Australia,
Austria,
Chile, the
Czech Republic,
Dominican Republic,
Estonia,
Hungary,
Italy,
Israel,
Latvia,
Poland,
Slovakia and
Switzerland did not attend an international conference in the Moroccan city of
Marrakesh to adopt the agreement. The
United States did not participate in the negotiation of the agreement.
Belgium: In Belgium,
government party
N-VA, including its Secretary of State for Migration
Theo Francken came out against participating, while the three other government parties remained in favour, creating a political deadlock. All the parties (N-VA,
Open Vld,
CD&V and
MR) did in fact agree on the compact and Charles Michel announced Belgium's favourable position at the General Assembly of the UN on 27 September 2018. Unfavourable election results for N-VA and Austria's position on the compact had the N-VA change its position. On 4 December, the
Prime Minister of Belgium,
Charles Michel, announced that the issue would be taken to parliament for a vote. On 5 December, parliament voted 106 to 36 in favor of backing the agreement. Michel stated that he would endorse the pact on behalf of the parliament, not on behalf of the divided government. Consequently, N-VA quit the government; the other three parties continued as a minority government (
Michel II) that lasted 1 week and led to the fall of the Belgian government on 18 December 2018.
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Bosnia and Herzegovina has signed the document.
Brazil: Affirmed support for the document at the Marrakesh conference, but the
Jair Bolsonaro government announced that Brazil would withdraw its support for the document. Citing "immigration must be treated in accordance with the reality and sovereignty of each country", Bolsonaro again confirmed the withdrawal in a ceremony that happened on 2 January 2019. On 8 January 2019, Foreign Minister
Ernesto Araújo asked diplomats to inform the
UN that Brazil had withdrawn from the Global Compact for Migration. In January 2023, after President
Lula took office for his third term under the government slogan "Union and reconstruction",
Itamaraty officially communicated the country's return to the Global Compact, reinforcing "the Brazilian Government's commitment to the protection and promotion of the rights of more than 4 million Brazilians living abroad".
Bulgaria: On 5 December, the government announced that it would not sign the agreement; its representatives would vote "abstained".
Chile: On 9 December, the government announced that it would not sign the agreement
Denmark: On 27 November, the Danish Prime Minister
Lars Løkke Rasmussen stated that he was supportive of the agreement, but that his government would form a coalition of European countries to create an opt-out.
Dominican Republic: On 4 December 2018, the Dominican government set its position on the Global Migration Pact, stipulating that the Dominican state would not sign the agreement, as reported during a press conference by the legal consultant of the Executive Branch,
Flavio Darío Espinal. He also spoke about the participation of the country in the Moroccan summit and announced that the President
Danilo Medina would not be in the meeting. and the country's position was to be decided by the
Riigikogu. On 26 November, Riigikogu passed a declaration which supported the compact. According to the Estonian Prime Minister, the declaration would provide the basis for the Governments decision to support the Global Compact for Migration. On 27 November 2018, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that no Estonian official would be present in Marrakesh. Instead, Estonia's ambassador to the UN would vote in support of the compact on 19 December, during the gathering of the
United Nations General Assembly.
Finland: The
Finnish Government approved of the final draft in Marrakesh in 2018, and voted for the compact in the UN. The only party to question the treaty was the opposition
Finns Party.
Germany: There has been some opposition in the German parliament, led by
Alternative for Germany.
Merkel's CDU complained the Compact makes no distinction between economic migrants and refugees. However, the parliament voted 372–153 in favour of the compact on 29 November.
Israel: Israel has declined to sign the agreement.
Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu stated that "We have a duty to protect our borders against illegal infiltrators. That’s what we’ve done, and that’s what we will continue to do".
Latvia: On 6 December 2018, the Latvian parliament voted for rejecting the compact.
Lithuania: On 4 December 2018, the Lithuanian parliament voted for a resolution which acknowledged the need for international cooperation in dealing with the challenges that migration creates and that no state can solve them alone. It also noted that the compact is not legally binding and that the state itself chooses how to implement the goals of the agreement.
Luxembourg: The opposition parties
Déi Lénk and the
Pirate Party support the pact whereas
ADR does not. The Parliament will vote on whether supporting the pact or not.
Montenegro: Montenegro supports the pact. The cabinet ensured it would add a legal addendum, which would state that the Migration Pact can not be used as a viable juridical document and therefore can not be used as legal support in asylum claims.
New Zealand: On 19 December 2018, the
Labour-led coalition government announced that New Zealand would be voting in favor of the compact after seeking advice from the
Crown Law Office and the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The
Foreign Minister Winston Peters defended his government's decision on the grounds "that the compact was not legally binding and did not restrict New Zealand from setting its own migration policies." The Government's decision was opposed by the opposition
National Party leader
Simon Bridges who claimed that the compact did not differentiate between legal and illegal migration and could restrict the ability of future governments to set foreign and immigration policy.
Romania: On 28 November 2018, the Romanian Foreign Minister was authorized by the Romanian president,
Klaus Iohannis, to sign the Migration Pact. Sources say that secret negotiations were carried out long before the news broke out.
Russia signed the compact, but issued a statement repudiating certain elements of it:We reiterate our repudiation of the "shared responsibility" concept that, in its current form, merely implies sharing the burden of hosting forced migrants between the States that frequently have nothing to do with the causes of mass exodus of people. We are not in favor of shifting the burden to others, while the current complicated migration situation is largely a result of irresponsible interference into the internal affairs of sovereign States of Middle East and North Africa. In this context, the countries that were actively involved in such interference should primarily bear the greatest responsibility, including for the migration-related consequences.
Slovakia: After a dispute broke out within the
Government of Slovakia on whether to adopt the framework, it was decided that the issue would be moved to parliament for discussion. Following this, the Slovakian Foreign Affairs Minister,
Miroslav Lajčák, announced that he would contemplate his resignation if the parliament rejected the compact. On 29 November 2018, after the parliament had voted to refuse the compact, the Foreign Affairs Minister decided to resign, but later withdrew his resignation. On 5 December, following his cabinets approval of the parliamentary resolution, the
Prime Minister of Slovakia,
Peter Pellegrini, affirmed that Slovakia would not send a representative to the UN meeting.
Slovenia: Slovenia will endorse the agreement.
Switzerland: Switzerland will not attend the conference for the formal adoption of the framework in December 2018. The decision was made because the parliament demanded a final say on whether the country would approve the compact, which would require more time. ==Criticism==