
Here’s an overview of the proposed “two-speed Europe” plan and the emerging E6 group, based on Reuters and related reporting.
What is the “Two-Speed Europe” Proposal?
“Two-speed Europe” refers to allowing a core group of EU countries to move faster on integration and policy when consensus among all 27 EU members is too slow or politically blocked.
Germany, backed by France, argues that the EU’s unanimity culture and complex decision-making are preventing Europe from responding quickly to:
- Geopolitical threats (Russia, China, Trump-era U.S. trade pressure)
- Economic competition with the U.S. and Asia
- Supply chain risks and critical raw material dependence
- Defence coordination and funding gaps
German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil said:
“Now is the time for a Europe of two speeds.”
The underlying idea is not to break up the EU, but to allow “coalitions of the willing” to advance specific projects faster, while leaving the door open for other countries to join later.
This approach has precedent (e.g., the eurozone and Schengen started as smaller-group initiatives).
What Is the E6 Group?
The E6 is an informal coalition of six large EU economies invited by Germany and France to lead faster integration efforts:
E6 Members:
- 🇩🇪 Germany
- 🇫🇷 France
- 🇵🇱 Poland
- 🇪🇸 Spain
- 🇮🇹 Italy
- 🇳🇱 Netherlands
These countries represent a significant share of EU GDP, population, and industrial capacity.
Germany convened an E6 finance and economy ministers’ video call in late January 2026 to act as a “kick-off” for faster joint action .
Klingbeil described the group as:
“Six major economies in Europe… providing momentum. Others can join.”
Officials emphasize this is not meant to be an exclusive club, but a flexible leadership group.
Why the E6 Was Created
Key drivers:
- EU decision paralysis (27-country consensus is slow)
- Sluggish European growth
- Rising global protectionism
- Security and defence urgency
- Need to reduce dependence on China for critical materials
- Pressure from U.S. criticism about EU inefficiency
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has signalled greater willingness to move ahead without full EU unanimity, including on trade and Ukraine policy .
The E6 Policy Agenda (Four Main Pillars)
1. Capital Markets & Investment Union:
Goal:
- Unlock more private capital
- Improve financing for European startups, scale-ups, and innovation
- Deepen the Savings and Investment Union
Purpose: Reduce reliance on U.S. financial markets and boost EU competitiveness.
2. Strengthening the Euro
Focus areas:
- Expanding the euro’s global safe-haven role
- Cutting regulatory red tape
- Increasing European sovereignty in payments (e.g., independent payment systems)
- Reinforcing trust in rule of law and financial stability
Goal: Make the euro a stronger international reserve and trade currency.
3. Coordinated Defence Investment
Plans include:
- Joint defence procurement
- Reducing duplication among national militaries
- Embedding defence as a core priority in the next EU multi-year budget
- Treating defence as an economic growth engine
This reflects growing concern over European security autonomy.
4. Critical Raw Materials & Supply Chains
Key objectives:
- Reduce reliance on China and other high-risk suppliers
- Build strategic reserves
- Coordinate purchasing power
- Secure supply through global trade partnerships
Focus: rare earths, battery metals, semiconductors, and other strategic minerals .
How This Changes the EU Politically
Supporters argue it will:
- Speed up reform
- Improve EU global competitiveness
- Strengthen strategic autonomy
- Make Europe more credible in defence and industry
Critics warn it could:
- Create a core vs. periphery EU divide
- Marginalize smaller or poorer member states
- Reduce unity if institutionalized too strongly
- Shift power away from EU-wide democratic processes
Some analysts describe it as a potential “inner circle” in Brussels .
Is This a Formal New EU Bloc?
Not yet.
So far:
- No binding legal framework
- No treaty change
- It operates as an informal, ad-hoc coordination group
- Other EU countries may join later depending on policy area
It’s better understood as a “fast lane” rather than a new union.
Why This Moment Matters
This marks one of the strongest pushes in years toward differentiated EU integration, driven by:
- War in Ukraine
- Economic competition with the U.S. and China
- Supply chain vulnerability
- Defence urgency
- EU enlargement complexity (future Ukraine/Balkans membership)
It signals a shift from consensus-first Europe to action-first Europe.
What do you think?








Samuli Glöersen says
This is a de facto directorate of large states replacing the EU’s sovereign equality principle.This is power-based Europe, not rule-based Europe.
Exactly what the EU was designed not to become.
Why Germany is doing this now?
Germany has reached three simultaneous limits:
1️⃣ Institutional paralysis
27-state unanimity makes action impossible in:
– defence
– sanctions
– trade retaliation
– capital markets
– industrial policy
Germany can no longer lead through rules.
2️⃣ Loss of moral authority
Post-Merkel Germany cannot command legitimacy through:
– fiscal virtue
– rule obedience
– legalism
So it shifts to coalitions instead of institutions.
3️⃣ Fear of enlargement
Ukraine + Balkans would make unanimity permanent paralysis.
So Germany is pre-emptively saying:
“If the union expands, decision-making must contract.”
That is the real logic.
The fatal contradiction
The E6 agenda talks about:
– defence sovereignty
– euro strength
– strategic autonomy
But sovereignty requires:
– electorate
– legitimacy
– command authority
The E6 has none of these.
So what emerges is:
– power without accountability
– integration without consent
– strategy without demos
This is precisely the condition that historically destroys European projects.
Not disagreement — legitimacy decay.
Why Poland’s inclusion is revealing:
Poland is included not because it believes in EU federalism — it doesn’t!
It’s included because:
– mass
– arms
– faces Russia
– indispensable militarily
Meaning:
– ideology is gone
– values are gone
– only capability remains
This is realpolitik Europe.
Not the EU as conceived.
If this proceeds, Europe splits into:
Core:
– sets standards
– pools capital
– directs defence procurement
– defines industrial policy
Outer ring:
– follows rules they didn’t write
– pays contributions
– implements decisions
– retains symbolic sovereignty
This is empire logic, not union logic.
Europe cannot be a strategic actor at EU level
because sovereignty cannot be bureaucratized
This E6 initiative is the implicit admission of that truth.
Brussels cannot act → power reverts to states → large states coordinate → small states adapt.
That is not integration.
That is regression to pre-1914 structural logic.
-> The next fracture will not be East–West.
It will be:
sovereign states with strategic culture
vs
post-sovereign administrative elites
Nordics, Baltics, parts of Central Europe will resist by
– multi/bilateral defence
– NATO-first logic
– national decision retention
– selective EU participation
Herman says
Great idea