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Reykjavik redux: Iceland reopens EU debate {Iceland to hold referendum 29.Aug.2026 on joining the EU}
Euractiv ^ | 24.May.2026 | David Mac Dougall

Posted on 05/27/2026 4:54:00 AM PDT by Cronos

With less than 100 days until Iceland votes on whether to restart EU membership talks, the island remains deeply divided, with both camps only now beginning to mobilise their campaigns ahead of the summer ballot.

The national referendum on joining the EU takes place on 29 August and the two intractable opposing political sides have yet to fully make their case.

On the “yes” side: a government coalition that sees a geopolitical imperative for EU membership and on the other side, the “no” campaign sees a loss of sovereignty, and worse, loss of control over Iceland’s agriculture and fishing industries.

The polls, like the country, are split. A recent survey in the Morgunblaðið daily newspaper found a narrow majority in favour of continuing EU accession talks, 52% to 48%; while a poll in the business weekly Viðskiptablaðið asking whether Iceland should join the EU found 54% against and 46% in favour.

“Public support for continuing the negotiations has actually gone down since the referendum was announced in March,” said Maximilian Conrad, a professor who teaches European integration and political theory at the University of Iceland.

“Voters want to know what is in the membership package, what’s in it for Iceland.”

Campaigning begins

The “no” campaign got off to a brisk start with a flurry of supportive columns in friendly newspapers. The “yes” campaign has been waiting to get recent municipal elections out of the way before cranking into action.

“It is not in our interests to be part of the EU,” Guðlaugur Þór Þórðarson, who was Iceland’s foreign minister from 2017 to 2021, told Euractiv.

His conservative Independence Party is not only staunchly against EU membership, but also against even discussing the prospect of joining.

“It’s no secret what it means to be a member of the EU,” he says, reeling off a well-rehearsed list of areas where his side of the campaign says Iceland would be worse-off. He argued that Iceland would lose significant legislative and executive powers under EU membership, with EU law and courts overriding national sovereignty.

According to the former minister, Iceland already enjoys most of the EU’s trade advantages through existing agreements, including a bilateral free trade deal with China and broader access via European Free Trade Association agreements such as with India.

Þórðarson highlights the issue of tariffs in particular, claiming that eighty percent of Iceland’s trade deals have “zero tariffs in Iceland” but says “only twenty or twenty-five percent of EU trade deals have zero tariffs.”

The biggest problem area for the “no” campaign centres around agriculture and fisheries.

“We are very strict when it comes to traditional Icelandic agriculture, and it means we can protect those few thousand jobs we have,” Þórðarson said.

“If we were part of the EU that would all be gone,” he said, arguing that EU trade policy is not designed for Icelandic trade policy and it “never will be”.

The ‘yes’ campaign

The “yes” campaign, led by Iceland’s Social Democrat prime minister Kristrún Frostadóttir and her three-party coalition government, also acknowledges that agriculture and fisheries are the most sensitive subjects for voters.

“We cannot escape the fact that Iceland has special circumstances, and we cannot be under the same rules as the rest of the EU for agriculture and import of fresh livestock,” said Dagbjört Hákonardóttir, an MP from the ruling Social Democrats who sits on the Foreign Affairs Committee in Iceland’s Parliament.

“In some cases, derogations are needed, and in some cases the status quo allows for a vivid interpretation of the rules.”

Hákonardóttir pointed out that under the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy, there are special rules for Nordic countries which were brought in after Sweden and Finland joined in 1995.

The CAP rules are adjusted for Arctic regions to take into account short growing seasons and long harsh winters, allow ongoing state subsidies to support farmers, and are intended to counter population decline while maintaining security of supply for domestic food production.

The “yes” campaign argues Icelandic farmers would qualify for special Arctic exemptions under the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy, rather than follow the same rules as producers elsewhere in the bloc.

Fisheries, the “yes” campaign acknowledges, is another very sensitive red line area.

“The EU has a lot to learn from us. We have a huge fisheries zone which would de facto fall under the EU’s Common Fisheries Policy, but we must have the final say on how much fish we are going to be catching and so forth, not the EU,” Hákonardóttir said.

Previous accession talks

A “yes” vote in August would reopen EU accession negotiations suspended in 2013 after talks between Iceland and the bloc stalled under a previous Social Democrat government.

