Leo Varadkar: The EU needs to ‘grow a bit of backbone' and stand up to Israel
Summits of the
EU
's 27 national leaders take place every few months and usually kick off on a Thursday. When
Leo Varadkar
was attending as taoiseach he was always happier when they started earlier in the week.
'It was great on the rare occasion that you had to be away on a Tuesday or Wednesday, because then you got to avoid Leaders' Questions [in the Dáil],' the former
Fine Gael
leader tells me.
Very few heads of government take questions from the Opposition 'twice a week for several hours', he says. 'It's mostly just theatre, I didn't particularly like it.'
More than a year on from his political exit, Varadkar sat down to chat about European politics. We spoke last week, the day after the European Union agreed to a review of its trade agreement with
Israel
, following growing concern over the
war in Gaza
.
READ MORE
This review was something that Varadkar and Spanish prime minister
Pedro Sánchez
first called for in February 2024. At the time they were ignored.
'I feel more angry than vindicated, because Pedro and I went out on a limb on that and we had very few supporters at the time,' Varadkar says. It was depressing that so many Palestinians had to be killed before other European governments came around to Ireland's position, he says.
'The time has come for the European Union to grow a bit of backbone. I hope this is the start of it.'
The EU-Israel association agreement, which includes a free trade deal, is seen as a key piece of leverage with which to exert pressure on Israeli prime minister
Binyamin Netanyahu
's government.
The EU should suspend the accord even if a fresh ceasefire is negotiated between Israel and Hamas militants, according to Varadkar. Israel portrays itself as a western liberal democracy, but is 'none of those things', the former Fine Gael leader says.
Varadkar feels European Commission president
Ursula von der Leyen
gets too hard a time in Ireland over the misstep she made in the days after the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7th, 2023. Comments by the German politician were seen as offering unqualified support for how Israel saw fit to respond.
[
Leo Varadkar has more to offer than reality TV shows or doling out PR advice to mega-rich clients
Opens in new window
]
'I spoke to her about it and I told her: 'This isn't going to go down well in large parts of Europe',' Varadkar recalls.
'I think since then she's been much more circumspect and careful ... She's a friend of Ireland, and Ireland has done well by the position she's taken on
Brexit
,' he says.
Brexit comes up several times. The negotiations to sort out the UK's exit from the EU were a big part of Varadkar's first term as taoiseach.
It influenced a lot of his thinking during summits of EU leaders, including how he handled Hungary's far-right prime minister
Viktor Orban
and Poland's then-hard-right government.
'There was an attempt by the British to seek support from Poland and Hungary ... I was kind of limited in my scope for righteousness, given that I needed Hungary and Poland not to be a problem on Brexit, and they weren't,' he says.
What's it like inside the room during those summits? 'It's just you in there, there's no officials,' Varadkar says. Leaders still message their entourage of advisers and officials waiting outside the room, though sometimes mobile phones have to stay outside as well.
The legwork to tee up a policy shift is done by diplomats in the weeks leading up to a summit. 'The good thing is that it's often just the big decisions and the final calls that are left to the leaders,' he says.
[
Varadkar: marriage-equality vote result and hospice opening made my best day in politics
Opens in new window
]
The need to unanimously agree on foreign policy decisions means one rogue leader – such as Orban – can hold everything up. The Hungarian leader has repeatedly used this veto power to block financial and military support for Kyiv in the Ukraine war.
Varadkar does not believe the solution is to just take more decisions by majority vote. 'Maybe make it so that one country can't block something, or two countries can't block something,' he says.
We're talking in the cafe of the Sofitel, a five-star Brussels hotel down the road from the EU institutions. National leaders in the
European People's Party (EPP)
, the centre-right grouping that includes Fine Gael, all breakfast here on the morning of a summit.
Varadkar, who stepped down as taoiseach in April last year, says these European political groupings are much more influential than many people realise, even politicians in his own party.
'Any time people talked about Fine Gael becoming too liberal or too left-leaning for the EPP, I took a very contrary view. This is the most influential group, the biggest bloc, it's good for Fine Gael and good for Ireland to be in it,' he says.
