone" people.
      I've heard about your upcoming elections. That's scary.

    • @aaronruss6331
      @aaronruss6331 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@TheAstrobiologistOWwhat do you mean by LGBTQ exclusion zone?

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 Před 10 měsíci +3

      I don't have a problem with veto staying, but it really needs to be based on a percentage of countries and a percentage of the overall EU population.
      It's crazy that we actually still have veto rules where one member can block the rest, and because of that, there's no way the EU should expand until reforms are done, otherwise, more gridlock will happen with one or two members, abusing the veto rule.
      Majority voting needs to be more of a thing, with veto only being used if there is enough support from members to block something.
      I also think reforms in the EU is needed in other areas, I think the European Parliament needs to be given more powers, whiles reforms to the EU Commission is needed, maybe merge the EU Commission and President together and have it directly elected, also, reforms in bringing the EU project closer to the citizens, so they are more aware of what's going on, because for many, the EU can seem distant.

  • @ian2183
    @ian2183 Před 9 měsíci +3

    As a Bulgarian we want to LEAVE this dictator state!

  • @user-pk2ff2cz6l
    @user-pk2ff2cz6l Před 10 měsíci +23

    I am from Macedonia, and we are tired from EU's and our neighbor's games, pressures, hypocrisy and unreasonable conditions. Macedonian public is growing tired of and looks unfavorably towards this kind of behavior. If it was up to me, I'd quit negations and seek an alternative ally.

    • @George-Chris
      @George-Chris Před 10 měsíci

      what ally would be better than EU?

    • @vault13dweller15
      @vault13dweller15 Před 10 měsíci +8

      Yeah, the EU and Bulgaria basically forcing Macedonians to change history books was pretty disgusting. Some things are not worth benefits from joining the EU.

    • @sharknado623
      @sharknado623 Před 10 měsíci +4

      These are the rules and everybody should respect it, so why are you complaining? If you don't have the criteria, you don't enter, simple.

    • @user-pk2ff2cz6l
      @user-pk2ff2cz6l Před 10 měsíci

      @@sharknado623 We don't want to enter any more, simple. EU is not letting anyone in anyway. So between the choice of: changing our constitution and not entering and not changing our constitution and not entering, we choose the latter. Simple! cheerio EU .. We don't need your hypocritical dictatorial system, good riddance.

    • @user-pk2ff2cz6l
      @user-pk2ff2cz6l Před 10 měsíci

      @@vault13dweller15 Exactly. What remains to do is to convince our traitorous government of profiteers.

  • @dirkgonthier101
    @dirkgonthier101 Před 10 měsíci +31

    First of all, we've heard all of these arguments before the former Warsaw-Pact countries entered the EU. It didn't stop any of them. Secondly, they're not a member in the forseeable futur. Some - like Turkey and Serbia - make it even impossible that they ever become a member of the EU. There is also a possible life outside the EU (like Suisse, Norway, Iceland and so on).

    • @bennybenny43
      @bennybenny43 Před 10 měsíci

      At least a '' normal '' comment !
      😊👍

    • @reno.zed1
      @reno.zed1 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@bennybenny43Lol, that's how you define comments that you like? There is an apposite button for that mate.

    • @bennybenny43
      @bennybenny43 Před 9 měsíci

      @@reno.zed1 LOL
      That's how you react when you're in front of an other point of view ?

    • @reno.zed1
      @reno.zed1 Před 9 měsíci

      @@bennybenny43 which point of view?

    • @bennybenny43
      @bennybenny43 Před 9 měsíci

      @@reno.zed1 Scroll it up...

  • @thelazy0ne
    @thelazy0ne Před 10 měsíci +29

    No human rights no membership. Bye bye Turkey ✋😏

    • @honza_88
      @honza_88 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Exactly

    • @ponkacbg1969
      @ponkacbg1969 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ahahahahahahaha you have rights???? show it to me. is the refusal of the vaccine right you are talking about. or you are stoned.

    • @serkantemiz7565
      @serkantemiz7565 Před 10 měsíci +3

      I think you make up excuses

    • @Salsaman34
      @Salsaman34 Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@honza_88And you are from Romania 😂

    • @goncaloaraujo6644
      @goncaloaraujo6644 Před 10 měsíci +1

      M8 Poland is probably more homophobic than Turkey…

  • @andrasadam8256
    @andrasadam8256 Před 10 měsíci +16

    Super looking forward to the new video on multi-tiered EU! Great video by the way, I love how factual it is, and does not get lost in the sometimes overly positive mindset of pro-EU people.

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Glad you enjoyed! And yes.. In a month or so :)

    • @valt3692
      @valt3692 Před 4 měsíci

      @@EUMadeSimpleEvilMadeClear
      There’s absolutely no way we (Humanity) , will let her, Ursula (possibly linked to lord voldirmor or satan herself 🤞🏽)... stay till term end in 2029? Like wtf 🤨 This ends soon..
      It’s time we start calling out this evil for exactly what it is,..., airing our thoughts, wasting the censors time, and playing AI mind games still pack a punch....We are still the masters of manipulation and thought😅
      These puppets character speak and sound like all the other monsters in human history and all openly display a lack of basic human emotion which intuitively sets off our internal alarms ....wake up people 🤦🏽‍♂️🙏🏽

  • @toni-rafa118
    @toni-rafa118 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Ukraine should wait some good decades to join the EU!!!

    • @cinoeye
      @cinoeye Před 10 měsíci +3

      The EU accepted Bul and Rom because of the political reasons while still not accepting Ser and Mne who are now much more ready than Bul, Rom…they can accept Ukraine even though they won’t be ready until 2050 if the war stops today. EU HAS double standards!

    • @nashbridges-cu6dy
      @nashbridges-cu6dy Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@cinoeyewe will get Ukraine into EU from political reasons too we have to invest in Russia or we our economy is done by 2050. But first we have to put someone like Zellensky on throne of Russia.

  • @novvak168
    @novvak168 Před 10 měsíci +33

    Great video. Although I am from a candidate county and although I really want to see my country in the EU, I think you are right. There should be reform before that, even if it leads to larger waiting times. It is in the interest of the EU. It can be made a lot better. Maybe a multi teir EU is the only way to solve it, at first I didn't like the idea, but it just makes a lot of sense and plus I don't see an alternative currently. I'm going to watch that video next.

    • @monzar7268
      @monzar7268 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Which candidate country are you from?

    • @filiplazic9970
      @filiplazic9970 Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@monzar7268Novak is south Slavic so probably Serbia or montenegro

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +7

      he is from Serbia. He frequently comments on my videos :)

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +4

      Thanks Novvak :) I am also undecided whether multi tier is the way forward. But just like you said - not sure how else we can move forward.

  • @simonklein226
    @simonklein226 Před měsícem +1

    We got to change the veto's, thats completely unacceptable at this point

  • @accountforcommenting
    @accountforcommenting Před 10 měsíci +11

    Balkans should be give priority in EU membership

    • @dacian_1346
      @dacian_1346 Před 10 měsíci +4

      True, they’re are small countries with small population and economy, way easier to integrate than Turkey or Ukraine

    • @danielm6319
      @danielm6319 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I think that EU problem is who will contrubute to EU budget (EU funds) if Turkey and Ukraine join, even Balkan states. So if Germany is larger countributor and Poland largest beneficial how many Euros will Ukraine and Turkey received and how many countries need to be contributors to EU? Only Germany and France can not hold much together positive financial balance for too long.
      We need either Norway or Switzerland to join to be financial contibutor or financial balance would be too much pressure for just Germany and France.

    • @WonderBroadcast
      @WonderBroadcast Před 10 měsíci

      @@danielm6319 even italy, which despite the not exactly idyllic economy, has always been a contributing country

    • @dovlaaaable
      @dovlaaaable Před 10 měsíci

      @danielm6318 Balkan states are peanuts money. We are losing population quite fast, and if go into EU it would go even faster. After joining EU all of those states combined will have less than Belgium. And I think Norway is contributing to the EU. Maybe someone can confirm this?

