PM Orbán: Europe needs strategy not tactical responses

The European Union needs a strategy for dealing with emerging problems, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said at an online international conference on Wednesday.

Orbán told the Uncensored Europe conference that in times of crisis the EU had reacted to unfolding events tactically rather than following a strategic approach. Proactive and strategic thinking is needed, he said, adding that the challenges included strengthening the bloc’s economic performance and competitiveness.

The prime minister said that hopefully the European People’s Party would drive the development and implementation of a new European strategy.

Orbán said

Europe was “in retreat”, arguing that the continent was underperforming in terms of its reproduction rate, defence spending and its weight in the global economy.

Furthermore, he said, the balance of power in Europe had shifted, pointing out that 30 years ago the French-German axis had been the dominant force, while Britain had represented the Europe of nations. This provided a balance that remained intact even when the central European countries joined the EU, he said.

But today France is in serious debt, the United Kingdom has quit the bloc and Germany is again the strong member state everyone looks to for solutions “whenever things get tough”, Orbán said.

“This is the new reality of power in Europe.”

The prime minister said Europe had experienced three major crises in the recent period, which he said were the financial crisis, the migration crisis and now the coronavirus crisis. All three of them had been managed differently on the two sides of the continent, he added.

During the financial crisis, western Europe aimed to save the welfare state while central Europe, especially Hungary, “responded with a labour-based society”, he said. When it came to the migration crisis, the West saw immigration as the solution to its demographic woes whereas central Europeans did not want to take on the problems of other civilisations, Orbán explained.

Another problem, he said, was that while Europe was incapable of resolving its own issues, it wanted to solve the problems of the world and tell its international partners how to run their countries.

“This practice has to end and we must go back to the approach of Europe concentrating primarily on solving its own internal problems before giving advice to others,” Orbán said.

The prime minister said

the ongoing debates within Europe involved the clash of two conflicting visions.

One, he said, was “the liberal, leftist, progressive, semi-Marxist approach that supports multiculturalism and migration.” This vision, he added, was…

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