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Merz's plan of 'associate EU membership' for Ukraine gets mixed reviews

Diplomats in Brussels are casting doubt over German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's bold plan to grant Ukraine "associate membership". The European Commission says any innovative solution should respect the "merit-based" nature of the multi-chapter accession process.

READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2026/05/21/merzs-plan-of-associate-eu-membership-for-ukraine-gets-mixed-reception

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Transcript
00:00German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has suggested Ukraine should become an associate member of the EU before becoming a fully-fledged
00:09member state,
00:10a proposal aimed at breaking the two-year deadlock in the country's bid to join the bloc.
00:16In a letter to EU leaders, Merz said,
00:19It is now time to boldly move on with Ukraine's EU integration through innovative solutions.
00:27Merz noted it was obvious the EU will not be able to complete the accession process shortly given the political
00:35complexities of ratification processes in various member states.
00:39The associate status, Merz argues in the document, would grant Ukraine access to the decision-making bodies, the European Council,
00:48the European Commission, and the European Parliament without voting rights or a dedicated portfolio.
00:55Crucially, it would enable Kyiv to request aid from other member states in the event of a new Russian attack.
01:03Merz first floated the idea during an informal summit of EU leaders in Cyprus last month,
01:09where Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky renewed his push for fast-track accession and rejected any proposal for symbolic membership.
01:19According to Merz, the proposal of associate membership, which has no precedent in history, is set to raise a couple
01:27of questions.
01:29Merz 2
01:30COVID-19
01:302
01:30arriv
01:3021
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