  • @ivanvikalo4995
    @ivanvikalo4995 Před 10 měsíci +123

    I wouldnt want a multi-tiered EU, but unfortunately there is no other realistic choice. That is why I support the idea, and hopefully the more integrated part will have the other members outside of it join, just like with Schengen agreement. Maybe a third solution would be the enhanced cooperation method, but it would risk fracturing the EU more as this method is topic-based. So yes, multi-tiered should be the way to go ahead

    • @gothicgolem2947
      @gothicgolem2947 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Agreed as otherwise there will just never be new members as reform is unlikely to ever happen to the veto system

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier Před 10 měsíci

      I don't think *tiers* alone is the solution.
      I think that regions with tiers within them might be a better solution.
      Different regions in Europe have different concerns and needs.
      Allowing for differences in laws between them while maintaining compatability is better then to try to force the exact same laws on each region.

    • @nevigodstanson7160
      @nevigodstanson7160 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Question is: how are you going to motivate the EU members, to be in those tiers? The only solution that I see: exchanging political influence in return of economical advantages, considerable economical advantages.

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Would be ideal to not have that but we kinda already do with the Euro Zone, and maybe more of that might be needed as the union expands.
      But I think some major reforms are needed to the EU, with veto rules being scrapped or reduced a lot, majority voting being used a lot more, I also think the European Parliament needs to be given more powers and reforms to the EU Commission, maybe merge the Commission and President together and have them directly elected.
      Another major area the EU needs to do a lot better on is connecting with the people, for many, the EU can seem distant, whiles a lot of what's being done at the EU level, a lot of EU citizens not being aware of what's going on, and I think that would do wonders against the Eurosceptic movement around Europe, because they use ignorance as a weapon to push their own agenda and are more than willing to use the EU as a scapegoat to get what they want, so if Europeans were more clued-up on what's going on, that should be harder for them to do that.

    • @CedarHunt
      @CedarHunt Před 10 měsíci +1

      It makes more sense to look at the American Federal model.

  • @tixien
    @tixien Před 10 měsíci +13

    To sum it up, you’d like the EU to listen a bit more to the French 😂 As for this multi tiered EU advocated by France for… ever, you might have noticed it’s there already. Schengen/not Schengen, Eurozone/Not Eurozone, etc. And now an outer circle/tier with the CPE (European Political Community).
    Now you don’t address the main conflict in your own analysis, which results from what’s unsaid: the nature of the EU. Either it’s a union of countries, and then strategic disalignment can exist and vetoes are a valuable safeguard, or it’s a union of citizens and there’s no reason a Malta citizen holds more power than a German one. Reality is it’s both, hence this complicated voting system and a very specific way of negotiating called « package deals ».
    Talking about various voting systems without looking at how it would change the constitutional and political nature of the EU (or, the other way, how a change in the EU’s nature would be needed to make another voting system works) is a bit shallow.
    At the end of the day, institutions are just a way to organise reality, they don’t create it. Power and influence is what really matters. As far as the EU is concerned, the main event for the last two decades was Brexit and how it rebalanced power and influence across the block, not so much reduction of veto rights.

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +2

      Thanks for your comment tixien. I don't necessarily advocate for a multi-speed EU. I am actually undecided. Multi speed opens all kinds of new problems that warrants its own video. That's why I mentioned it.
      And you present a fair point, moving away from Unanimity will change the nature of the EU.. but only to a degree. We already use QMV for most of our policy areas. It's just the 7 areas mentioned in the video where unanimity remains. I will take your constructive criticism on board though and will try to cover it in more detail on my video about multi tier EU coming in a couple of weeks/months.
      Thank you!

    • @tixien
      @tixien Před 10 měsíci

      @@EUMadeSimple Always a pleasure to talk with people who like using their brain😊 (although it’s Sunday, mine won’t push it too hard today😂).
      I’m all for multi tiers, as I like stuff which embrace reality. And it’s here. And it works. It comes with specific difficulties for sure (not the least how it makes it more complicated to citizens) but what does not?
      I agree with you decision making setups have changed, adapted in the past, and vetoes are now of limited scope and use. And that’s precisely my point: it altered the nature of the EU but in an unspoken way. There was such a debate in 2005 but, once passed to voters, the outcome was inconclusive to say the least. Since then, the EU runs on « constructive ambiguity », to reuse T. May’s words. And why not. After all, the EU is first a crisis-solving mechanism, a pragmatic bottom-up construct. But you still need to realign stakeholders on your goals on a regular basis if you want them to support your means and ways.
      Otherwise the gap between expectations and reality just widens, and we know where it ends.
      Have a lovely Sunday 😉

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 10 měsíci

      That’s a very toxic approach, anything France or Germany propose is automatically something bad? And if small countries Veto for their benefit that’s good? Weird analysis.
      We are moving into a multipolar world and we can’t rely on the US and China as much anymore, Europe has to become a player in the big game too and this is only possible if we become more maneuverable and can act faster. Right now we don’t have a chance to be competitive in a world where all the other big players are unified countries and they can play EU countries against each other. There can be things like the membership that stay unanimous but at the very least economic and financial decisions can’t be unanimity vote anymore, it just won’t work.
      The EU is a great concept but if the big countries pay into it billions only for the free market that everyone benefits from and countries that block their changes to force concessions and benefits for themselves, quite frankly it’s debatable how beneficial it still is

    • @tixien
      @tixien Před 10 měsíci

      @@ja_u Seriously, what you understood from my post is Germany and France are bad and vetoes are good? Really? Oh dear.

  • @denisdenisi5323
    @denisdenisi5323 Před 10 měsíci +40

    A larger unified EU means only more power and stability to the continent.

    • @joschmo4497
      @joschmo4497 Před 10 měsíci

      @@elliasp6204 You mean like western Europe importing all of Africa to replace us? No thanks, if western Europe is the model of perfect EU, I would rather by colonized by China or Russia. Dumpster fire, look at France.

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 10 měsíci

      Yes but if a small country with like 2million of 450million ppl can block change for everyone that’s a problem. Just look at what has happened, China abused this when the EU wanted stricter rules for human rights violations and Hungary did it for Russia.. it’s just way too easy for foreign countries to stop EU law by corrupting some small Eastern European already corrupt country

    • @misiek_xp4886
      @misiek_xp4886 Před 9 měsíci

      I don't give a shit about "continent power". Germans won't decide about laws in my country.

  • @adineatha9766
    @adineatha9766 Před 10 měsíci +41

    The EU should definitely take up the rest of Europe.

    • @Pointi69
      @Pointi69 Před 10 měsíci +9

      That is only possible if all members are in peace with each others and build up more thrust.

    • @metodiusm428
      @metodiusm428 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Sadly this won't happen anytime soon

    • @MrGnorts
      @MrGnorts Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@metodiusm428
      What about in 20 years? or 10? 30?

    • @Judge_Magister
      @Judge_Magister Před 10 měsíci

      Why? Just so it looks nice on a map? The EU is a corrupt evil abomination.

    • @Guus-qv2ef
      @Guus-qv2ef Před 10 měsíci

      And not from África?.

  • @nouzgreb
    @nouzgreb Před 9 měsíci +6

    You forgot about Georgia as well. Georgia, although it did not get candidate status, still applied for membership

  • @ramochai
    @ramochai Před 9 měsíci +8

    Well hypothetically speaking, Turkiye's accession to EU (assuming that freedom of movement is granted) will destroy Turkish economy even further as Turkiye's blue collar workforce would instantly abandon Turkiye for wealthier Western nations. Turkiye would then need immigration from poorer non-EU nations which would bring further problems. I think from a Turkish standpoint it's a lot healthier to accept that Turkiye will never be an EU member and it has no reasons to, anyway. Europe's borders are open to well qualified individuals from all over there world and that's good enough.

  • @Jonsson95
    @Jonsson95 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Why is Georgia part of ruzzian in 1st map? Also isnt part of Azerbaijan considered as Europe while none of Armenia is?

