CEE lobbying power stronger after EP elections, says Hungarian FM

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Central and eastern Europe’s lobbying power has visibly grown after the European parliamentary elections in May, although “tough debates” are to be expected in the ensuing round of post-election bargaining, the foreign minister said on Friday.

Talking to journalists on the sidelines of the Globsec conference on security policy in Bratislava, Péter Szijjártó noted that the Hungarian and Polish ruling parties had been “awarded the largest domestic support” within the bloc, suggesting that central Europeans “are committed to a strong EU but want a union based on strong member states” and not the “united states of Europe promoted by the mainstream”.

A robust economic performance is also at the root of growing regional influence, Szijjártó said.

“We make reasonable decisions, lower taxes and put the security of our own citizens first”, he said.

The success of the region’s economic policies can be measured by the increasing interest in central and eastern Europe on the part of the world’s fastest growing economies in the Far East, Szijjártó said. South Korean car manufacturers, for example, have brought investments worth some 500 billion forints (EUR 1.5bn) to the country, creating over 3,200 jobs in high value-added positions in R and D, he said.

Three of the five Far Eastern companies producing e-cars in Europe chose Hungary, he said.

The Hungarian government contributes to that trend thanks to low corporate taxes, lower wage costs and research funding, he added.

On Friday, the second day of the Globsec conference, Szijjártó took part in a panel discussion on the political balance of forces after the EP elections, along with Czech Foreign Minister Tomas Petricek and George Ciamba, the Romanian minister for European affairs.

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