
EU Countries Call for Reduction in ‘Solidarity Obligations’
Several member states oppose a plan for countries facing the most migration pressure to resettle at least 30,000 people a year starting in 2026.

Several member states oppose a plan for countries facing the most migration pressure to resettle at least 30,000 people a year starting in 2026.

The EU’s main response appears to be focused on redistributing those arriving rather than on stopping the increasingly overwhelming influx of boats.

“We will not be complicit in robberies, machete fights, or rapes,” VOX president Abascal warned.

Instead of trying to abolish ‘pull factors,’ the Spanish government is distributing the migrants throughout the country.

After criticizing the Dutch migrant redistribution bill, van der Plas said BBB would vote for it—on the condition there was no coercion involved.

Warsaw is putting its foot down. “We will not pay for the mistakes of European multicultural policy. We know how to distinguish solidarity from coercion and dangerous ideological projects,” Polish PM Mateusz Morawiecki said.

“There are more battles to come,” conservative MEP Charlie Weimers noted, observing that the decision would prevent effective border control and enshrine migrant quotas in the new Asylum and Immigration Pact.

Italy favors external border solutions over redistribution schemes, said PM Giorgia Meloni after the EU summit.