  • @stefanilic9310
    @stefanilic9310 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Most recent polls in Serbia show that more than 60 percent of people are for joining the EU as an economic union if Serbia didnt have to give up Kosovo, less than 30 percent people are for joining if Serbia has to recognise Kosovo. Its pretty black and white, every year Serbia fullfills more requirements and EU just adds more. Serbia is the only candidate ever that EU demands them to recognise their teritory as a sovereign. I wouldnt want to join either.

    • @magicki13
      @magicki13 Před 5 dny

      чак и да признамо косово као независно европска криминална унија је очекивала да се остатак србије федерализује односно припреми за уништење ако знаш политику Динкића у време владе коштунице они су наглас причали о томе а пошто нису тада то успели они су прогласили косово независно....еу нас не жели они желе да униште Србе и Србску државу као такву европска унија је наш непријатељ

  • @marcoocram46
    @marcoocram46 Před 10 měsíci +45

    The next country that needs to enter is Montenegro because it has a 100 percent harmonized policy with the EU, is a member of NATO, has a small population and we use the euro as a currency, thereby giving hope to other countries that the effort will pay off 🇲🇪🇪🇺🇲🇪🇪🇺

    • @RaduRadonys
      @RaduRadonys Před 10 měsíci +8

      You use the euro unilaterally though :)) that's pretty fkud up man.... :))

    • @JimmyM1975
      @JimmyM1975 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@RaduRadonys It’s illegal but again it will be useless to change it because they are so close to becoming an EU member now

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Před 10 měsíci

      Montenegro is corrupt, there is no rule of law, its political leaders are mafia bosses, their main income is cigarette smuggling, they are BFFs with Serbia...

    • @thorH.
      @thorH. Před 10 měsíci

      @@RaduRadonysthat is a common practice. It is good for the Euro, because it increases its value. Montenegro has no control over it’s monetary policy however, which is a problem. However using euros does increase stability. The Euros value is higher than the natural value of a montenegran currency tho, which makes exporting more expensive and entices imports.

    • @_utahraptor
      @_utahraptor Před 10 měsíci +4

      They have a bit of an auth government from what I've heard. It could be another Orban

  • @politisk_prins
    @politisk_prins Před 10 měsíci +4

    The entrance of turkey to the EU would be the death of the west. it was fun while it lasted

    • @user-si8cf2we5w
      @user-si8cf2we5w Před 10 měsíci

      turkey might dream to enter EU,but this is just only a dream.turkey will never join EU

    • @BT-ss4fz
      @BT-ss4fz Před 3 měsíci

      Russias entrance to the west 😂 West is already dead.

  • @ametix9855
    @ametix9855 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Awesome video ! Not only is everything super well explained, it also highlights solutions and hypotheses for the future, instead of pointing out only the quirks in the system.

  • @nostro1940
    @nostro1940 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Turkey already showed how disgusting it can be by vetoing sweden and Finland nato accession.
    Imagine the problem if they joined the EU

  • @albevanhanoy
    @albevanhanoy Před 10 měsíci +23

    The Veto system was a huge mistake and should have never been implemented in the first place.

    • @Rey.Nasido
      @Rey.Nasido Před 10 měsíci +1

      Your position sounds viable, unless of course, you are in a minority group.
      Europe has a very looooong history of shitting on minorities.
      The veto needs to stay.
      It FORCES compromise and moderation.

    • @mattia8327
      @mattia8327 Před 10 měsíci +9

      When the EU was only Germany, france, Italy, Netherlands, Belgium and Luxemburg it made sense.
      But now it is just a mess.

    • @albevanhanoy
      @albevanhanoy Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@mattia8327 The issue is, they should have seen this coming. They knew the EU would expand eventually. But they didn't have the firesight to anticipate..

    • @Rey.Nasido
      @Rey.Nasido Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@mattia8327
      The EU was never just 6 countries.
      Besides, you left out the UK.
      What we know of today as the EU evolved over time from pond scum or primordial ooze or something like that.
      Roflmfao!

  • @dantetre
    @dantetre Před 10 měsíci +16

    Ireland used veto power more than Hungary or Poland in its lifespan in EU...

    • @dprout3392
      @dprout3392 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Could you please describe the nature of those Irish oppositions.

  • @excentrik5725
    @excentrik5725 Před 9 měsíci +2

    And how did EU accept Romania and Bulgaria in 2007,hmm? Did these 2 countries fulfill all requirements before they joined? Maybe we should talk about that.

  • @eurotop40
    @eurotop40 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Especially not Serbia for this generation, since it is Russia's trojan horse.

  • @lucasamorelliribeirokornex60
    @lucasamorelliribeirokornex60 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Great video and explanation, and looking forward to the next. :)

  • @delly41
    @delly41 Před 10 měsíci +4

    anyone i know in Türkiye dont care becoming eu membership really

  • @danielm6319
    @danielm6319 Před 10 měsíci +6

    EU financial balance would be unstable if we accept Türkiye and/or Ukrayina. So I think we need to make those nations rich in EU first to be contributors (like Spain) or we need either Norge or Switz to join.

    • @Guus-qv2ef
      @Guus-qv2ef Před 10 měsíci

      Spain is not a taxpayer?.

    • @danielm6319
      @danielm6319 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Guus-qv2ef They are taxpayers but is EU beneficiaries with -1,946 million euros whike Germany is +25,572 million euroy as contributor. Source: Statista

    • @hansmuster4538
      @hansmuster4538 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Take it from a swiss citizen: the swiss people doesn't want to join the EU!
      Because we love our freedom to have a vote on every law if we want or we can change the constitution at any time
      And because we are one of the weahltiest countries in the World we would have to pay massive amounts to the eu. That is not really appeasing to us.
      We love our freedom, our neutrality and the direct democracy
      Thats why switzerland will never vote yes to join the EU

    • @vikey1764
      @vikey1764 Před 4 měsíci

      Ukraine after the war is won, reformed and a member of EU will very soon become a major donor for the EU. Not to mention EU on its further integration quest will benefit from having Ukrainian military capacities/experience on its side

  • @kosatochca
    @kosatochca Před 10 měsíci +9

    EU isn’t US or Brazil - It’s a framework for international relations, cooperation and reconciliation, not just another empire trying to hold all the provinces together. EU isn’t a geopolitical unit in a common sense, it’s different

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 10 měsíci

      Then we have different visions, which is why a multi tiered system makes sense. Germany and France for example would be open to some kind of EU defense policy, similar economic and financial policy and in general more integration. If some small Eastern European country doesn’t want that then that’s sad but we can’t let that stop us from evolving. We are moving into a multipolar world, US and China want to strengthen their grip on the world and we will just be their toy if we don’t integrate and operate more as one. It’s gonna be a problem working against 2 unified countries if we are like we are right now. Already today the EU is losing competitiveness because US and China play us against each other (also Russia with the help of Hungary but Russia isn’t a world power by any means)
      It just won’t work if we don’t change. France will leave, Germany will leave. There needs to be change to survive the next decades

    • @arskaaro
      @arskaaro Před 10 měsíci

      @@ja_u Of course germany and france are open for that because they want to take the girp of the whole continent without caring a shit about other countires sovereignty. These smaller countries joined a political and economic union not a federation!

  • @AstroTheFungus
    @AstroTheFungus Před 10 měsíci +16

    Very interesting to see more opinion videos, just like your audience requested.
    Either way, when reforming, the EU needs to strike a balance between giving member states the power (Intergovernmentalism) regardless of size, and giving the citizens the power (supranationalism) regardless of national origin. The current system is, in principle, the best approach: the two bodies that accept the law which everyone abides by technically have equal power; the Parliament representing the citizens and the Council representatives the member states. They both have an equal say in regards to law, and in my opinion, this is how it should be. It is important to understand that both of these approaches have some merit and advantages, therefore we ought to reach a compromise to best make use of our system; the EU is very close to achieving this.
    If the voting method can be reformed and the veto removed, I believe we would reach a nearly perfect legislative system.
    Great and informative video, as usual!

