Major current viewpoints •
2014 EU Presidential candidates
Jean-Claude Juncker (
EEP) and
Martin Schulz (
S&D) promised that Turkey would never join the European Union while either one of them were President, reasoning that Turkey had turned its back on European democratic values. Juncker won the election and became the new president of the EU in November 2014. He stated that April: • Primary reasons for Turkey's persistent requests to join the EU are, among others, the many
Turks in Europe and the importance of trade between the two. Turkey is, however, also increasingly disappointed with the widespread opposition to its accession among EU member states. In September 2012, Turkish Prime Minister
Erdoğan was asked by CNN if Turkey still wants to join the EU. His response: "There are 5 million Turks in Europe and 3 million
Turks in Germany alone. We are a natural member of the European Union. Germany invited Turkish workers 50 years ago, however, 50 years have passed and we have waited at the
European Union's doorstep. No other country has experienced such a thing. We will be patient until a point. However, when we cross that point, we will bring light to the situation and decide accordingly." During a trip to
Yalta, Erdoğan expressed his stern disappointment regarding the EU accession process: "We are still an
EU negotiating candidate. At such a position, I wish EU accession. Otherwise, such a scenario would affect a large region including
Ukraine and Turkey." • Former German Chancellor
Angela Merkel has repeatedly opposed full membership of Turkey to the EU at German-Turkish summits, advocating instead a
privileged partnership. Some Christian Democrats back fuller support for Turkey, risking the chancellor becoming more isolated in advocating for a "privileged partnership". In September 2011, on the occasion of the visit of the Turkish president
Gül, Merkel said: "We don't want the full membership of Turkey. But we don't want to lose Turkey as an important country", referring to her idea of a strategic partnership. Again in 2014, when Erdogan urged Merkel to strongly support his country's bid, there was no sign the chancellor had relinquished her skepticism. She revealed after the two had talked: "I personally said that we are in a negotiation process that has certain outcome and no fixed time frame. It is no secret and nothing has changed in my view that I am sceptical about full membership for Turkey." In a TV debate in September 2017, then-German chancellor
Angela Merkel and her challenger
Martin Schulz both said that they would seek an end to Turkey's membership talks with the European Union. • Former French President
Nicolas Sarkozy opposed the entrance of Turkey in the European Union, arguing the country was too big, too poor, and too culturally different to join the EU. Former President
Francois Hollande, however, reaffirmed support for Turkey in 2012, intending to smooth the way for French companies seeking contracts in Turkey. Franco-Turkish relations remained tense after Turkey imposed a law in 2009 that criminalised
recognition of the
killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915 as a
genocide; a move
France's Constitutional Court reversed, in turn, causing French firms' share of foreign investment in Turkey to shrink from 6% in 2009 to 3% in 2012. Leaders of French infrastructure companies were especially eager to enter the Turkish markets for
nuclear security and rail infrastructure, expected to respectively be worth $40 and $50 billion by 2020.
Timeline • In September 1999, following a thaw in Greek-Turkish relations after mutual help in earthquake relief, Greek Foreign Minister
George Papandreou told
The Guardian "Greece not only wants to see Turkey in the EU, it wants to be pulling the cart of a European Turkey", and that it was within his nation's interests as a way to avoid "continual conflict and tension with the block and European standards". • / In November 2002, then-French President and then-President of the European Convention
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing said in an interview with the French newspaper
Le Monde, "Turkey is an important country close to Europe, but it is not a European country. It is not a European country because its capital is not in Europe and 95% of its population lives outside Europe." he said. Estaing continued as follows: "The Union should now focus on internal financial problems and the construction of European harmony instead of expansion. Those who most support Turkey joining the Union are actually opponents of the European Union. In fact, the majority of European Council members are against Turkey joining, but the Turks were never told this. Turkey joining the European Union would mean the end of the European Union." • The 2005 EU Progress Report stated that: "On 29 July 2005, Turkey signed the Additional Protocol adapting the EC Turkey Association Agreement to the accession of 10 new countries on 1 May 2004. At the same time, Turkey issued a declaration stating that the signature of the Additional Protocol did not amount to recognition of the Republic of Cyprus. On 21 September, the EU adopted a counter-declaration indicating that Turkey's declaration was unilateral, did not form part of the Protocol, and had no legal effect on Turkey's obligations under the Protocol. The EU declaration stressed that recognition of all Member States was a necessary component of the accession process. It also underlined the need for supporting the efforts of the Secretary General of the UN to bring about a comprehensive settlement of the Cyprus problem which would contribute to peace, stability and harmonious relations in the region." • In November 2006, the European Commission members decided to suspend parts of the talks with Turkey regarding accession, as Turkish officials said that they will not open Turkish ports to traffic from the Republic of Cyprus until the EU eases its embargo on Turkish-controlled northern Cyprus. • In 2007, European Commission President
José Manuel Barroso said that Turkey is not ready to join the EU "tomorrow nor the day after tomorrow", but its membership negotiations should continue. He also called on France and other member states to honour the decision to continue accession talks, describing it as a matter of credibility for the Union. • On 28 June 2007, Portuguese State Secretary for European Affairs Manuel Lobo Antunes affirmed that "Turkey should join the EU once it has successfully completed membership talks, which are likely to run for at least a decade." "We think it is important and fundamental that Turkey joins the European Union once it fulfils all the conditions and all the criteria," he said, adding that "
Portugal aims in the next six months to 'put the process on track'." He indicated that "the Italian Parliament will give a 'clear word' when necessary with the 'enormous majority' of the
Berlusconi government, but also with 'the opposition' which it knows it can count on." Berlusconi pledged to "try and win over those EU members resistant to Turkey's application." The French President, who is an outspoken opponent of Turkey's entry to the European Union, did not want to highlight the strong divergence of views on this topic with Swedish Prime Minister
Fredrik Reinfeldt, the French newspaper
Le Monde reported on 28 May 2009. • On 5 April 2009, Spanish Prime Minister