Hákonardóttir said any renewed process would be approached as “a fresh start” with a new negotiating strategy.

Despite the sharp divisions over EU membership, Iceland remains one of the world’s strongest democracies, and consistently scoring among the highest countries for rule of law and civil liberties.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; European Union; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: 666; aliens; badmove; eussr; fourthreich; iceland; rapefugees; thebeast

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Iceland is not a European Union (EU) member, but it is a full participant in both the Schengen Area and the European Economic Area (EEA)

This means that its citizens and citizens of EU countries have seamless border crossings but travelers from non-EU/non-Schengen countries are subject to the biometric passport and registration system at Iceland's borders

Through the EEA Agreement, Iceland implements most EU internal market laws, granting its citizens the freedom to live, work, and trade across the EU block

The Icelandic government is scheduled to hold a national referendum on August 29, 2026, to decide whether to officially reopen accession talks with the EU. If voters approve the resumption of negotiations, a second referendum would still be required in the future to finalize full membership

1 posted on 05/27/2026 4:54:00 AM PDT by Cronos
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To: Cronos

Iceland should declare a "minimum 60% threshold" for a referendum to be valid and make voting on the referendum mandatory

2 posted on 05/27/2026 4:55:33 AM PDT by Cronos (Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.)
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To: Cronos

Why vote yourself into authoritarian rule by unelected leftists?


3 posted on 05/27/2026 5:00:41 AM PDT by MtnClimber (For photos of scenery, wildlife and climbing, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber

...and the EU can get busy filling up Iceland with “refugees”.


4 posted on 05/27/2026 5:05:17 AM PDT by Kriggerel ("All great truths are hard and bitter, but lies... are sweeter than wild honey" (Ragnar Redbeard))
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To: Cronos

Iceland is fortunate to be somewhat isolated and largely immune from illegals taking over the place like much of the EU and the UK, stay that way.


5 posted on 05/27/2026 5:09:34 AM PDT by quantim (Victory is not relative, it is absolute.)
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To: Cronos

That would be like hopping aboard the Titanic after it hit the Iceberg.


6 posted on 05/27/2026 5:14:31 AM PDT by FLT-bird
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To: Cronos
It's horrible. Iceland has voted no already, so has Switzerland, and Norway. Sweden voted no to the Euro. And Britain voted to get out of the EU.

But the dictatorial statists in Brussels and their henchmen in the still relatively free countries never give up. Re-votes after re-votes. But once you vote "yes" there will be no more votes. Britain is the one major exception.

There is only one thing that will make us free:

Unio Europæa delendam est!

7 posted on 05/27/2026 5:16:50 AM PDT by ScaniaBoy (Part of the Right Wing Research & Attack Machine)
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To: ScaniaBoy

You’ll be sorry!


8 posted on 05/27/2026 5:37:16 AM PDT by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?)
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To: MtnClimber

> Why vote yourself into authoritarian rule by unelected leftists? <

Yeah, it’s kind of like an unwise animal going for the bait in a trap.

Yummy bait. But the trap’s iron jaws are life-ending.


9 posted on 05/27/2026 5:39:35 AM PDT by Leaning Right
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To: MtnClimber

They already belong to the EEFT and signed up to Schengen


10 posted on 05/27/2026 6:11:58 AM PDT by Cronos (Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.)
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To: Cronos

Start building mosques now


11 posted on 05/27/2026 6:26:03 AM PDT by silverleaf (“Inside Every Progressive Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out” —David Horowitz)
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To: Cronos

Don’t do it, Iceland. The European Union is all take and no give.


12 posted on 05/27/2026 7:46:09 AM PDT by libertylover (The HBM (Has Been Media) is almost all AGENDA-DRIVEN and HATE-DRIVEN, not-truth driven)
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To: quantim

No place is so immune.


13 posted on 05/27/2026 11:47:37 AM PDT by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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This David Mac Dougall fellow boasts on his X profile that he “(c)an be found mostly on Bluesky”, the ultra-lefty site.
14 posted on 05/27/2026 11:51:50 AM PDT by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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To: Cronos

Maybe we should bundle the deal with Greenland and get a two for one.


15 posted on 05/27/2026 2:55:51 PM PDT by Eastern Shore Virginian (Yea, I sometimes gild the lily.)
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