
Ursula von der Leyen wants to centralize European power and money in Brussels.
After surviving a motion of censure in the European Parliament, Commissioner Ursula von der Leyen has noticeably lost a lot of political pull – but not her will to make the EU bigger and costlier to the struggling nations of the old continent.
When Crisis Strikes Again: Europe’s Emergency Plan EXPLAINED by Von der Leyen!
President Ursula von der Leyen unveils how the EU is preparing for the unknown — with a powerful new crisis instrument in the next long-term budget. From pandemics to wars, she shares how future… pic.twitter.com/8YXlVfhaLY
— Camus (@newstart_2024) July 19, 2025
As she rolls out her budget proposal for 2028-2034, she immediately faces harsh opposition from her native country, Germany.
Politico reported:
“’A comprehensive increase in the EU budget is unacceptable at a time when all member states are making considerable efforts to consolidate their national budgets’, said Stefan Kornelius, spokesperson for Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government in Berlin late Wednesday [16]. ‘We will therefore not be able to accept the Commission’s proposal’.”
Many other leaders have also rejected the budget proposal.
The EU calls it their budget proposal, but it’s really a Ukrainian bailout. Up to 25% of the money goes straight to Kyiv, another 10% to pay off old debts. What’s left? Less than ever. I will never support this.
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— Orbán Viktor (@PM_ViktorOrban) July 18, 2025
The central budget of €1.816 trillion would be a major increase in the EU’s spending power, and comes with three new tax proposals on electric waste, tobacco products and ‘high-turnover companies’.
“‘We also do not support the additional taxation of companies proposed by the EU Commission’, [German spokesman] Kornelius said in Berlin. ‘We must maintain the Commission’s reform approach and the budget’s focus on new priorities. This course is the right one to make Europe strong for the future’, he added.”

Chancellor Merz has long argued that EU spending has to be made efficient, rather than increased.
“’We [must] reorganize the priorities in the European budget’, the conservative leader said late last month. ‘Additional tasks cannot always be linked to additional expenditure… and that is the difficult task we now face’.”
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The post EUROPEAN TURMOIL: Weakened EU Commissioner Ursula von Der Leyen Tries to Negotiate €1.8 Trillion Budget, Gets Panned by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.