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero stated that "Spain firmly supports Turkey's candidature to enter the EU, provided it meets the necessary requisites." Zapatero told Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan that "Spain's position is 'firm, clear and solid' in favour of Turkey's candidature to enter the European Union." • On 4 November 2009,
David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom, during a visit to Turkey underlined the UK government's support for Turkey's bid to join the European Union, saying: "I am very clear that Turkish accession to the EU is important and will be of huge benefit to both Turkey and the EU." • On 27 July 2010,
David Cameron, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, during a visit to Turkey promised to "fight" for Turkey's membership of the European Union, saying he is "angry" at the slow pace of negotiations. He added that "a European Union without Turkey at its heart is not stronger but weaker... not more secure but less... not richer but poorer." On 22 May 2016, Cameron said that "it is not remotely on the cards that Turkey is going to join the EU any time soon. They applied in 1987. At the current rate of progress they will probably get round to joining in about the year 3000 according to the latest forecasts." • On 23 December 2010, President of the European Council
Herman Van Rompuy he said "Turkish reform efforts have delivered impressive results." He continued "Turkey plays an ever more active role in its neighbourhood. Turkey is also a full-standing member of the G-20, just like five EU countries and the EU itself. In my view, even before an outcome of the negotiations, the European Union should develop a close partnership with the Turkish Republic." • In March 2011, then-Finnish President
Tarja Halonen pledged her country's full support for Turkey's European Union membership process. • On 3 July 2013, at an election rally of the Christian Democrat Party in
Düsseldorf, German Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schäuble stated that Turkey should not join the European Union as it is not part of Europe. • On 7 June 2013, Turkey's Undersecretary of the Ministry of EU Affairs Haluk Ilıcak said "The process means more than the accession. Once the necessary levels are achieved, Turkey is big enough to continue its development without the accession. Our aim is to achieve a smooth accession process." • In 2013,
Czech Republic Prime Minister
Petr Nečas said: "We continue to believe that Turkey should be given the chance to become a full-fledged member of the European Union after it meets all accession criteria". He described Turkey as an important partner to the EU and praised the constructive role it plays in the Middle East region. • In March 2016, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said that democracy and freedom were "phrases" which had "absolutely no value" in Turkey, after calling for journalists, lawyers and politicians to be prosecuted as terrorists. • In July 2016, European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
Federica Mogherini announced that EU membership negotiations would be terminated if the death penalty was reinstated in Turkey. • In August 2016, then-Austrian Chancellor
Christian Kern called for the suspension of full membership negotiations between the EU and Turkey. • In March 2017, in a speech given to supporters in the western Turkish city of Sakarya, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said "my dear brothers, a battle has started between the cross and the half moon" (referring to
Christianity and
Islam respectively) after insulting European government politicians as "Nazis" in the weeks before. The same month, he threatened that Europeans would "not be able to walk safely on the streets" if they kept up banning Turkish ministers from addressing rallies in Europe. European politicians rejected Erdoğan's comments. • In the context of the imminent
Turkish constitutional referendum in April 2017, the Vice President of the
European Parliament,
Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, summarized the state of affairs as this: "In law Turkey is still a candidate, in fact, it is not. Nobody believes in Brussels or in Ankara for that matter that Turkey will eventually join the European Union. And that is why we say it is better to make a new start and put the relationship on a new foundation." • In a TV debate in September 2017, then-German chancellor
Angela Merkel and her then challenger
Martin Schulz both said that they would seek an end to Turkey's membership talks with the European Union. • In December 2017, then-Austrian Chancellor
Sebastian Kurz announced that they were in favor of stopping Turkey's accession negotiations with the European Union. • On 17 July 2018, then-Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, in an interview with the Greek newspaper
Kathimerini, called for ending full membership negotiations between the EU and Turkey and developing relations instead of full membership negotiations. Kurz said: "I have been speaking out for years about developing an honest relationship with Turkey." Kurz continued as follows: "EU membership negotiations with Turkey should be stopped immediately. Turkey has continuously moved away from Europe and its values over the last few years. We should also focus on exploring other forms of cooperation between our neighbors the EU and Turkey." • In September 2023, Austrian Chancellor
Karl Nehammer, in an interview with the German newspaper
Die Welt, called for the termination of full membership negotiations between the EU and Turkey and the development of a new concept within the
relations between the EU and Turkey. • In September 2023, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announced that the European Union was well into a rupture in its
relations with Turkey and that they could part ways, if necessary, during Turkey's European Union membership process. • On 17 December 2024, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in his meeting with President of the European Commission
Ursula von der Leyen, stated that they wanted to open a new page in
EU-Turkey relations, that Turkey's EU accession negotiations were a strategic goal, that the customs union should be updated again, and that visa liberalization negotiations should be resumed. He announced that they expect the EU-Turkey summit to be held as soon as possible. • On 8 May 2025, the European Parliament voted to support the continued freezing of Turkey's accession to the EU due to "the recent democratic backsliding" and "that geographic and geopolitical importance of Turkey wouldn't make up for the democratic backsliding in Turkey". The report, which was passed with 367 votes, stated that Turkey's European Union registration process cannot be restarted under current conditions. Members of the European Parliament also expressed "deep concern" about the deterioration of democratic standards and the disproportionate interventions against peaceful mass protests and the rapid trials without evidence and the increasing pressure on critical voices in Turkey. Political attacks on Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality Mayor and Presidential Candidate
Ekrem İmamoğlu were also evaluated as “political moves to prevent a legitimate opponent from participating in the elections.” == Challenges to Accession ==