Considering most of those countries were concerned about user's rights, I expect a significant deadlock, because the film and music industries who were in favor of Article 13
dropped their support like a hot potato the
instant the EU inserted even a semblance of safeguards to not completely fuck over users and internet platforms. The legacy entertainment industries want a stranglehold over the internet, and any way of getting out of paying exorbitant licensing fees is a non-starter for them.
Article 11 is another kettle of fish, though Google has already shown what their gameplan is for dealing with it -
remove links to news articles in their search results entirely, and basically cripple Google News in the EU. It's something they've done multiple times before in response to other 'link taxes', and each time news publishers panic, because they know they can't survive without Google, so they either beg to get rid of the tax or demand some kind of law somehow mandating that Google restore the links or some nonsense.
While Article 13 and 11 aren't outright dead, this move just confirmed that it'll be significantly harder to implement, especially Article 13, which is too draconian for several countries, but fixing that problem will cause its supporters to flip the fuck out and say they'd rather have nothing than a version of it with any kind of safe harbours.