europeanwesternbalkans.com<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2026/03/11/cost-of-non-enlargement-would-exceed-that-of-accepting-new-members-to-the-eu/>
Cost of non-enlargement would exceed that of accepting new members to the EU
EWB
5–6 minutes
________________________________

European Parliament's report

11.03.2026.

4 min read

European Parliament Session; Photo: European Union

STRASBOURG – In a report on the EU enlargement strategy, adopted today, members 
of the European Parliament state that the EU enlargement is a strategic 
response to the evolving geopolitical reality and a vital investment in the 
EU’s security and stability. The document, drafted by Petras Auštrevičius, a 
Member of the Renew Europe group at the European Parliament, was adopted with 
385 votes in favour, 147 against and 98 abstentions.

The document calls on EU institutions to maintain the momentum of the process 
and to remove internal obstacles while strictly upholding a predictable and 
merit-based accession procedure.

In addition, Parliament argues the cost of non-enlargement would exceed that of 
new members joining the EU, risking the creation of geopolitical grey zones 
vulnerable to antagonistic foreign influence.

It stresses that enlargement is “a win-win” for both current and future member 
states. It also highlights the political urgency for the EU to demonstrate 
commitment to the process, underscoring that enlargement will strengthen 
European security.

“EU enlargement must go hand in hand with internal reforms to safeguard the 
EU’s functioning and improve decision-making processes, including the greater 
use of qualified majority voting. The EU must complete these reforms by the 
time frontrunner candidates fulfil membership criteria and are prepared for EU 
accession”, Auštrevičius said.

Also, the document commends Montenegro and Albania “for their significant 
progress, noting their ambitions to conclude negotiations by the end of 2026 
and the end of 2027, respectively”.

The report states that the EU accession is a key instrument for promoting 
democracy, the rule of law, and respect for fundamental rights, as well as 
representing an important anchor for fostering regional reconciliation and 
stability, increasing resilience, and protecting candidate countries from 
malicious foreign interference.

It stresses that the rule of law, democratic reforms, media freedom, and 
respect for fundamental rights, including minority rights, must remain at the 
core of the enlargement process.

Judicial independence, the fight against corruption, and the inclusion and 
support of civil society are identified as key prerequisites for progress 
toward EU membership, especially at a time of growing authoritarian tendencies.

In addition, it emphasises that regional cooperation, particularly in the 
Western Balkans, is a prerequisite for EU accession, and underlines the 
importance of the Belgrade-Pristina Dialogue, “which is crucial for Serbia and 
Kosovo to advance on their respective European paths and will contribute to 
regional stability and prosperity”, as well as the importance of continued 
good-faith implementation of the Prespa Agreement between North Macedonia and 
Greece and the Treaty of Friendship, Good Neighbourliness and Cooperation 
between North Macedonia and Bulgaria, in line with the EU negotiating framework.

Alignment with the EU’s common foreign and security policy is also highlighted 
as an important indicator of a candidate country’s commitment to the Union’s 
core values and principles and its readiness for future membership.

Marta Kos: Countries joining the EU must be strong and resilient democracies

During the discussion about the document, held on Tuesday, Marta Kos, European 
Commissioner for Enlargement, remarked that “countries vulnerable to Russia’s 
toxic influence cannot become EU members”.

“There are no Trojan horses. Countries that would undermine us from within 
cannot become members of the EU. We must be absolutely certain about that. 
Countries joining the EU must be strong and resilient democracies capable of 
resisting the toxic influence of Russia and others,” Kos said in the European 
Parliament, it was reported by Bgnes news agency.

She said that insisting on the rule of law as a key priority inevitably 
strengthens the credibility of the EU enlargement process. Therefore, Kos 
warned that no shortcuts will be allowed in the process of European integration 
or in the implementation of reforms. A specific warning was directed at the 
countries considered to be leaders in the accession process.

“A leading position in the accession process does not guarantee any special 
status… This refers precisely to the countries that have progressed the most 
toward EU membership – Montenegro, Albania, Ukraine, and the Republic of 
Moldova… Progress must continually be earned through reforms”, Marta Kos stated.

According to her, enlargement remains a merit-based process, rooted in a 
steadfast commitment to democracy, rule of law and fundamental rights.

“There can be no compromise on the rule of law, democracy, fundamental rights, 
nor or alignment with our Common Foreign and Security Policy”, Kos remarked.

Tags

  *   EU enlargement<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/eu-enlargement/>
  *   European 
Parliament<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/european-parliament/>
  *   Marta Kos<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/marta-kos/>
  *   Petras 
Auštrevičius<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/petras-austrevicius/>
  *   rule of law<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/rule-of-law/>

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/PH0PR13MB544675F9B1454F51EE66DA57AE44A%40PH0PR13MB5446.namprd13.prod.outlook.com.

Reply via email to