Europe’s reactive and protective muddling through: the results of a summit in fire-fighting mode

Oct 19, 2015
Janis A. Emmanouilidis
Deputy Chief Executive and Director of Studies
The EU’s October summit was dominated by one issue; the migration and refugee crisis, with EU leaders intent on putting on a public display of unity after weeks of bitter arguments, and concentrating on fire-fighting and immediate measures to tackle the most pressing reasons for, and impacts of, the crisis. Longer-term measures to address some of the root causes of increased migratory flows, support for the integration of newly arrived refugees or the introduction of new channels of legal migration, were not discussed. The Summit also spent little time on two issues that had originally been expected to be a key part of the agenda: the forthcoming British referendum on EU membership, where irritation with the slow pace of talks and British vagueness about its demands were in evidence; and the governance of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), where EU leaders missed another opportunity for a thorough debate about future perspectives on the basis of the ‘Five Presidents’ Report’.

Read the full paper here

Related publications

By the same authors

To the Point
Mar 25, 2026
by Almut Möller, Fabian Zuleeg, Janis A. Emmanouilidis
MESSAGE
Dec 18, 2025
by Fabian Zuleeg, Janis A. Emmanouilidis, Elizabeth Kuiper, Emma Woodford, Maral Bedrossian, Almut Möller, Bianca Baumler, Corina Stratulat, Georg Riekeles
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. More information is available in our Privacy Policy