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BackEU Leaders Face Mounting Criticism Over Slow Decision-Making as Geopolitical Crises Mount
EU Leaders Face Mounting Criticism Over Slow Decision-Making as Geopolitical Crises Mount
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Politico EU4/23/2026Politics6 min read

EU Leaders Face Mounting Criticism Over Slow Decision-Making as Geopolitical Crises Mount

Former NATO chief and EU officials call for fundamental reform of consensus-based European Council as bloc struggles to respond to rapid-fire global emergencies

Quick Look

  • The European Union faces mounting criticism over its slow decision-making architecture as leaders and former officials call for fundamental reform of the European Council.
  • Former NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen warned that the EU's consensus-based system was not designed for permanent crisis mode, while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen specifically criticized the unanimity requirement for foreign policy decisions.
  • The bloc has repeatedly failed to make unified calls on critical issues including Ukraine funding, Russia sanctions, and responses to Middle East tensions.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The EU was founded after World War II specifically for economic integration, with security matters outsourced to the US through NATO. The European Council was designed as a consensus-based body for long-term strategic decisions, not rapid crisis response. This architecture is now being tested by multiple simultaneous geopolitical crises.

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When the EU was formed in the shadow of World War II, it was built for economic integration, not hard power — its security outsourced to the U.S., and its politics and institutions set up for consensus. But the world that birthed the bloc is no more. And in Brussels and beyond, aggravation is growing at the speed and urgency — or lack thereof — with which its 27 leaders, collectively known as the European Council, confront challenges and make decisions, especially on security and foreign policy. "Europe today is in permanent crisis mode and its decision-making architecture was simply not designed for it," former Danish Prime Minister and NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told POLITICO. "You cannot wait for the Council to agree a statement while the world is burning." The EU has failed repeatedly in recent months to make unified calls on issues of seismic geopolitical importance — from unblocking a €90 billion tranche of funds for Ukraine, to imposing sanctions on Russia and violent West Bank settlers, to responding cohesively to the war in Iran. At the most recent EU leaders' summit in March, leaders spent hours squabbling about the finer details of the bloc's ETS carbon permit scheme even as Tehran struck Europe's energy supplies in the Middle East. "To say ETS is the biggest issue when big gas fields are burning is a bit weird," an exasperated EU official, granted anonymity like others in this article to discuss the sensitive diplomacy they were involved in, told POLITICO. A large share of the agendas of the October, December and March summits were dedicated to unfinished business from previous meetings, revisiting issues that were never resolved: from defense readiness to financing Kyiv and plans to fix the EU's economy. The idea that Europe is too slow to make decisions has almost become a cliché. Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten used his first trip to Brussels in the role last month to urge the EU to get a move on. "We cannot explain to our constituents that Europe is sometimes way too slow in reacting on great issues that affect us all," he said. At the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, French President Emmanuel Macron, sporting sunglasses, declared that the EU "sometimes is too slow, for sure, and needs to be reformed, for sure." And last week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen criticized the EU's need for unanimity to take decisions on international affairs, saying it had created "systemic blockages" and calling for an end to the national veto, specifically on foreign policy. Rasmussen argued the EU needed to move away from late-night talking shops and accelerate its ability to respond to security threats "with fast-moving structures that this era demands." Don\u00a0t blame Europe Of course, the nature of the EU, its whole raison d\u2019être even, is consensus-based decision-making among its member countries. Under its ungainly structure, all 27 European leaders gather periodically to discuss the bloc\u2019s priorities, set the political direction and, after hours of negotiating, wrangling and compromise, agree on collective statements. Much of what gets decided is pre-negotiated by national diplomats in formats such as Coreper, the committee of EU ambassadors. "Could it be more efficient?" an EU official mused to POLITICO. "Probably. I do understand the criticism." "There are some issues that can be a little bit difficult to tackle at the European Council level," the official added. "Where there is a huge focus right now is how to change those policy agreements into concrete action, because there is so much pressure on Europe right now." That