Rome: European Union (EU) leaders gathering in Rome on Saturday sought to reinforce the unity of the remaining member states just four days before Britain officially sends notice it’s leaving.
UK Prime Minister Theresa May’s absence from the celebratory summit, marking 60 years since the Treaty of Rome created the bedrock for the EU, highlights the division and sense of pessimism that’s gripping the 28-nation club. The 27 leaders who did show up published a declaration that stopped short of being a radical blueprint for the future.
“Europe as a political entity will either be united, or will not be at all.” EU President Donald Tusk told the leaders in the frescoed hall on Capitol Hill where the original treaty was signed. “Only a united Europe can be a sovereign Europe.”
As they acknowledged the challenges, EU leaders see some indications for hope. There’s little sign that Brexit has triggered a domino effect across Europe, the nationalist Geert Wilders failed to convert an early poll lead into victory in this month’s Dutch elections and pro-EU candidates remain ahead of rivals for the upcoming votes in France and Germany.
Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni, whose country was one of the six founding members of the bloc, recalled at the ceremony that Europe had been “reduced to rubble” after World War II.
‘Too slow’
“It was a journey of conquest, a journey of hopes that have been fulfilled and of hopes that have yet to be fulfilled,” Gentiloni said. But in recent years, “Europe has been too slow to act on immigration, growth and jobs,” he said. To relaunch the EU, “we must first of all win back the trust of citizens.”
There’s little agreement about how the EU should evolve when the UK ceases to be a member in two years’ time. And even Saturday’s declaration nearly ran afoul of the Greek and Polish governments, which criticized the absence of commitments to social protection and European unity.
Both countries said on Friday that they would back the two-page statement, which marks a departure from previous EU strategy by emphasizing the possibility for countries working together at different paces and intensity, rather than by moving forward as one.
“The European Union is facing unprecedented challenges, both global and domestic: regional conflicts, terrorism, growing migratory pressures, protectionism and social and economic inequalities,” the leaders will say, according to a draft of their statement obtained by Bloomberg. “We are determined to make the EU stronger and more resilient, through even greater unity.”
Optimism, dynamism
On Rome’s Capitol hill, the leaders sought to recapture at least some of the spirit of optimism and dynamism that gave birth to the European Economic Community in 1957. They signed Saturday’s statement with the same pen that was used for signing the treaty 60 years ago.
“There are signatures that last,” European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker said to applause.
It was not the most auspicious of beginnings. According to a BBC news report, a printing hitch meant that the delegates 60 years ago signed a virtually blank document.
Around and away from the opulent venue, more than 5,000 police, including anti-terrorism units and snipers, were deployed to enforce a ban on trucks and guard the routes of six separate demonstrations. Authorities feared the gatherings could turn violent with possible infiltration by anarchists and other groups. Bloomberg