EU inches toward ‘membership-lite’ plan for candidate countries – POLITICO

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Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia have all applied to join the EU and have been waiting for years while the terms are discussed. The idea of giving these countries pre-accession benefits is seen as a way to ensure they don’t become disillusioned. According to two diplomats with knowledge of the talks who were granted anonymity to speak freely, leaders on Friday also agreed that the process of joining the bloc needs to become much faster.

European Council President António Costa was the first to publicly support discussion of the Franco-German plan. Following Friday’s talks, he told reporters that reform is on the table, suggesting “some kind of new omnibus on enlargement in order to move rapidly to conclude this merit-based process.”

“It looks positive,” said a senior EU official working on the issue. “We now need to see what specifically it could entail and see what others are saying and build consensus.”

Mixed bag

Montenegro, the host of Friday’s summit, is keen to avoid being on the list of countries that partial benefits are being considered for. Prime Minister Milojko Spajić said the country had “fulfilled all our obligations” to join the EU, and “will place ourselves in a position where we can enjoy all the rights and assume all the obligations” of full membership.

Some of those further behind in the process are keen to enjoy economic benefits as soon as possible. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said in January that a phased approach to integration was a “good idea,” and that he was under no illusion that the EU’s founding members “are the adults in the family who make the important decisions.”

However, some of the others are worried the move could create second-class countries that have to take orders from Brussels without proper representation.