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Poland's Donald Tusk takes over EU presidency, pushing centre of gravity eastward

Outgoing European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, right, prepares to give incoming European Council President Donald Tusk a bell during a handover ceremony for the European Council Presidency at the EU Council building in Brussels on Monday, Dec. 1, 2014. Poland’s former prime minister Donald Tusk is pushing the EU’s center of political gravity eastward by taking over the EU Presidency from Belgium’s Herman Van Rompuy. Monday’s transition ceremony highlighted the increasing power of Poland within the 28-nation EU and further shift from a west European economic association to a strong political body uniting some 500 million people from Britain to the borders of Russia in the east. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)
Original Publication Date December 01, 2014 - 6:00 AM

BRUSSELS - Former Polish prime minister Donald Tusk is pushing the European Union's centre of political gravity eastward by taking over the EU presidency from Belgium's Herman Van Rompuy.

Monday's transition ceremony highlighted the increasing power of Poland within the 28-nation EU, and the bloc's ongoing shift from a western European economic association half a century ago to a strong political body uniting some 500 million people from Britain to the borders of Russia.

Like Van Rompuy before him, Tusk will be in charge of EU summits of government leaders who meet about four times a year to set out long-term goals or deal with short-term crises like the financial problems of the past years and the fighting in Ukraine this year.

With unemployment still hovering around record levels and underscoring a deep economic divide in the EU, Tusk said Europeans "need ruthless determination to end the economic crisis."

As an eastern European he has long kept an eye on Russia and sees the conflict in Ukraine and testy relations with Moscow, especially for nearby states like the Baltic nations, as a key challenge during his tenure.

"Europe has to secure its borders and support those in the neighbourhood who share our values," Tusk said. In standing up to Russia, Tusk has a key ally in the United States and he said the trans-Atlantic relationship is second to none in international politics despite the acrimony over revelations of surveillance by the U.S. National Security Agency of European allies.

"The year ahead will be crucial," Tusk said. "Relations between Europe and the United States are the backbone of the community of democracies."

President Barack Obama called Tusk to congratulate him on his first day of the job, the White House said in a statement Monday evening.

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Follow Raf Casert on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/rcasert

News from © The Associated Press, 2014
The Associated Press

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