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks Astro. I agree that a lot of the EU structure makes sense. Just some things we need to think about before enlarging .

  • @samueltrusik3251
    @samueltrusik3251 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Especially when there are more important things to do, like equalise economies and lower gas emissions.

  • @fortunatelymichael6836
    @fortunatelymichael6836 Před 10 měsíci +8

    At 0:31 you display Georgia and Belarus as part of Russia while displaying Kazakhstan and Armenia as separate.
    Honestly kinda disrespectful towards those two, especially Georgia.

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Well about Georgia that could be true, but belarus is pretty much russian at this point

    • @HorrorSFManiac
      @HorrorSFManiac Před 10 měsíci

      @@mikel9138 It is true about Georgia, it wants nothing to do with Russia.

    • @o_s-24
      @o_s-24 Před 9 měsíci

      Mistake I guess. Mistakes happen. The question is why Armenia and Georgia are on the map and not Azerbaijan, also a mistake?

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 9 měsíci

      @@o_s-24 They aren't Europeans

    • @o_s-24
      @o_s-24 Před 9 měsíci

      @@mikel9138 and Turks are?

  • @petrskupa6292
    @petrskupa6292 Před 10 měsíci +37

    As Czech I empathize with almost everything said here (Orban, 1 blocking country, need for reform… etc) and generally I am very pro-EU (and wish for some federalism model in the future)…. but … but … I am almost equally torn with the proposed multi-tiered integration, especially because it is driven by France and Germany - those two countries, which vision did fail in our opinion in the East so spectacularly regarding necessity of strategic safety (Energy, Russia) while constantly reminded in the past.
    If those countries made a block in fully reformed EU, they would be far from supermajority…
    However, considering some potential core of multitiered integration - those can easily dominate anything and henceforth determine future trends by themselves.
    That sounds scary over-here.
    Macron is disappointed from decrease of enthusiasm in Eastern part of EU for further EU integration, and while I sympathize with him (I wish further integration) I recognize that his own country and his own policies are partly the reason.
    The disillusion from handling Russia for the last 15 years (and not listening about the influence of their hybrid influence for example in the migration crisis in 2015, where they managed to stoke panic in our populace to high degree only to be extremely chastised by both Germany and France - created partly heart ache in the hearts of liberals over here … and so on and so on, EU commissioners almost never ever travel to our country and never talk to our media or blogs, while they do to francophone ones … so it helps too to feel integration is just Franco-centric or Germano-centric prospect)
    If integration - than let’s overcome Hungary somehow and let’s do that together. Not with Germany/France deciding through some small core.

    • @AKAHEIZER
      @AKAHEIZER Před 10 měsíci +3

      As a German I tend to conclude from your comment, that maybe the EU itself is failing to deliver anything of importance for our societies.
      It will be more beneficial when we all go back to our nation-states, and in Germany we could finally return to our beloved DM.
      It makes sense to me, in the absence of any meaningful positive people to exchange, nonexistent political cooperation, lacking solidarity and the perceived failure to come to any political consensus, the EU may be abolished all together.

    • @ponkacbg1969
      @ponkacbg1969 Před 10 měsíci +1

      exactly...it is the new Franco-German Reich. that's why UK left.

    • @petrskupa6292
      @petrskupa6292 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@ponkacbg1969 But leaving doesn’t help. European free market is by definition managed and created by EU. The only viable way is to be in and to break DE/F tandem.
      Britain was tired of being alone in opposition … only to leave, when finally stopped to be alone (I watched intently - at that time Brits completely stopped trying only thinking of way out, instead of allying against Fr/De - never tried that)
      Fr/De in EU in which both UK and Central/Eastern Europe exist at the same time - represent just 140 million out of 450 million people. Believe it or not this simple math really represents their ability to dominate (or not) in practice.
      Now we back almost at square one. Even now, even without UK De/Fr don’t have absolute dominance … it’s just really harder without You.

    • @petrskupa6292
      @petrskupa6292 Před 10 měsíci

      @@AKAHEIZER every time You need cross it by train@@AKAHEIZER - there was so many stupid breaks on everything)
      We need logical and functional EU, not lack of it.@@AKAHEIZER
      As a German do You remember Manfred Weber?
      @@AKAHEIZER (Schulz - kinda lessened this stupid collab)@@AKAHEIZERManfred Weber would have been rather great leader of European commission. He had backing of all Central/ Eastern EU countries… as well as majority of votes in European Parliament
      He was very probable to be next leader, first competent after long time, first with deep democratic legitimacy…. only for Macron to throw tantrum over him, having tantrum in the inter-governmental setting, where he got the ear of Germany government, who almost apologetically submitted U von der Leyen instead of Weber as palatable German replacement - who cared about everyone else except France?
      That is what I talk about.

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@ponkacbg1969that’s just bullshit. Not only is the Veto something the big powers can’t ever use because “they are reasonable and can take a hit to their big economies”
      And I know it’s gonna be the old “Germany benefits from the open market” but so does literally everyone else in the open market, and on top of that Germany is a net payer of over 21billion euro while countries like Poland receive over 12billion euro, are integrated into the EU market and as if that’s not enough, like to Veto on bullshit to get their way.
      Quite honestly, if we keep going like this with Veto powers on everything we will all go down together. Or France and Germany will eventually leave and that’s gonna be bad for everyone else too. We really need to get away from this “EU is just for France and Germany to benefit” idea because that shit is not true

  • @Stoic03
    @Stoic03 Před 8 měsíci +5

    As albanian i dont trust anymore EU. I must say thank you for all to Italy 🇮🇹 our best friends ❤

  • @CIutchX
    @CIutchX Před 10 měsíci +6

    At this point I expect Hungary vetoing care packages meant for itself.

  • @Kapanol97
    @Kapanol97 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Same with Schengen, Austria holding Romania and Bulgaria with only one no vote meanwhile all others voted yes

  • @dtf.eternal5857
    @dtf.eternal5857 Před 10 měsíci +2

    2:46 the guys eyes, when the EU don't wanna put up with your goulash anymore 😂😂😂

  • @2SSSR2
    @2SSSR2 Před 10 měsíci +7

    While I agree that EU needs to reform (not only in VETO area but to equalize the GDP and salaries between east and west EU countries, it is not ok for French or German to have 4500 EUR while Pole or Romanian have 1200 or less) but they should not wait too long becasue in those potential member states the popular support for joining is becoming less and less the times go forward. Most Turks do not support EU membership today, Serbia is on the fence and Bosnia will most likely follow. Albania or Macedonia will also lose support the more the time goes forward.

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Firstly Its good that the Turks arent in, about the western balkans its 50-50 and secondly it isnt our job to make them join.

    • @tomislav5689
      @tomislav5689 Před 10 měsíci +2

      No one can just "equalize" the GDP of a country, it comes naturally with economic and industrial progress, and that just takes time.

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@tomislav5689 Not exactly, with the right enforcement and incentive, a country can easily equalize.

    • @tomislav5689
      @tomislav5689 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@mikel9138 and that is what EU is constantly doing after a less developed country joins, and even before it joins.

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@tomislav5689 Wouldn't it make more sense to help the already less developed eu countries first rather than add even worse countries in it?

  • @dusenkarotte007
    @dusenkarotte007 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I like your new longer Vids. Way better than before

  • @chomikxd3
    @chomikxd3 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Turkey shouldn't be in the EU at all. Period.

  • @lycho4519
    @lycho4519 Před 10 měsíci

    Great video, probably the most useful in this chanel.

  • @mrgrumpy888
    @mrgrumpy888 Před 10 měsíci +6

    We should also never accept multiple states all at once. Have a period of e.g. 5 years between admissions. The "big bang" expansion of 2004 was a mistake in retrospect as we've accepted multiple states that simply were not ready to be accepted.

