Europe's Leaders Launch Fight for EU Top Jobs
EU leaders
are heading to Brussels to assess the post-election political landscape and
consider rival candidates for the EU's top jobs.
The haggling
over jobs - including a replacement for EU Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker - is likely to last several months.
The UK is
involved in the discussions.
For the
first time the big centrist blocs no longer have a majority. The European Parliament
elections boosted nationalists, the Greens and liberals.
It leaves
the EU more fragmented, so finding consensus may be harder than in the past.
The talks
over dinner on Tuesday may not even result in a shortlist of candidates.
It is more
an occasion for leaders to assess the political mood and explore possible
combinations, to ensure a stable balance of political opinions, geography and
gender.
UK Prime
Minister Theresa May will participate, but Brussels sources say there will be
little or no discussion of Brexit.
The other
top EU officials to be replaced later this year are: European Council President
Donald Tusk (Polish); European Central Bank President Mario Draghi (Italian)
and EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini (Italian).
After
lengthy negotiations, the new top officials will take up their posts on 1
November, except for the new European Council chief, who starts on 1 December.
French
President Emmanuel Macron - a liberal - met Spain's socialist Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez in Paris on Monday. Mr Macron wants his En Marche movement (LREM)
to be at the heart of a new centrist alliance in Europe.
In 2014 Mr
Juncker was chosen to head the Commission as the centre-right European People's
Party (EPP) candidate, after the EPP had won the election.
But it is a
much tougher challenge this time for the EPP's candidate Manfred Weber - a
German - after his bloc shrank from 217 seats to 180 in the 751-seat
parliament. He has the backing of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Party
leaders are also meeting in Brussels in an effort to agree on a
"Spitzenkandidat" - lead candidate - for Mr Juncker's job. The
Commission enforces EU rules and drafts EU laws, so it is the most coveted post
in the 28-nation bloc.
French
President Emmanuel Macron - a liberal - met Spain's socialist Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez in Paris on Monday. Mr Macron wants his En Marche movement (LREM)
to be at the heart of a new centrist alliance in Europe.
In 2014 Mr
Juncker was chosen to head the Commission as the centre-right European People's
Party (EPP) candidate, after the EPP had won the election.
But it is a
much tougher challenge this time for the EPP's candidate Manfred Weber - a
German - after his bloc shrank from 217 seats to 180 in the 751-seat
parliament. He has the backing of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Party
leaders are also meeting in Brussels in an effort to agree on a
"Spitzenkandidat" - lead candidate - for Mr Juncker's job. The
Commission enforces EU rules and drafts EU laws, so it is the most coveted post
in the 28-nation bloc.
he EU has
committed to balance gender, political affiliation and geography when it fills
its top jobs.
The leaders
of the 28 member states will have to compromise with each other, and with MEPS
who get to approve the choice. But this morning the European Parliament watered
down its demands for the selection of the president of the European Commission,
issuing a statement which says the winner only had to be someone "who made
his/her programme and personality known prior to the elections, and engaged in
a European-wide campaign".
That
potentially opens the door to candidates who weren't strictly candidates
before, such as Denmark's Margarete Vestager or maybe even the Chief Brexit
negotiator, Michel Barnier.
The previous
front-runner Manfred Weber, of the centre-right European People's Party, admits
that his political family lost seats at the election which weakens his claim on
the job.
There are
also hints that the European Parliament will focus its efforts on defining the
EU's future direction, rather than seeking a powerful role in picking its
personnel. A lot of names will come and go and rise and fall before the process
eventually comes to an end later this year.
Mr Juncker,
an EU veteran and ex-Prime Minister of Luxembourg, won in 2014 despite
opposition from the UK and Hungary.
But Mr
Macron and some other EU leaders are sceptical about the Spitzenkandidat
process. The final choices for the top posts still have to be approved by the
European Parliament.
Many
nationalists and Eurosceptics - still a minority in the parliament - reject the
process, seeing it as an establishment stitch-up.
Mr Weber's
rivals include centre-left candidate Frans Timmermans, from the Netherlands,
and liberal candidate Margrethe Vestager, from Denmark.
Because of
the new clout of liberals and Greens, Ms Vestager - famous for legal battles
with US tech giants - might be seen as a compromise candidate.
Countdown to EU top
jobs:
May-June: Consultations
between EU leaders and parliamentary groups
20-21 June: European
Council decisions
July: European
Parliament votes on nominee for Commission president
1 November: New
Commission president takes office, along with new High Representative and ECB
president
1 December: New
European Council President takes office
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe-
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