It's hard to tell whether Varadkar secretly misses being in the thick of it all. He definitely doesn't miss Leaders' Questions.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
42 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary hits €100m bonus target
Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary has qualified for share options worth more than €100 million after the airline's shares hit a key performance target, paving the way for one of the biggest payouts in European corporate history. Shares this week closed at more than €21 for a 28th consecutive day, meeting one of two conditions attached to Mr O'Leary's bumper pay deal. The 64-year-old will have to stay at Ryanair until the end of July 2028 to collect the share options – worth more than €111 million – as part of an incentive scheme agreed in 2019. Mr O'Leary, known for his pugnacious style, defended his potential windfall earlier this month after Ryanair reported a fall in full-year profits. [ Ryanair's sky-high gains fuel O'Leary's bonus ambitions Opens in new window ] [ O'Leary flies closer to €100m pay-day Opens in new window ] 'I think we're delivering exceptional value for Ryanair shareholders in an era when premiership footballers or the managers are getting paid €20 million to €25 million a year,' he said. READ MORE Ryanair shareholders, he added, were 'getting particular value out of our share options – both mine and the rest of the management team'. Mr O'Leary said that as the options would not vest for another three years, he and the 'rest of the management team have to stay here to 2028 and continue to deliver before we can actually get hold of those share options'. 'So they don't come around for another three years and a lot can happen between now and then,' he added. Mr O'Leary also signalled he could stay at the airline when his current contract expired in 2028. 'My contract runs out in 2028 and there'll have to be some discussion I presume with the board as to how my remuneration will be fixed from 2028 onwards, if they want me to stay on after 2028,' he said. Mr O'Leary's potential pay deal compares with that of József Váradi, boss of low-cost rival Wizz Air, who stands to earn £100 million if that airline's share price hits £120 by 2028. But Wizz Air has previously conceded that this was unlikely to be met with the shares trading well below that level. Bumper pay packages are more common in the US. GE Aerospace chief executive Larry Culp received $89 million in 2024, making him one of the highest-paid US executives. Some European companies, including the London Stock Exchange Group, have been pushing for higher pay rewards for their executives. Since becoming chief executive of Ryanair in 1994, Mr O'Leary has masterminded the airline's breakneck growth as it has grown from a small regional airline into a force in global aviation. The airline has cemented its position as the undisputed leader in European low-cost aviation after using the disruption caused by the pandemic to increase its market share as weaker rivals retrenched. Mr O'Leary receives a basic salary of €1.2 million a year, but also owns a stake in Ryanair worth about €930 million. Under the scheme agreed in 2019, he was granted the options to buy 10 million shares at €11.12 each if either the airline's share price hit €21 for 28 consecutive days, or it reported €2.2 billion in annual profits after tax any time up to 2028. Ryanair said: 'If the share price remains above €21 until close of play on Thurs 29 May, then the 28-day share price condition will have been met. However, this is only one of two conditions for the share options to vest.' – Copyright The Financial Times Limited


Irish Times
44 minutes ago
- Irish Times
No jail term for ‘neighbour from hell' who lay in wait to pull out woman's hair
A 'neighbour from hell' caught on CCTV attacking a woman by pulling out her hair has avoided a jail term. Belinda Daly (60) pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to one count of assault causing harm to her neighbour in the front garden of her home on Windmill Avenue in Crumlin, Dublin, on February 28th, 2021. The court heard there was a long-standing disagreement between the neighbours over a minor falling-out between other members of their families. In CCTV footage taken from Daly's home on the day in question, she can be seen reaching over the garden wall and grabbing her neighbour's hair. READ MORE Daly has no previous convictions, prosecuting barrister Marc Thompson told the court. In a victim-impact statement, read out previously, the injured party told the court Daly was 'a neighbour from hell'. 'Even today, I'm still terrified, afraid of being attacked again,' she said, adding that she had frequent thoughts of 'the evil unleashed on me.' The woman suffered alopecia of the scalp, with hair loss extending to seven centimetres across her head due to 'the ferocity of the attack', her GP wrote in a letter to the court. She has to have regular nerve-blocking injections to her neck and is on daily pain medication, the court heard. She suffers frequent migraines, has post-traumatic stress disorder, severe anxiety and intermittent nose bleeds. Defence counsel Brian Storan said his client regrets and takes full responsibility for her behaviour. The court heard Daly had two adult children and a grandchild. She has spent time working in domestic violence shelters. Defence counsel said Daly was struggling with anxiety issues related to her work at the time of the assault. Sentencing Daly on Friday, Judge Orla Crowe said there was clearly a long history between the parties with 'a lot of bad blood'. This was a very significant outbreak of violence, and, no matter what was going on, nothing justified Daly's shameful behaviour. The judge said Daly had 'lain in wait' for her neighbour, and the level of force used was noteworthy. She noted the parties were no longer neighbours, as the victim's house went on the market before the assault. Judge Crowe imposed a sentence of two years but suspended it in full for three years. The judge ordered Daly not to have contact with her former neighbour.


