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What are the key
imperatives ahead? How can von der Leyen make the most of the remainder
of her mandate to help the EU advance in this new era (Zeitenwende)?
EPC analysts from across all programmes compare and contrast the
initial 6 policy priorities against their actual delivery and provide
recommendations for the second half of the Commission’s term.
Priority 1: A European Green Deal
The
European Commission has made a commendable effort to lay the foundation
for real change, but should now focus on turning goals into action. The
rationale for the Green Deal has never been stronger.
Priority 2: A Europe fit for the digital age
The
Commission should shift from a catch-up mentality to offering
anticipatory governance while continuously expanding the EU’s digital
infrastructure.
Priority 3: An economy that works for people
The
Commission must move beyond an emergency management mindset and provide
bold, long-term solutions. Simplifying fiscal rules and establishing
guarantees for a growth-friendly public debt reduction should top its
immediate to-do list. In addition, it should make a greater effort to
achieve its social targets in the European Pillar of Social Rights.
Priority 4: A stronger Europe in the world
A
significant institutional redesign will likely be needed if the EU,
including the ‘geopolitical Commission’, is to emerge as a credible
player on the world stage. Redefining the EU’s engagement with its
neighbours also impels a general re-evaluation of enlargement policy
based on a workable model and real political support from member states.
As for the Union’s newest external neighbour, the Commission
must continue to de-escalate and depoliticise subsequent flare-ups with
the UK.
Priority 5: Promoting our European way of life
The Commission must not lose sight of the EU asylum and migration acquis.
The Commission’s proposals for a New Pact on Migration, presented two
years ago, remain gridlocked by the political disputes on solidarity and
responsibility-sharing in the allocation of asylum seekers across
member states.
In addition, the Commission has laid the
foundation for a European Health Union, with proposals to extend the
mandates of the European Medicines Agency and the European Centre for
Disease Prevention and Control and establish the Health and Emergency
Response Authority. Proposals should continue to be put forward to
become a reality and not be subject to major delays.
Priority 6: A new push for European democracy
European
democracy is suffering. The Commission must react to new threats and
adapt to the changing power balance in the EU – and the world – caused
by disruptive illiberal voices.
More broadly, von der Leyen’s
promise to renew the Commission’s relationship with the other EU
institutions has not transpired. Going forward, the Commission should
develop continuous interinstitutional coordination on not just
international negotiations but also all issues of key strategic
importance for the EU.
The von der Leyen Commission must
continue to pursue its initial key priorities. However, it will now have
to do so through the prism of the Zeitenwende currently
underway. Following the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine, the
entire Union now lives and operates in a new era. The EU and its member
states must make a choice: opt for a joint future or watch the old
continent drift into fragmentation and irrelevance, unable to defend its
own interests.
Moving ambitiously ahead will only be possible if
the Commission is ready to open new frontiers and daring enough to
present proposals that might have been taboo previously. It is the only
way to ensure that Zeitenwende translates into adequate policy
choices and substantial reform of the Union’s governance structures.
This is not the time to be cautious, and history will surely judge the
von der Leyen Commission.
Read the full paper here.