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Official visit by Roberta METSOLA, EP President to Finland Discussion at the Paasikivi Society

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Dear members of the Society, dear friends, it's really good to be back, and by way of anecdote,

I was supposed to come here in 2022 when my flight was delayed,

and I promised Anti that I would be back, and here I am four years later.

It took a little bit of a while, but here I am.

And of course it's so great to be here. I mean, coming back to Helsinki.

Not only because my family lives here and is from here, always feels like coming home.

As many of you know, Finland is part of my life in ways that go well beyond politics.

I know these are not easy times, and I was asked to exchange a little bit with you.

As to what our perspective is from the European Parliament,

if I can put this in a nutshell, first of all, people are worried.

This is a sense that we get from everywhere across the Union that we live in,

and they have a right to be.

We have a war that is being fought on our continent. Energy costs are squeezing families.

The world feels less certain, less predictable than it did even a few years ago.

But what you could expect from me is perhaps a message of fear, but I didn't come to give that. I came to give the opposite.

Because I come with a message of conviction, because I know that Europe, against all odds, has what it takes.

Europe has been here before, not in exactly this form, not with exactly these pressures,

but at the edge of a moment that demands more than caution, more than half measures.

I just came from a meeting with President Stübgen, and he calls this Europe's 1989 moment,

and I believe he is right because just as the fall of the wall demanded bold decisions, so does this time. Small steps will not cut it. If anything, we need giant leaps.

This is why I am here in Finland.

I take it upon myself in order to visit as many Member States on the ground as possible,

to speak with various parts of societies.

Today, I will, after this meet with your Prime Minister, and tomorrow I will visit the Parliament and meet all the representatives of the political groups,

and I'm really happy to see a number of colleagues here from the European Parliament.

Thank you for being here, Mika, Anna Magyar and Sebastian.

I think this week there is particular reason for hope. The people of Hungary have chosen Europe.

It was moving to see those scenes in Budapest young people spontaneously and joyfully waving the European flag,

chanting for a future built on freedom, on democracy,

on the belief that their lives in a way, belong to them.

Those young people have placed their trust in our Europe,

and now it falls to us to show that they were right to place their trust in us, because this is what our Europe is all about.

It is a living idea rooted in liberty,

in the conviction fundamentally that free people can build something together that is worth defending and that is worth passing on. That idea has outlasted.

Empires, it has restored nations from rubble, it has turned ancient rivals into lasting partners,

and it is as vital today as it has ever been.

I look at this country as one that has always seen this world with a particular kind of clarity. There is a reason for that.

1 kilometers of shared border with Russia, the enormous sacrifice made to defend this country's sovereignty and independence,

all of it is woven into how Finland thinks and how Finland plans.

You warned us, Poland warned us,

the Baltic states warned us year after year about who our neighbors were and what they were capable of. We should have listened sooner, very.

Clearly, openly, but today we are listening and we are acting more importantly.

When Russia launched its full scale invasion of Ukraine, many predicted that Europe would not hold.

The most common criticism we would get at the time was that we were too slow,

we were too divided and we were too comfortable.

They told us that Ukraine would fall in days.

We are now in year 5 of Putin's 3 day war.

Far from fracturing, if anything, Europe has come together in ways that would have seemed unimaginable before February 2022.

From the very first days in the European Parliament, specifically, we stood for Ukraine. We pushed for sanctions against Russia.

We are now at the 20th package, urged Europe to take real responsibility for its own security. This is not a given. This was not touched upon before 2022.

If we think about where we were 4 years ago and where we stand today,

Finland and Sweden joining NATO, a decision of historic courage and clarity.

I remember I met my husband in 1999 and the one thing he would say consistently is that some of us are in favor,

but this will probably not happen.

European defense spending has risen by more than 60%.

NATO countries moving towards 5% of GDP on defense, €800 billion mobilized for Europe's defense readiness,

that is a continent that has decided to stand on its own 2 ft. We saw that same resolve on Greenland.

When others signaled that the sovereignty of nations should be treated as negotiable.

As an open question to be revisited by those with the power to do so, Europe did not hesitate. We rallied, we made our position.

Super clear We showed that when Europe chooses to protect and project power, it can.

Not through bluster, not through threats, but through unity, through solidarity, through the simple and powerful act of standing together,

which has always been and always will be Europe's strength.

Mr President, the Arctic is where the next chapter of European security will be written.

Energy routes, critical infrastructure, military presence, the geopolitics of melting ice,

these will be defining contests in the coming decades, and Europe must be ready for them.

We are already seeing that readiness in Finland's leadership of NATO's Arctic sentry operation.

In the recent appointment of Jyrki Katainen as the EU Special Adviser for Arctic relations,

I think this sends exactly the right signal at the right moment,

and Finland's contribution to European defense does not stop at the high north.

Finnish companies like Summa Defense, manufacturing drone systems here and supplying them directly to Ukrainian forces,

these are exactly the kind of defense innovation that Europe needs more of.

So when we talk about strategic autonomy, this is what it would look like in practice, tangibly, concretely. I am a strong supporter.

You can be proud of your country's leaders in Helsinki, in Brussels and Strasbourg, of your President, of your Prime Minister,

your European Commissioner and Executive Vice President and Members of the European Parliament,

all of them making the case every single day for a stronger and more capable Europe.

Finland has always understood something I think that much of the rest of Europe,

and I see this as coming from the opposite end of the continent is still learning that security and prosperity are two sides of the same coin. And that nowhere.

It is clearer than that right now than in the Middle East.

Our thoughts are, first and foremost with the people of the region who have suffered enormously and continue to,

but the consequences of that instability are reaching well beyond the region, they are pushing energy costs higher.

Things will become more difficult before they become easier.

They are squeezing families and businesses across our continent.

We are relieved that a ceasefire has been established and we are clear that all sides must act in good faith,

and I know that tomorrow President Stub will be joining other Heads of State and Government to find a way forward,

to deescalate and to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and Europe is needed around that table.

The transatlantic relationship,

and I will switch now has been the foundation of the free world for 8 years.

And our first point is that we want to preserve it.

We will work to preserve it, but not at any cost. There has to be trust. There has to be mutual respect.

These things we have been very clear about, and we will continue to be.

Bill Clinton once said of his country that people around the world have always been more impressed by the power of our example than by the example of our power.

While these words were meant for an American audience,

I think they also describe something we in Europe have always understood about ourselves.

The power of our example is our founding logic.

It is how we rebuild this continent from the ruins of the worst war in human history.

It is how we extended the circle of freedom, generation after generation.

It is how we project who we are and what we stand for,

not through force, but through the strength of what we have built together.

Our Europe has transformed countries,

it has changed lives and has opened up horizons that a generation ago would have seemed impossible.

We have done this before in harder circumstances, with fewer resources against longer odds. And we are doing it now.

We just have to be prepared for it.

We have to be united in doing it.

I think those young people on the streets waving European flags in our neighborhood and in our immediate Member States were right to choose Europe,

and now it's our turn to deliver it for them.

Media information
ID I-287462
Date 16/04/2026
Duration 12:02
Languages Original
Personalities Roberta Metsola
Location Helsinki (Finland), 16h45 / 17h45 (local time)
Institution European Parliament
Views 32

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