    • @joschmo4497
      @joschmo4497 Před 10 měsíci +5

      LOL first of all you accepted Bulgaria which didn't even have a referendum to join EU, which is a requirement. So EU clearly doesn't care too much about democracy as long as their interests are being pushed.

    • @dovlaaaable
      @dovlaaaable Před 10 měsíci

      Western Balkans combined have 15mil people. After joining EU it would be even less. Just strip them of their veto power or give a periond of let us say 5years and if they behave good give rights like other countries if not new 5y of waiting

    • @joschmo4497
      @joschmo4497 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@dovlaaaable Oh no, most of them shouldn't get in. Macedonia should, Montenegro maybe, then Albania.
      Serbia definitely not, and Bosnia just applied.

  • @MartinNew14
    @MartinNew14 Před 10 měsíci +14

    In my opinion, the EU should focus on fixing its economy by being innovators and independent on china and the usa instead of adding new poor country, cuz they will not able to help economically in the future.

    • @FredSveru.
      @FredSveru. Před 10 měsíci +2

      true

    • @melkor3496
      @melkor3496 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I agree that the EU should focus more on economy and especially on industrializing but I also think certain members once ready should be let in like Ukraine.

    • @marcussver620
      @marcussver620 Před 10 měsíci +1

      agree

    • @novvak168
      @novvak168 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I think you can do both. New member countries are not harming the EU economy, it's the opposite. Eastern Europen members added in 2004 and later are the fastest growing part of the continent. Plus they offer natural resources, investment opportunities and expertise. These nations are well educated and have a lot of room to grow. I still agree with the point of the video. I just wanted to show that on the economic part new members don't harm existing ones.

  • @flexparachute
    @flexparachute Před 10 měsíci +7

    No, if the Netherlands can keep Romania and Bulgaria outside Schenghen even if we worked so hard to get in, the system should stay the same and should not be changed because one country doesn't vote like the "great powers" would want. Democracy is agreement of all parties involved, not just the majority. Brexit is a good example - the majority agreed on 1 thing and the UK is not handling the situation well.
    What France and Germany are proposing is the ex USSR model if you ask me - everybody voted for what Moscow wanted and there was not debate if 1 party disagreed. This will make the voting process into a performance art. We didn't break our economies while making the political changes just to get the same short stick. And I come from Bulgaria so I have seen these processes with my own eyes.

    • @flexparachute
      @flexparachute Před 10 měsíci

      @@oldebarneveldt5326 that's just not true but you missed the point completely.

    • @flexparachute
      @flexparachute Před 10 měsíci

      @@oldebarneveldt5326 You didn't understand my comment now, did you?

    • @flexparachute
      @flexparachute Před 10 měsíci

      @@oldebarneveldt5326 i'm not your teacher. you have eyes and brain. you just need to think. i'm done explaining stuff to people who aren't ready and are just searching for the next debate to get some "i'm right points" which don't even matter.

    • @oldebarneveldt5326
      @oldebarneveldt5326 Před 10 měsíci

      @@flexparachute I have seen your nonsense. What I don't have though, is your arrogance!

  • @a.rodimtsev9446
    @a.rodimtsev9446 Před 10 měsíci +3

    The original six plus Austria should leave the EU as a block, and start again as a confederation just like Switzerland.

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 10 měsíci

      It’s very sad but honestly this is the only way. The EU core is still aligned and would work with veto powers but the expansion has let in countries that just abuse the system for their own gain.
      In the end it’s also a multi tiered system you propose, we don’t need to leave the EU, just approve further integration in a 1st tier EU

    • @misiek_xp4886
      @misiek_xp4886 Před 9 měsíci

      Austria stays with us.

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 9 měsíci

      @@misiek_xp4886 who is us blud

    • @marcioborgesreis9066
      @marcioborgesreis9066 Před 9 měsíci

      And what would be the benefit for those ,six plus Austria ,by doing that ?

    • @ja_u
      @ja_u Před 9 měsíci

      @@marcioborgesreis9066 You can bypass the idiotic unanimity this way. We want to put sanctions on someone? Ok let us (Europe core) do it. We want to strengthen ties economically? Perfect lets do it. We want to make certain legislation? Sweet, we can do that.
      Currently, we are all being held captive by the unanimity that countries like Poland or Hungary use to extort concessions. Its a bullshit system and its not future proof.
      Right now we have to be very careful which new countries we let into the EU because they will have a veto to completely stop any proposal because of unanimity voting. And especially small countries have always and will in the future abuse this system to strong arm their own agenda. And not only that, we have seen with countries like Hungary, Cyprus and Greece, that they are also ready to sell this veto to countries like Russia and China. If China doesnt like something they force Cyprus to veto it, their investments in the "new silk road" give them power to shut down harbors if you dont act like they want.
      With a core EU we could just say "ok if you Malta, Cyprus or Hungary dont want to do something then dont do it, we will tho"

  • @matthewlynch9331
    @matthewlynch9331 Před 10 měsíci +3

    In your guys opinon if in a crazy hypothetical Norway, Iceland and Switzerland voted to join would you let them in now or wait?

    • @josef_belz519
      @josef_belz519 Před 10 měsíci +5

      To be fair, those are already inside in every sense except technicality. The only thing keeping them from officially becoming members is they deciding they actually want to be there.

    • @marcioborgesreis9066
      @marcioborgesreis9066 Před 9 měsíci

      Those are already in .

  • @zeuslozano
    @zeuslozano Před 10 měsíci +3

    I agree with you, the European Union must reform its laws and that laws can be approved by a simple majority... The United Kingdom was always a burden for the European Union because deep down they did not feel part of the union and many projects were delayed due to this

  • @antoninodarioconti6347
    @antoninodarioconti6347 Před 9 měsíci +1

    We do not want other countries behaving like Hungary and Poland, on the same side to destroy the concept of Rule of Law in Europe. No, firstly we deal with this filo-Russian mentality and then we can accept new members.

  • @petricorsworld
    @petricorsworld Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think the European Union needs to recruit new members urgently. Many Americans think that because of the aggressive behavior of Russia and China, the European Union will live its past history again. damn It seems like a second Marshal aid is on the way.

    • @user-si8cf2we5w
      @user-si8cf2we5w Před 9 měsíci +2

      i think america should focus on her problems and leave EU to make her own decisions for her own good.

  • @TheMRJGREATJ
    @TheMRJGREATJ Před 10 měsíci +3

    Macedonia should be the only one to join, others are quite a bit difficult with malign influences, Montenegro has large serbian/russian influence, albania is tangled in the kosovo situation, Serbia obviously large russian influence and kosovo, bosnia tangled with serbia, Turkey is too big and culturally different.

