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Good morning from Strasbourg !

The day is finally upon us: The European Parliament will cast their ballots for the new Commission, and the vote is expected to pass despite whispers of dissent from some groups, including President Ursula von der Leyen's own ranks.

In this context, the leader of the European People's Party (EPP), Manfred Weber, praised his own efforts to create an "enlarged majority" that could span both wings of the European Parliament and include the right-wing European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR). 

However, while approval by the European Parliament is certain, the new college of commissioners will be expected to hit the ground running when they take up their positions on 1 December, with a raft of burning issues landing on their desks.

The first ‘hot potato’ will be the Mercosur free-trade agreement with South American countries, which, if signed on 6 December in Montevideo, Uruguay, will end some a 25-years of negotiations and drama.

But as the Mercosur negotiations enter the home straight, its detractors, led by France, are doing everything they can to derail them. Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk took sides yesterday in opposing it. 

All eyes are now on Italy, whose government’s unclear position could give France its blocking minority if swayed.

A mission for France’s Michel Barnier, who chose Rome for his first official visit abroad, on 5 December, on the eve of the Mercosur summit.

Apart from Mercosur, within its first 100 days, the Commission is expected to deal with a new Clean Industrial Deal, a review of the bloc’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), defence priorities, the combustion engine ban, migration, and Trump’s impending return to the White House.

EU Parliament’s most burning vote of the year

After weeks of political manoeuvring and backroom deals, MEPs are set to vote today (27 November) on Von der Leyen's next College of Commissioners. In this episode, host Giada Santana and politics reporters Nicoletta Ionta and Magnus Lund Nielsen talk numbers, alliances and behind-the-scenes buzz from Strasbourg's corridors. Listen here.
Bubbling in Brussels
Click on the picture to read the story |  [European Parliament]

Outgoing European Commissioner for Economy Paolo Gentiloni offered criticism of the EU’s new fiscal framework on Tuesday, arguing that he bears no responsibility for the “rigid” provisions that limit member states’ ability to accrue public debt. Thomas Moller-Nielsen has the story.

Meanwhile, Trump’s threat to impose additional tariffs on goods from Mexico, Canada and China should be a "wake-up call" for Europe, Siegfried Russwurm, head of German industry group BDI, said on Tuesday, warning Europe could be hit next.

If implemented, Trump’s tariff policy could also escalate trade tensions and trigger more WTO disputes, which would be difficult to resolve due to the paralysis of the Appellate Body, Sofia Sanchez Manzanaro writes

On the ‘wolf front’, while NGOs claim that the decision to lower the protection of wolves is unlawful and led the EU Ombudsman to open an investigation, experts have been called to oppose the proposal by 30 November.

Internationally, G7 foreign ministers unanimously backed an immediate ceasefire between Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah in Italy on Tuesday but failed to discuss an agenda item on the ICC arrest warrants recently issued against Israeli and Hamas leaders, Alessia Peretti and Simone Cantarini report.

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Western Europe
Click on the picture to read the story |  [Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu via Getty Images]

PARIS | WARSAW

The Polish government and the French National Assembly have passed resolutions opposing the EU's trade deal with Mercosur, as farmers from both nations have voiced their opposition, which they say will lead to unfair competition for European agriculture. Read more.

BERLIN

Habeck admits coalition failure in key German industries lagging. Germany's key industries are falling behind, and the coalition government is partly to blame, Vice Chancellor and Economics Minister Robert Habeck admitted at his ministry's industry conference in Berlin on Tuesday. Read more.

‘Undemocratic’ snap elections have Germany’s small EU delegations fear for their future. Smaller German parties in the European Parliament fear the shortened registration deadlines for Germany's early elections and a new electoral threshold in 2029 EU ballots will threaten their future electoral prospects in Berlin and Brussels. Read more.

Southern Europe

ROME

G7 states back Middle East ceasefire, omit debate on ICC arrest warrants. G7 foreign ministers unanimously backed an immediate ceasefire between Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah in Italy on Tuesday but failed to discuss an agenda item on ICC arrest warrants recently issued against Israeli and Hamas leaders. Read more.

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MADRID

European Commission approves Spain's new fiscal plan. The European Commission on Tuesday approved the fiscal plan submitted by Spain in mid-October to clean up the country's public accounts over the next seven years and comply with the deficit and debt limits set by EU rules. Read more.

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LISBON

European Commission approves Portugal’s 2025-2028 budget plan. The European Commission announced on Tuesday that Portugal's medium-term budgetary plan, which sets targets for public spending between 2025 and 2028, aligns with the EU's new fiscal rules and allows for a "sound budgetary situation" over the period. Read more.

Nordics
Click on the picture to read the story |  [Shutterstock]

STOCKHOLM

Prime ministers from the Baltic Sea region will meet in Stockholm on Wednesday and Thursday for a summit on security in the region, which has been in turmoil since the cutting of strategic undersea cables last week. Read more.

Eastern Europe

WARSAW | KYIV

Poland, Ukraine edge closer towards exhumations in WWII row. Polish and Ukrainian foreign ministers on  (26 November) hailed progress in resolving a historical dispute over the WWII Volyn killings, adding they were working towards exhuming the victims. Read more.

The Balkans
Click on the picture to read the story |  [EPA-EFE/ROBERT GHEMENT]

BUCHAREST

A member of Romania's coalition government threw its weight behind the centrist candidate in a presidential election run-off late on Monday, as the NATO member braces for a ballot that may propel an anti-NATO candidate to its highest office. Read more.

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SOFIA

Bulgaria on verge of holding eighth election in just four years. Bulgaria is headed for an eighth general election in just four years as the country continues to grapple with a severe political crisis, with Boyko Borissov (EPP), leader of the largest party GERB, announcing on Tuesday that he did not want to become prime minister and "take care of this broken country". Read more.

Agenda
  • EU: Commission President Ursula von der Leyen participates in Parliament’s plenary debate on the new College of Commissioners and its program;
  • Parliament President Roberta Metsola, Commission President Ursula von der Leyen meet; Give joint press conference;
  • Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson gives keynote address at Conference on Drug-Related Violence hosted by EU Drugs agency;
  • Equality Commissioner Helena Dalli makes Commission statement on recent legislation targeting LGBTQI persons;

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[Edited by Charles Szumski, Daniel Eck, Alice Taylor-Braçe]

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