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The EU Veto: The Most Powerful Weapon in European Politics Nobody Understands How to Reform
The EU veto allows any single member state to block most foreign policy and tax decisions. Here is why it is impossible to reform, who uses it most, and why that might be changing.
The EU veto allows any single member state to block most foreign policy and tax decisions. Here is why it is impossible to reform, who uses it most, and why that might be changing.
- The EU veto allows any single member state to block most foreign policy and tax decisions.
- The European Union's veto mechanism is both its most antidemocratic feature and its most persistent one — persistent precisely because the states that benefit most from vetoes are the ones whose agreement would be requir...
- Under EU Treaty rules, foreign policy and tax policy — among the most significant areas of governance — require unanimous agreement among all 27 member states.
The EU veto allows any single member state to block most foreign policy and tax decisions.
The European Union's veto mechanism is both its most antidemocratic feature and its most persistent one — persistent precisely because the states that benefit most from vetoes are the ones whose agreement would be required to eliminate them, creating a logical circularity that any reform attempt immediately encounters.
Under EU Treaty rules, foreign policy and tax policy — among the most significant areas of governance — require unanimous agreement among all 27 member states. Any single member can block any decision in these domains indefinitely. Hungary has used this capacity most prominently in recent years, blocking EU decisions on Russian sanctions, Ukraine support, and other foreign policy matters where Viktor Orbán's government holds positions substantially divergent from the majority of member states.
The EU veto reform debate has been active for years and has consistently run into the same structural problem: moving from unanimity to qualified majority voting in any specific policy area requires a Treaty change, and Treaty changes themselves require unanimity. The circle is complete and the outcome is determined.
Euronews published an explainer on why veto reform is so hard on March 31, 2026 — timed to coincide with ongoing European Council discussions about the EU's institutional architecture in the context of potential enlargement. The addition of Ukraine, Moldova, and potentially the Western Balkans to EU membership would add countries with their own policy preferences and their own veto rights, multiplying the blocking potential within the Council.
The creative legal solutions that have been explored include 'constructive abstention' — a procedure that already exists in EU law and allows a member state to abstain from a vote without blocking a decision — and enhanced cooperation mechanisms that allow a subset of member states to proceed with deeper integration while others abstain. These mechanisms exist and are used but have not solved the fundamental problem: that critical decisions requiring unanimity still require unanimity.
The Iranian war has given the veto debate new political salience. Several EU foreign policy positions that most member states want to take — including clearer statements about civilian casualties and proportionality — have been blocked or diluted by unanimous-requirement processes that have required lowest-common-denominator language.