  • @zaros1781
    @zaros1781 Před 10 měsíci +12

    While you address some fair points, I really disagree with the point of now allowing new members, because:
    a) Promises. Back in 2003, the Western Balkans were promised a future in the EU;
    b) Ignoring the made efforts by the countries. While some have been backsliding (Serbia, Turkey), others have been through great efforts to become new members. North Macedonia literally changed its name to do so;
    c) Maintaining hope and influence in the countries concerned. The disinterested attitude of the EU pre-2022 Ukraine invasion seriously affected the attitudes of the people of the Western Balkans towards the EU. It can make them more disinterested in politics, create more opportunities for corruption and 'strong men', and leave them more open to influence of China and Russia. You can see that in some countries, democratic values have been decreasing in part because of this;
    d) The time it'll take to join the EU. Out of all applicants, only Montenegro is likely to join in the short term (if their politicians finally sort their own mess out). The others would be Albania and North Macedonia, and they will still take years to join. Integration into full EU membership can still take place while the EU works on reforming;
    e) But countering the previous point, reform in the EU can easily take a decade if not more. What you are basically saying is telling a whole extra generation that they have no chance of joining even if they qualify for membership;
    f) The short-term effect of countries joining. Really, what's the overal impact of a country like Montenegro joining the EU? We're talking about a country that would have the second-smallest population of the block (just above Malta) and mainly consists out of mountains. It's agriculture and economy are small, so it'll make little dent in the EU budgets. The only significant impact would be the veto right. But considering the strong EU attitude of the population and willingness to organise demonstrations for it, it is highly unlikely it'll change into the next Hungary.
    The 'concerning' countries (those who's membership would make the biggest impact on the EU as a whole) would really be Ukraine and Turkey. At present, Turkey is unlikely to ever join - currently nobody's taking their application seriously, even the EU itself: it isn't even considered to be part of the current enlargement program - so the most likely country that would make the biggest impact would be Ukraine. Concerning attitude it will be absolutely no issue, as its European ambitions is a reason why it is currently at war (and we all massively owe them for their efforts to keep the Russians at bay and reinvigorating the EU). The biggest impact would be on the budget, which is going to be massive. But Ukraine isn't going to be a member this year, next year or the year after. It is more likely not going to be before 2030, so there's time left for reform;
    g) From a selfish point of view: some of these countries have highly valuable resources, especially Ukraine (in natural gas, lithium, titanium and other resources, contribution in energy production). A country like Ukraine will be a massive contributor to the strategic independence of the EU;
    h) At present, the current applicants face restrains including on economic level. Keeping them away from EU membership will limiting their economic development, which will put them in a position of remaining poorer countries;
    i) For all of these countries, there simply isn't a plan b: none have other means of becoming the next Switzerland. They literally have no other option than to be part of the EU;
    j) In line with the previous points: most of these countries are depopulating because of limited economic opportunities, corruption and no visible viable future within their respective countries. Blocking any possible EU membership will accelerate this process;
    k) One important reason why the EU has changed its attitude towards expansion is the realisation that the current status quo is not a guarantee of maintaining peace on the continent. The best guarantees are a) EU membership (peace and prosperity between members) and b) NATO membership (the shield against outside adversaries). You can bet that because of our support for Ukraine, Russia will try to pull every possible lever to create as many crises as possible for us. For example, I for one wouldn't be surprised if there's a strong hand of Russia in the recent Serbia-Kosovo tensions, or the general destabilisation in Bosnia & Herzegovina;
    l) There is no equal level between the EU states and those wishing to join. The perfect example is North Macedonia, which has been going through a lot by being pushed around by Greece, France/Netherlands and Bulgaria. It would take away their ability of becoming on equal footing with other European nations.
    The most realistic way of maintaining peace and prosperity on the continent is to allow any country that wishes to join the EU to provide them this opportunity, provided they meet the conditions. Just because a country wants to it doesn't mean we should lower the standards, we do indeed need to take into consideration about how it went wrong with Hungary. We do indeed need reforms, such as the abolishment of the veto. But we cannot just decline other countries because of faults in the system. We cannot leave them hang out to dry, to treat them as second-class Europeans because we've made a mess and need to change things. And it isn't just for the future of these countries, it is also in our interest to have these countries be part of the EU. We therefore should not and cannot decline countries who have met the conditions of becoming new member states. It should be the other way around: with new members around the block, we need to work fast on preparing the EU for the membership of these countries.

    • @danielm6319
      @danielm6319 Před 10 měsíci

      Actually as Croatian I would say Macedonia are ready to join as well as Montenegro.

    • @danielm6319
      @danielm6319 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Also Serbia could be problematic as well as Türkiye and Ukrayina. Macedonia also has small evonomy like Montenegro.

    • @neonex2046
      @neonex2046 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@danielm6319 Also, if Serbia joined right now, it would be 10 times worse than Hungary with their pro Russian and anti EU politics. Meanwhile, Serbia already pretty much gave up the idea of ever joining the union, and it's been strengthening its ties with Russia and China for years. If it remains outside the EU, the influence of those powers will only become stronger at the doorstep of Europe. So, there are no easy solutions and some kind of reform is really needed.

    • @GioBall
      @GioBall Před 9 měsíci

      @@danielm6319 North Macedonia has problems with all its neighbours. How is ready to join exactly?

    • @danielm6319
      @danielm6319 Před 9 měsíci

      @@GioBall North Macedonia don't make any problems. Actually, with Serbia they sign "Open Balkan Inituative", with Greeks problem is solved by changing name, with Bulgarians they currently need to agree something about history and Albania don't make any problem since they [North Macedonia] join NATO.

  • @mirceazambitchi1151
    @mirceazambitchi1151 Před 6 měsíci

    I agree as person from Moldova, if we do the needed job best case scenario, we will be only ready to join closer to 2030

  • @katynewt
    @katynewt Před 9 měsíci

    Yeah, get rid of the veto. Such a self-defeating idea...

  • @rain-cy6ve
    @rain-cy6ve Před 10 měsíci +11

    The multi tier EU could be a Pandora s box we do not want to open. I dont agree with it at all

    • @EUMadeSimple
      @EUMadeSimple  Před 10 měsíci +3

      It definitely has a lot of drawbacks. Going to cover it going forward :)

  • @Iamlateforcurfew
    @Iamlateforcurfew Před 10 měsíci +13

    The way I see it is that we need this multi-tier EU, with one side aiming to become a European federation. We wouldn’t be able to thrive otherwise between the US, Russian and Chinese interests. The remaining countries can decide if they want to give up more independece and join the federation or not. Ofc, the electoral system of the federation would need to be designed to force politicians to represent all people within.

  • @curtiswfranks
    @curtiswfranks Před 10 měsíci

    Your proposed solution was the one which came to my mind too. It is not a new idea, so I might be influenced by prior knowledge, but it really does seem to be the only option.

    • @markodimic5457
      @markodimic5457 Před 9 měsíci

      Eastern and Western Roman Empire? It didn't end well...
      Historia magistra vitae est.

    • @curtiswfranks
      @curtiswfranks Před 9 měsíci

      Maybe for the Western Empire. The Eastern Empire functioned just fine for another thousand years. But I think that the situations are not comparable anyway.

  • @couragescomputer2995
    @couragescomputer2995 Před 10 měsíci +1

    i don't fully agree but i've always wanted to hear the reasoning behind this opinion

  • @Alex-ll3ig
    @Alex-ll3ig Před 10 měsíci +5

    Dear people who are in EU, what are your thoughts on Serbia as a country, and our people?
    Would you like to see Serbia or any other country in the EU?

    • @TheSwedishHistorian
      @TheSwedishHistorian Před 10 měsíci +4

      like serbia and serbiand and their christian roots. wish they have peace

    • @George-Chris
      @George-Chris Před 10 měsíci +6

      As a Romanian, I don't know that much about Serbia, but I want it and its' people inside of EU and NATO. I would hope that 1. Kosovo gets split half for Albania and half for Serbia, or fully reintegrated in Serbia, 2. You give minority rights to the Romanians in the historical Banat region on the border with Romania instead of considering the Romanians there as an ethnicity different from Romanians, and minority rights to Albanians or any other minority as well so there's no more conflict and we live in peace and harmony.

    • @vault13dweller15
      @vault13dweller15 Před 10 měsíci +6

      As a Slovenian I would love Serbia in the EU. But the truth is Serbia currently really is not in a good state enough to be let into the EU. You still have huge problems with nationalism and your current government is very authoritarian. If we would let Serbia in now it would only become Hungary 2.0.

    • @shaclo1512
      @shaclo1512 Před 10 měsíci +1

      serbs are very angry people, similar to russians. I don't think that they belong to the EU.

    • @HorrorSFManiac
      @HorrorSFManiac Před 10 měsíci +4

      As a Romanian, I think Serbs are very divided, some pro-EU and European values, some very nationalist and pro-Russia. I don't know if the pro-Russian movement is blown out of proportion on the news or if that's truly the reality on the ground. I would love for it to be exaggerated and for Serbia to join as soon as possible, but if it's not exaggerated the EU can't afford another Hungary.

