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EU Council President Donald Tusk during negotiations yesterday. Geoffroy Van Der Hasselt/AP/Press Association Images

EU suspends negotiations until tomorrow as Europe's leaders fail to agree who should get top jobs

Talks will resume tomorrow to decide who will get the EU’s top jobs.

NEGOTIATIONS TO DECIDE who will get the top jobs in the EU have been suspended until tomorrow morning after European leaders failed to break the deadlock following a long night of debate and discussions. 

A spokesperson for European Council President Donald Tusk confirmed this morning that talks had been suspended, with negotiations set to reconvene tomorrow morning at 11am. 

Talks resumed this morning after an agreement was not reached at yesterday’s emergency summit. 

Speaking following the suspension of negotiations, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel said she “hoped that with good will a compromise will be feasible”.

A press conference by Tusk that was set to take place today was also cancelled.

There was no majority for any candidate at the last meeting on 20 June, and the Council agreed to meet again to resume the discussions.

France’s President Emmanuel Macron and Merkel came to Brussels after developing a plan on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan.

Under the “Sushi deal”, the 28 EU leaders would nominate Dutch social democrat Frans Timmermans as president of the European Commission, rather than his conservative rival German MEP Manfred Weber.

Weber would instead be put forward for election as speaker of the European Parliament, while a liberal candidate would become president of the EU Council of national leaders.

But, when Merkel put this to fellow centre-right leaders in the European People’s Party (EPP), several rebelled, and the main summit was delayed as heads of government shuttled between side meetings until dawn broke.

Belgium Europe Top Jobs German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks with the media as she arrives for the summit. Olivier Matthys / AP/Press Association Images Olivier Matthys / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

The leaders began a working dinner almost three hours late, only for the summit to be suspended an hour later to allow host EU Council president Donald Tusk to consult leaders individually.

Tusk’s office tweeted the summit would resume “once bilaterals completed”, but six hours later they were still underway, with the former Polish premier trying to get conservatives back on board.

Before the summit, but after the leaders from the centre-right group met, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic warned: “There is no support for what circulated in media today.”

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar was also pessimistic. 

“From the EPP point of view, the vast majority of EPP prime ministers don’t believe that we should give up the presidency of the Commission quite so easily without a fight,” he said last night.

He added that as EPP, they had not agreed to the package that was negotiated in Osaka. 

‘Poorly prepared’

A French source told AFP the breakdown in communication between Merkel and her fellow centre-right leaders had not been anticipated.

“This summit was very poorly prepared,” said one European diplomat, annoyed by the lack of consultation before the marathon session.

For a nominee to go forward, he or she must secure the backing of 21 of the 28 EU leaders, representing 65% of the bloc’s population.

Timmermans, the outgoing vice-president of the Commission, spearheaded EU efforts to impose its vision of the rule of law on authoritarian-leaning eastern members and is firmly opposed by Hungary and Poland.

But sources said Merkel and Macron were trying to corral the eastern countries around to his candidacy which, if approved, could face a vote in the European Parliament on Wednesday.

Macron arrived at the summit in an upbeat mood, determined to push on with efforts to agree a power-sharing package, adding that the top jobs should be shared by men and women equally.

The 28 leaders are aiming to agree candidates for president of the European Commission, president of their own Council and a foreign policy chief. 

“The way things are presented, they will not be very simple consultations, to put it mildly,” Merkel, the bloc’s most influential leader, said as she arrived.

Macron, however, reiterated the names of Timmermans, Danish liberal Margrethe Vestager and French conservative Michel Barnier.

He admitted he had been “hostile” to some candidates, implying Weber.

Merkel had discussed a four-person package at Saturday’s G20 summit with Macron and prime ministers Pedro Sanchez of Spain and the Netherlands’ Mark Rutte.

Historical mistake 

As vice-president of the Commission for the past five years, Timmermans has made enemies in the east of the EU.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, in a letter to EPP leader Joseph Daul, said Timmermans would be a “serious or even historical mistake”.

Polish Premier Mateusz Morawiecki said: “Frans Timmermans is a candidate who deeply divides Europe and he certainly doesn’t understand Central Europe.”

Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May is attending her last EU summit. A spokesman said she would play a “constructive role” and would not abstain from any vote.

The EPP came out on top in European parliamentary elections in May, although with a historically low share of the vote and little-known Weber as its lead candidate.

Additional reporting from AFP and Adam Daly

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