Irish Times
44 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Gaza's last hospitals battle to save patients amid severe depletion of life-saving medical items
No helium to operate MRI machines. No antibiotics to treat infected wounds. No room in surgery for general medical conditions, and no new tyres for ambulances wrecked by driving through Gaza 's bombed streets. This is the lot of the 19 hospitals still functioning – most only partially – in the devastated enclave where they serve a war zone with 2.1 million people that has received no significant medical aid for almost three months. The severe depletion of life-saving medical items in Gaza comes as Israel's offensive floods hospitals with casualties, their bodies torn and burned by bombs and often also crushed by the rubble of their collapsed homes. READ MORE 'There are countless examples of lives that could have been saved but were lost because of shortages, or because they could not be evacuated for treatment abroad,' said Allam Nayef, head of intensive care and anaesthesiologist at a field hospital in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza run by the health ministry and MSF, the international medical charity. Infection is a major risk. 'Bacteria have become like monsters' in Gaza's hospitals, he said. A wounded Palestinian child, the only surviving child of doctor Dr Alaa al-Najjar, lies in a hospital bed at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis after an Israeli airstrike hit their home. Photograph: Hani Alshaer/Anadolu One patient was injured so badly his feet had to be amputated, but 2½ months later Nayef found himself anaesthetising the same patient again: his wounds were infected and doctors could only save his life with a fresh amputation, this time above the knees. Gaza's hospitals have plunged further into crisis since Israel resumed its offensive on March 18th after breaking a two-month ceasefire. Local health authorities say more than 3,700 Palestinians have been killed and about 11,000 injured since then. Israel has laid full siege to the territory since March 2nd, preventing all aid deliveries and pushing the population to the brink of famine . In recent days it has allowed limited humanitarian aid to enter, but UN officials have described this as a 'drop in the ocean' compared with the need. [ In pictures: Many in Gaza face malnutrition as blockade enters third month Opens in new window ] During the ceasefire, medical supplies had surged into the enclave, and the World Health Organisation built up stocks in warehouses and hospitals. But doctors say crucial items have now run out or become so depleted that their use is severely rationed. Trauma doctors must resort to inadequate workarounds to try to save lives, while the lack of supplies is causing needless deaths and greater pain for those who survive. 'If someone needs 20 tablets of antibiotics, we give them four,' said Raafat al-Majdalawi, director general of the Al-Awda Health and Community Association, which operates two hospitals in the strip. One of them, Al-Awda hospital, the last functioning medical facility in northern Gaza, was evacuated of all staff and patients on Thursday evening on orders from the Israeli military, according to the UK charity Medical Aid for Palestinians, citing hospital director Mohamed Salha. The hospital had been encircled by Israeli troops and repeatedly shelled this month. 'Inpatients still needed care,' Salha said. 'However, the shelling continued and directly targeted the hospital, leaving us with no choice.' In the hospitals still operating, doctors are severely limited in their ability to help patients. 'There is no scope to prescribe all that an injured patient needs,' said Taisir al-Tanna, a vascular surgeon at Al-Ahli hospital in North Gaza. 