  • @s.p9638
    @s.p9638 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Well it is not entirely related to the subject of the video but I think membership of Turkey will truly test our acceptance of secularism as a core european value not only in Turkey but also in all of Europe. The arguments about turkish identity not being european enough always turns out to be religiously motivated int he end on both sides (in turkey and europe) and it is a big shame for all europeans including turks. There has to be a future for all of us where we liberate ourselves from the influence of some idiotic ancient moral codes and get together around modern, logical and benevolent shared core values. Just be open-minded and you will be surprised for sure. Those who most fervently oppose turkey and other so called muslim majority countries share the same mentality with radical islamists in those countries you see...

    • @dprout3392
      @dprout3392 Před 10 měsíci +3

      I would agree with you except that latest elections in Turkey do confirm that this country is not yet ready for democracy as we perceive it in the West.

    • @Murmilone
      @Murmilone Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@dprout3392 the democracy as you perceive in the west assumes that the Turks should elect a candidate approved by Brussels and Washington?

    • @dprout3392
      @dprout3392 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Murmilone No at all. It requires that all religions be tolerated but excluded from the constitution. State and religions be separated.

    • @GioBall
      @GioBall Před 9 měsíci

      The acceptance of secularism in Europe is tested every day on the streets of our cities where people all over the world and followers of every religeon live. We dont have to accept 90 m people that 99% of them follow 1 religeon to test it

    • @gokcancakmak3739
      @gokcancakmak3739 Před 3 měsíci

      @@dprout3392i am confused. How do you think Turkiye is ruled? Secularism is already in Turkish constitution and religion is separated from the government for hundred years now. Do you think Turkiye is governed like Iran or gulf countries?

  • @zavaraninoveuhorky
    @zavaraninoveuhorky Před 9 měsíci

    I remember there was a topic of "EU Core" in like 2016-ish. I remember in slovakia the goverment expressed very strong desire to be part of it.

  • @sunjarty8521
    @sunjarty8521 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I believe that EU should decrease amount of their members. Not in the litteral sense of kicking out existing members, but through integration of current members into a federations with united representation in EU. Of course considering current geopolitical state of EU it might be a bit impossible, but at least I could humour myself believing that maybe someday such prospects would be possible.

  • @Rey.Nasido
    @Rey.Nasido Před 10 měsíci +5

    Neither the EU nor the candidate countrys are ready.
    The EU will be lucky to continue to exist considering the challenges to EU authority being brought by existing EU member states.
    The EU must either pursue greater fiscal, legal, and military unity or face collapse.

  • @gyorgymuller5060
    @gyorgymuller5060 Před 10 měsíci +6

    The core issue in case of Hungary is one of culture. While the hungarian population at the collapse of the iron curtain had a genuine desire to adopt western institutions, and western way of life, in 2022 the majority views these with slight detest at best.
    Economically it is vital for the country to be part of the EU, but otherwise the people want to do nothing with it. Since there is no procedure to kick out a country against it's will, this is kind of an impossible situation, casue Hungary will indeed block any reforms which in the long run may force it to change it's current radical right-wing authoritarian system.
    The only viable way for EU leaders may be to pick on the country until it leaves voluntarily. The anti-eu propaganda of the government over the years had already planted some kind of HUXIT sentiment in the fanatic government supporter strata of the population.

  • @HorrorSFManiac
    @HorrorSFManiac Před 10 měsíci +2

    Honestly, part of me thinks Hungary shouldn't be allowed to vote anymore, temporarily, not permanently, they should be given a second chance at some point. Multi-tiered EU sounds fine in theory, but in your graphics it appears to be based on geography which I think would divide us further, I don't think all countries in the less integration graphic want less integration and not being allowed to integrate further would make people more Eurosceptic and probably push them to form closer ties with the US and support them not the EU when there's a conflict of interest / opinion / international policy. More or less integration should not be based on geographical location, especially if we're still talking about Turkey joining the EU.

  • @InfernoVor
    @InfernoVor Před 7 měsíci

    Supermajority seems like the way to go personally... It protects smaller members while also keeping it reasonable since imho most things should still be passed on unanimity, but one or two countries fucking with the system is fucking insane. The fact Hungary could just fuck all progress because they got punished is insane.

  • @MAZEA413
    @MAZEA413 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Switzerland needs to be forced to pay more contributions and taxes to the EU budget of the European Union because it benefits from the EU single market of the European Union and the Schengen area. Switzerland benefits the most from it and pays the least

  • @billocoy9811
    @billocoy9811 Před 10 měsíci +15

    With such small populations, there would be no negative impact to the EU if Macedonia and Montenegro were allowed to enter the Union tomorrow.

    • @George-Chris
      @George-Chris Před 10 měsíci +5

      As a Romanian, fully agreed. Would love to have both these countries in the EU, plus our fellow kin the Moldovans!

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 10 měsíci

      Veto Vote

    • @markocroatia7630
      @markocroatia7630 Před 10 měsíci +1

      And area (km2) also. 🇲🇰 ~ 25 000 and 🇲🇪 ~ 13 000 km2

  • @Instruisto31
    @Instruisto31 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Multi Speed EU is the only practical solution till the old national chains were broken.

  • @mateabonyi299
    @mateabonyi299 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I don’t like a multi tiered Eu, it seems like a bad idea.

  • @gamps2771
    @gamps2771 Před 10 měsíci +7

    As a Serb i hope that we wont join the EU due to many different reasons.

    • @MAZEA413
      @MAZEA413 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Serbia Wejdzie do uni europejskiej,europejskiego obszaru gospodarczego EOG EEA, strefy Schengen Area w 2025 roku 😊

    • @Guus-qv2ef
      @Guus-qv2ef Před 10 měsíci

      Discuss it Witherspoon family and friends.

    • @arvidgreat
      @arvidgreat Před 10 měsíci

      As an EU citizen we don't want you.

    • @Murmilone
      @Murmilone Před 10 měsíci

      @@arvidgreat saying "we" as a single person is a symptom of a mental disease.

    • @jati3149
      @jati3149 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@MAZEA413Serbia will not join because it is thinking about BRICS. Serbia just takes money from the EU and deceives the EU that it wants to enter. Russia is closer to Serbia than the EU

  •  Před 10 měsíci +4

    It shouldn't matter for size of population of smaller or bigger countries if it is measured in percentage.
    For veto to work shouldn't work on one country but rather at a minimum of 5 or so. This way they still can veto but can't force their way.

    • @MrGnorts
      @MrGnorts Před 10 měsíci

      this ^^^^^^

    • @geenkaas6380
      @geenkaas6380 Před 10 měsíci +1

      The problem with that is that you then can pass a law that we take all the money from Sweden for example and that Sweden cant veto that

    •  Před 10 měsíci

      @@geenkaas6380 well it could also be set to maximum percentage and the veto still stands. The decision is more democratic this way.
      Where this whole EU thing doesn't work well is because we're united yet divided. More laws need to be equalised , same civil laws, criminal laws across EU same taxes, signs, licence plates, a base language for general communication in schools mandatory (no need to get rid of native language. english is already a good established kind of) ect.
      This is the only way for being a "union". EU citizens need a feel of future direction. This is missing and is the reason for so many issues. The leaders aren't giving good directions in this regard. Imho.
      If any country wants to join they have to accept the direction that is agreed upon.

  • @maspalfiker
    @maspalfiker Před 9 měsíci +1

    I am sorry to say but the EU should only invite those which really wish to join. Bosnia&Herzegovina is very tricky since forever in history, not only EU but also Russia and Turkey wish to be politicaly present in BiH so it would be a very hard to have a stable political cooperation with BiH. Serbia is so much divided on the question of joining the EU, some wish to be "free" (as they believe to join is actualy to become ocupied), some wish to be almost something as a member of the Russian federation, and the least of people actualy wish to join the EU. Turkey if it joined would become a "Hungarian problem" forever. A much better EU policy would be to keep tight(er) ecnomical cooperation with those countries and maybe making it easier for their people to travel to EU, something like for the EU countries outside Shengen, but it should also finaly let Romania and Bulgaria into Schengen or those countries might replace the feeling of being 2nd class EU citizens with the feelings of maybe being better off with some other "alliances" (history should be a teacher for the EU bureaucrats!)

