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24 Jan, 2026 13:35

Austrian chancellor opposes fast-tracked EU accession for Ukraine

The rules should be the same for everyone, Christian Stocker has said
Austrian chancellor opposes fast-tracked EU accession for Ukraine

Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker has rejected the idea of Ukraine being provided with fast-tracked accession to the EU.

Kiev was granted EU candidate status in 2022, several months after the escalation of the conflict with Moscow. Earlier this week, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban claimed that a confidential document presented at a summit in Brussels envisages Ukraine becoming a member by 2027 and getting $1.6 trillion in funding from the bloc by 2040.

In his interview with the Swiss paper Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ) on Friday, Stocker was asked about the possibility of the EU taking in Ukraine “right now” as the membership could serve as an important security guarantee for Kiev as part of the peaceful settlement of the crisis.

The chancellor replied by saying that he believes that Ukraine “can be an asset” to the EU. However, he stressed that it has the same options of joining the bloc as Western Balkan countries such as Montenegro and Albania.

”I’m not a fan of the fast lane. The admission criteria must be met. Basically, I believe the conditions should be the same for everyone,” he said.

When asked if his stance meant that EU membership for Kiev would be “unrealistic for years to come,” Stocker replied by saying that “this depends on what you mean by it. Austria has proposed a model of gradual integration.”

“By giving candidate countries gradual access, for example, to the internal market and other policy areas, we are creating further incentives to move closer together and resolutely pursue the path of reform,” he explained.

On Friday, Orban accused Kiev of meddling in Hungarian elections and insisted that “in the next hundred years Hungary will not have a parliament that would vote for Ukrainians to join the EU.”

Moscow, which has categorically rejected Kiev’s membership in NATO, does not have similar reservations regarding the EU. Russian President Vladimir Putin said in September that “Ukraine has set itself the goal… of joining the EU. I repeat, it is Ukraine’s legitimate choice - how to build its international relations.”

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