29/08/23View in Browser

Retreat to attack

By Nick Alipour | @realNickAlipour

School trips have a kind of magic: Collectively hiding away in a new place, removed from parental influence, can do wonders for group dynamics, weld cool kids and nerds together, and spark moments of unlikely chemistry. The government-level equivalents are no different.

In the magic of cabinet retreats, prime ministers and presidents confide. At the peak of Britain’s Brexit blockade, Theresa May invited her secretaries to Chequers, the prime minister’s countryside residence, to work out the infamous Chequers plan.

The need to “anticipate the risks of the summer” is enough for France’s Elisabeth Borne to hold a cabinet workshop at Hotel Matignot.

Chequers and Matignot are surely no hostels. But the recipe is the same as with school trips, albeit with fewer bunk beds and soggy dinners: shield ministers from nagging stakeholders, create a cosy siege mentality, perhaps even a sprinkle of late-night gossip, and the ministers will start to bond.

Few governments have institutionalised the idea of cabinet retreats as much as Germany’s coalition government has.

The “traffic-light” coalition of SPD, FPD, and the Greens meets every six months for a two-day “workation”. The latest edition is in full swing as of Tuesday morning, held at Meseberg Castle, the government’s official guest house, an hour from Berlin.

German governments have always been fond of the stuffy, middlebrow charm of team-building trips.

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 Photo of the day

The Liberian-flagged bulk carrier Primus, the second cargo ship to leave Ukraine's Odesa port since the end of the grain deal despite Russian threats, sails on the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey, 29 August 2023. EPA-EFE/ERDEM SAHIN

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 The Roundup

The European Commission’s proposed mandatory target to incorporate at least 25% of recycled plastics into new cars was met with praise from recyclers and scepticism from carmakers and the plastics industry.

The ban on the abaya in schools, announced by French Education Minister Gabriel Attal, has highlighted the left’s divisions over secularism and its implementation, while the radical left has vowed to take the decision to court.

After the recent Niger coup, EU foreign and defence ministers this week are expected to discuss a strategy to deal with the situation and reassess the bloc’s approach to the Sahel region, according to an internal memo seen by EURACTIV.

The EU’s recently adopted climate legislation was not properly assessed, exceeded Brussels’ authority and now threatens Poland’s economy as well as energy security, legal arguments published by Warsaw on Monday (28 August) contend.

Last but not least, our Transport Brief is back, with the latest weekly roundup of policy news: Italy takes on airlines over ticket prices.

Look out for…

  • EU institutions are still in summer recess.

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Nathalie Weatherald]

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