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31 August 2014

European Voice comment: Six things to know about the EU's decision on top jobs


EV offers comment on the top-jobs process and decisions.

(1): The grand coalition rules, OK.
The two-fold decision was another triumph for the grand coalition of the parties of the centre-right and centre-left that has been extended from the German government in Berlin into the EU’s institutions in Brussels.
The centre-right European People’s Party, having secured the appointment of their candidate, Jean-Claude Juncker, to the presidency of the European Commission, accepted that the choice of the high representative would fall to the centre-left Party of European Socialists. That the person chosen was Federica Mogherini is chiefly a reflection of the pre-eminence of Matteo Renzi within the PES. Renzi almost messed things up in July – he misjudged the extent of the doubts about Mogherini and thought he could impose his will on the European Council. That the Mogherini candidacy was rescued owes something to Herman Van Rompuy’s skills and also to a re-assertion of the grand coalition’s dynamics.
A Tusk candidacy for the presidency – long whispered about, though often in tones of disbelief – was sufficiently important to the EPP to guarantee their co-operation with the PES on the counter-balancing the Mogherini candidacy. Note that the liberals, whatever their importunate claims, have been left empty-handed for the moment, though they will be hoping for sops in the distribution of Commission portfolios.
(2): Approval for European commissioners will be smoother than in the recent past.
(3): Last time round was worse.
The decision made by the European Council on Saturday night on the European Union’s top jobs was a vindication of Van Rompuy’s tactics. Van Rompuy decided back in mid-July that discussion of the appointments was not ripe for a decision and he convened an extra summit – for a Saturday at the end of August.
(4): Tusk is without comparable precedent.
When the role of permanent president of the European Council was created by the Lisbon treaty, there was much debate about whether the person appointed would become the embodiment and public face of the EU, about whether the president would prove to be a rival to national leaders, or become merely the poodle of the EU’s bigger member states. There were doubts about how the interests of the smaller member states would be safeguarded.
In the event, the European Council opted for Herman Van Rompuy, who was prime minister of Belgium, rather than for, say, Tony Blair or Felipe González.
This time round, the European Council has appointed as its president a serving prime minister from a large member state – a country that matters demographically, economically and militarily in Europe and that is a close ally of the United States.
Tusk has been an important figure on the world stage since his election as prime minister in 2007. He is arguably the person of highest standing ever appointed to head an EU institution. (Note that Romano Prodi was an ex-prime minister before he became Commission president. The prime ministerships of Belgium, Luxembourg and Portugal do not compare.)
(5): Languages are not everything.
The most intriguing unknown about this two-pronged appointment is not how Mogherini will work out (the precedent of Ashton suggests that in a half-formed state EU foreign policy will muddle along, albeit unsatisfactorily). The fresher question is how the appointment of Tusk might change the presidency of the European Council, which, like the foreign policy role, is still in its adolescence.
The choice of Tusk has been accompanied by a preoccupation in Brussels with his linguistic skills (or lack of them) – a preoccupation, it has to be said, that appears to be shared by Tusk himself. The doubts about his ability in English (and inability in French) have even prompted some to suggest that Juncker might be given more opportunity to speak for the European Union.
At one level, the linguistic skills do matter (think of Romano Prodi’s communication failures as Commission president), but there is more to making a success of the presidency of the European Council than speaking several languages.
Tusk himself was at pains after his appointment to stress that he would be acting in the interests of all member states, and that his Polish background would be left behind. He stressed the need for the president to build compromises and rightly paid tribute to Van Rompuy as “a master” of such work.
If Tusk can combine his experience as a prime minister with this awareness of what the EU needs, and if he can exploit the respect that government leaders have for him (not least Angela Merkel), then he might set an intriguing precedent for leadership of an EU institution. (They have usually been charisma-free.)
(6): The honeymoon is already over.
At this stage, what can only be guessed at is how to weigh Tusk’s stature against Mogherini’s comparative inexperience. There was much discussion beforehand of how the European Council could achieve a balanced ticket. Could its choice balance the politics of left and right? Could it satisfy east-west, north-south? And – as the Ukraine crisis intensified – would it be hard or soft on Russia?

The European Council has taken a calculated gamble. If Mogherini lives down to the expectations of her detractors, and if Tusk is a diminished figure outside Warsaw, then the gamble fails. The omens are hardly propitious. The two will take up office in the midst of Europe’s most important foreign policy crisis for many years – armed conflict in Ukraine – with the European economy threatening to nose-dive into a deflationary slump, and the United Kingdom heading towards an incendiary general election that could unleash another wave of Euroscepticism. The pair will not have an easy ride.

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