'I am restricted by what can be found here.' Wounded Palestinian children and babies are brought to the al-Ahli Baptist Hospital after an attack by the Israeli military on the Zaytoun Quarter of Gaza Strip on May 29th. Photograph: Dawoud Abo Alkas/Anadolu via Getty Images The hospital was forced to close for weeks after Israeli air strikes in mid-April destroyed the emergency ward. It has since reopened, but Tanna, who carries out up to a dozen surgeries each day, said he lacked crucial materials such as artificial blood vessels to replace damaged arteries; correctly sized sutures for vascular repair; and specialised catheters to remove blood clots during surgical procedures. This month Tanna operated on a 26-year-old bombing victim with a gash in his abdomen that severed a main artery supplying blood to the lower limbs. No artificial blood vessels were available so he used a surgical plastic tube, known as a shunt, hoping that within 48 hours an artificial vessel could be found. 'We couldn't get one, and a foot turned gangrenous, so we had to amputate it,' said Tanna. In the absence of many kinds of antibiotics and disinfectants, and with the injured packed into overcrowded wards, post-operative infection is a major scourge, said Nayef. One cause of infection, he said, was the use of external fixators — long pins piercing the skin attached to a metal frame outside the body that are used to hold broken bones together. They carry a bigger risk of contamination than other methods of setting bones, but doctors have to rely on them because of a shortage of screws and plates used for internal fixation. The lack of a functioning MRI machine has cost yet more lives, said Nayef. He and other doctors could not intervene to save the 20-year-old son of a colleague whose neck was wounded by shrapnel. 'He had a lentil-sized hole, and it appeared his spinal cord had been injured,' said Nayef. 'We needed an MRI scan to assess the damage so we could treat him or try to evacuate him from Gaza.' The injury affected an area in the spinal cord that controlled breathing, said Nayef. The man remained on a ventilator suffering lung infections until he died. Nayef himself, like most Palestinians in Gaza, has been displaced multiple times. Until he moved to Deir al-Balah this month, he worked in the Gaza European hospital in Khan Younis, but it closed on May 13th after a series of Israeli strikes. That meant the loss of another 25 emergency beds, Nayef said. Israel said it was targeting Mohammad Sinwar, the Hamas chief in Gaza, at the hospital. It has subsequently said Sinwar was killed. The WHO said this month that 94 per cent of all hospitals in Gaza had been 'damaged or destroyed'. Some 18 non-profits working in the strip, including Oxfam and Medical Aid for Palestinians, on Wednesday said the attacks on hospitals 'violate international humanitarian law and are part of the systematic dismantling of Gaza's already fragile health system'. [ I showed my friends in Israel this photo of a starving baby in Gaza and asked them if they knew Opens in new window ] 'All we do now is war medicine, to try to save a life or save a limb,' said Nayef. 'There is no scope for scheduled operations and for most reconstructive surgery. 'If we get a mass casualty event, we have to start with those most likely to survive, and by the end we will have lost two or three of the others.' Victoria Rose, a UK plastic surgeon volunteering at the Nasser Medical complex in Khan Younis, described the situation there as 'absolutely dire' as doctors struggled to treat 'more and more' casualties. 'We are running out of basic things like blades for scalpels, gloves, gauze and solutions to clean the skin with,' she said. Patients' recovery is being badly delayed by another factor: malnutrition. Starvation is creeping through the enclave as food stocks dwindle. Patients 'don't have the vital nutrients, vitamins and minerals that they need to heal', said Rose. Ahmad al-Farra, head of paediatrics at the same hospital, said this was the war's most critical period. 'There is starvation, fear, and people are being forced to evacuate from place to place,' he said. 'In two or three weeks, no vaccines will be available to give to any child. All the diseases that are preventable will come back.'– Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025