  • @Robbiewa-bg4lu
    @Robbiewa-bg4lu Před 28 dny

    As someone British who voted for Brexit,and No I don’t regret it either the countries that want to join the EU will be net recievers,not net contributors.
    And I think with the withdrawal of the U.K. my feeling is that the EU cannot afford new members.
    And note that no country has joined to replace the U.K.

  • @DanielSann
    @DanielSann Před 10 měsíci +5

    Agreed

  • @danglez
    @danglez Před 10 měsíci +7

    very good video, definitely some challenges in the EU’s future for a geopolitical world in need for a stronger Europe and its values

  • @ShadowSkryba
    @ShadowSkryba Před 10 měsíci +2

    I vehemently oppose QMV, that leads to ignoring nearly half the continent's interests.
    I still feel like the Supermajority would end possibly up excluding too many countries anyway.
    This only got so bad due to Hungary and the war. We just need high standards for admissions and mechanisms for punishing breaking them. And we basically do, the funding would be cut wouldn't it be for the dire situation in the East.
    The rotating presidency is a big issue indeed, what are the potential solutions except reducing the presidency to the ineffective 4 months?
    The Parliament seems like a relatively easy fix, add more and rebalance.
    The Commission is bloated anyway. Perhaps just make permament duos working on one matter each?
    The budget definetly could use some restructuring, especially in farming, but free trade and growth kinda offset the contributions.

  • @damarmar1001
    @damarmar1001 Před 10 měsíci +1

    The Eu should throw out Hungary and let no other country in that doesn't meet the necessary level of democracy and stability. No poor countries that need their own people to build up their country. But those candidate countries should be helped with fighting corruption and education. Turkey is aa Asian country and should never be let in. The small part in Europe says nothing and their treatment of minorities is just another reason to keep them out. Not saying we shouldn't work with Turkey where we can but the people already here aren't really intergrating and a danger to our democracy. Not all of course but too many.

  • @realnilik619
    @realnilik619 Před 10 měsíci +4

    As a Serb i would like to see my country in the EU 🇷🇸🇪🇺

    • @MAZEA413
      @MAZEA413 Před 10 měsíci +2

      2025 Years 😊

    • @sheriffsis1146
      @sheriffsis1146 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Ne, netreba to nama, da se prodama kao kyrva, više smisla bi imalo, da pokušamo dostići neki trgovni dogovor ili da postanemo samo član EFTA-e.

    • @mihajloboric7889
      @mihajloboric7889 Před 9 měsíci

      Šta ćemo tamo gde nas ucenjuju?

  • @1LPMx1
    @1LPMx1 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I'm not a political scientist but I could imagine a sort of "emergency veto". In such a system any member state can veto any decision but if they do they won't be able to do so again for a certain time period.This way members will really only use their veto if they consider something to be extremely serious for them.

    • @radicalazuw9964
      @radicalazuw9964 Před 10 měsíci +4

      What if a proposal that is very similar is proposed shortly after again?

    • @Newbyte
      @Newbyte Před 10 měsíci +1

      I don't think using time as a limit is a good idea. This way you benefit from proposing multiple controversial proposals within a short timeframe as a means to work around the system.

    • @1LPMx1
      @1LPMx1 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Newbyte I ment for this system to be implemented in addition to qualified majority voting. The emergency veto is intended for the rare situatuation that a member state says "I cannot let this happen under any circumstances!" Most of the time, majority voting is how decisions are made and countries will hold on to their emergency veto just in case they really need it. If you propose multiple controversial topics at once like you suggested, then any proposal that isn't vetoed will still have to go through the regular process of qualified majority voting.

  • @NoName-hg6cc
    @NoName-hg6cc Před 9 měsíci +1

    We should become a Federation then accept new members
    Perhaps Ukraine should be the only exception

  • @dhfconst
    @dhfconst Před 10 měsíci

    100% on point!

  • @BlazeMaster
    @BlazeMaster Před 9 měsíci +4

    Eu should accept new members but on their own terms and not be forced through political circumstances like they are in the case of Ukraine because the EU wants to protect Ukraine from Russia ignoring the risks of accepting into the union a corrupt totalitarian state and the possibility of negative repercussions of giving the Ukrainian oligarchs an ability to openly meddle with European policies.

  • @Robbiewa-bg4lu
    @Robbiewa-bg4lu Před měsícem

    The more I see this,the more I think my country,the U.K. was right to leave the EU.

  • @Cesspit7
    @Cesspit7 Před 10 měsíci +1

    we shouldn't accept old members either...

  • @romainch505
    @romainch505 Před 10 měsíci +3

    If the EU wants to stay stuck, then it is probably time to stop it 😢

    • @metodiusm428
      @metodiusm428 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Exactly, the EU needs also to stabilize and develop poorer countries like Poland, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria before taking in other members

  • @AchyutChaudhary
    @AchyutChaudhary Před 10 měsíci +8

    0:20 on top of that, 🇬🇪Georgia & 🇽🇰Kosovo have also applied to join & awaiting Candidate status!

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Kosovo is a barely recognized country, they aint joining in the near future

  • @user-km1jq9db8b
    @user-km1jq9db8b Před 9 měsíci

    We do not want to join the European Union. Thank you. Greetings from Serbia!

  • @keepcalm2626
    @keepcalm2626 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Turkey did with NATO exactly what Hungary did with EU, pretty much blackmail...

  • @kikiwora
    @kikiwora Před 10 měsíci +10

    As a Ukrainian, I can say that Ukraine does not really have the liberty to wait till the EU solves its internal problems with its inability to make decisions.
    Supermajority and qualified majority voting is the only way to move forward for the EU. Veto mechanism is obsolete already. And it will be even more obsolete when more countries will join.
    However, I do no think that supermajority or qualified majority voting shall depend on the population numbers of each country.
    If we are concerned about smaller countries being weaker represented than bigger countries when making important decisions, we simply have to not take population into account.
    For supermajorioty voting: one country - one vote. No veto. It will solve everything.
    For less important decisions a qualified majority voting with taking population into account is better.
    Thus we have proper representation without decision blocking.

    • @George-Chris
      @George-Chris Před 10 měsíci +15

      As a Romanian, I say first solve your coruption (besides the war with Russia), and the minority rights. I highly dislike how you're treating the Romanians in Ukraine, after you've been gifted our lands (Budjak and N. Bukovina) by USSR/Russia after World War 2. I'd happily accept Ukraine in EU/NATO after 1. the war with Russia is finished, 2. You gave more rights to the minorities (Hungarian, Romanian, Polish, Russian) and 3. Create autonomous regions just like Switzerland is, so that all minorities can live in peace and have their heritage, language, culture etc preserved!

    • @firstnamelastname7941
      @firstnamelastname7941 Před 10 měsíci +13

      Why doesn’t Romania offer the Hungarian minority in Romania Switzerland style autonomy? I think it is very hypocritical of you to suggest that Ukraine must be held to a standard that Romania does not keep.
      Let’s also not pretend that Romania is not a corrupt country.

    • @George-Chris
      @George-Chris Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@firstnamelastname7941 Romania's corruption is way smaller than that in Ukraine. It's not even close. Furthermore, Romania is offering a lot of rights to the Hungarian minority. Studying in native language from kindergarten up to college. Unlike in Ukraine which closed a lot of schools for minorities. And who says I wouldn't agree to a Swiss type of autonomy for Hungarians in Romania?

    • @dacian_1346
      @dacian_1346 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Even if the EU solves all the internal problems tomorrow it will still take Ukraine DECADES to join, you are nowhere near ready to join and be accepted into the EU, your whole country needs to change drastically

    • @dacian_1346
      @dacian_1346 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@firstnamelastname7941I’m from Romania and yes, a federation state would make 100% sense for Romania just like Germany.