said, the Council is "by far the best forum" to tackle the most pressing issues of the day, the official insisted. A second EU official agreed. "It\u2019s a democratic institution, it gathers all the heads of state, it is the right place to discuss these kinds of issues," the official said, arguing there was no real alternative to the mandate and legitimacy of the Council. It\u2019s "not entirely fair to evaluate" the Council by its response to crises alone because it was set up to decide the EU\u2019s "long-term" political goals, said Steven Van Hecke, professor in European Politics at KU Leuven Public Governance Institute. But it has been "acting like a supreme executive" when it needs to, including during the financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic. The body certainly has its defenders, including former Belgian Prime Minister and United Nations Development Programme chief Alexander De Croo. "The European construction sometimes takes time to come to decisions," he told POLITICO. "But I\u2019ve been part of moments where they were very decisive." De Croo, who sat at the Council table from 2020 to 2025, also pointed to the EU\u2019s response to the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, which included a massive recovery fund and vaccine cooperation. "The speed of decision of execution was actually quite high. And the effectiveness of the response from the European level was high," he said. "So I don\u2019t think it\u2019s a structural issue." In a world rocked by decisions taken by U.S. President Donald Trump on foreign policy and tariffs, Europe\u2019s more ponderous ways are also to its credit, he argued. "For me, one of the main learnings of what is happening now is that \u2026 it\u2019s sometimes not bad to consult with your partners and to think ahead of what is happening," he said. "You can\u2019t really blame European countries for being thoughtful and being prudent in what is the right response." Macron made a similar point in his Davos speech, saying Europe had proven "predictable" and "loyal" to its partners. A new world Yet even if the EU is predictable, the world increasingly is not. In the last decade the international order has tilted sharply on its axis, old alliances have shattered and crises have multiplied. Europe\u2019s old ways of taking decisions simply don\u2019t cut it, Rasmussen said. "When I attended the European Council between 2001 and 2009, the world was a fundamentally different place," he said. "Russia was still a G8 partner. America was an unambiguous ally. We had our share of crises, but also the space to deliberate. That world no longer exists." Rasmussen called for the EU to "fundamentally reinvent its security frameworks." Some of the ideas that have been floated, along with doing away with the veto for foreign policy matters, include creating a European Security Council, a high-level body with a mandate to make defense decisions for the continent, and reinforcing the powers of the European Commission. "Of course, if you say, well, we need to reform the EU to make it faster, then the question is OK, but how?" said Gilles Pittoors, a political science lecturer at KU Leuven. "You could, for example, introduce QMV (Qualified Majority Voting) in the European Council on these foreign policy issues. But that raises a hell of a democratic issue," he said. Creating new bodies would solve nothing, he argued. "I think the best way forward here, if you\u2019re really serious about reforming the EU to make it more agile, to make it respond more quickly, is to basically strengthen the powers of the Commission." Yet that too faces skepticism from member countries wary of giving the EU executive too much power, he acknowledged. When leaders gather for a summit this week, there will be one notable absence: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who after suffering a crushing defeat in an election this month said he would not attend. Without the chronic consensus-blocker in the room, one official said, the Council could overcome its divisions and reach compromises faster. But time is of the essence. The meeting is once again set to be hijacked by war and geopolitics, with the U.S. blockading the Strait of Hormuz after Washington\u2019s negotiations with Tehran fell through, and no end to the global energy shock in sight. At least one headache should finally be alleviated: Ukraine is set to finally get its €90 billion loan from the EU, four months after the bloc\u2019s leaders first agreed on it at a summit in December.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • EU will likely move toward Qualified Majority Voting for some foreign policy decisions

    Likely · Within months

  • Hungary under new leadership may become more cooperative with EU decisions

    Possible · Within months

  • European Security Council proposal will be debated but not implemented soon

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will the EU actually abolish the unanimity requirement for foreign policy?
  • Can the upcoming summit make faster decisions without Orbán?
  • How will the US blocking of Hormuz affect European energy security?
  • Will member states agree to give the Commission more powers?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Politico EU.

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