Daniela Apaydin (Neubacher)

Research Associate, Freelance Journalist, Wien

3 Abos und 1 Abonnent
Artikel

When the Green Deal Is a No Deal

© M-SUR / Shutterstock

Let's start with a tricky question. Is the European Union's Green New Deal a path toward the world's first climate-neutral continent by 2050, as EU-Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen sees it? Or do you agree with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's view of the deal as a "utopian fantasy"? Whatever interpretation you are leaning toward, the question itself reveals the current polarization across Europe.


As in many other situations when an urgent EU response is needed, like when human rights violations are happening right on the bloc's borders and shores, the roots of this political polarization are an intended result of populist anti-EU rhetoric spearheaded by the likes of Orban and other illiberal leaders. Nevertheless, the supposed dividing line between "old" and "new" EU member states on the perception of the green transformation is a by-product of failing Europeanization, something Orban and his consorts cannot be blamed for exclusively.


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