David Cameron tries to stop Jean-Claude Juncker
getting EU top job
Christian
Democrats claim mandate for Juncker to head commission as nominee of
parliament's largest caucus
Ian Traynor in Brussels
The Guardian, Tuesday 27 May 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/27/david-cameron-jean-claude-juncker-eu-top-job
As national heads of government held a Brussels summit to
consider their options after a tumultuous European election that was tantamount
to a vote of no confidence in many of the leaders, Cameron attacked the EU as
being "too big, too bossy, too interfering".
The fallout from the weekend elections
began to hit politics across the continent when a senior member of the German
government labelled France 's
Front National (FN) "fascist", a description that was echoed by a
senior member of the commission, following the FN's rout of the mainstream
parties in the ballot in France .
Europe's Christian Democrats emerged as the
biggest caucus in the new parliament and the main parliamentary leaders on
Tuesday claimed that as a mandate for their contender, Jean-Claude Juncker, the
former prime minister of Luxembourg ,
to be nominated as next head of the commission, a choice vehemently opposed by
Cameron.
The parliamentary leaders demanded that the
summit rubber stamp that nomination. Cameron was joined by the Hungarian and
Swedish prime ministers in rejecting Juncker.
"Europe
cannot shrug off theses results. We need an approach that recognises that
Europe should concentrate on what matters, on growth and jobs and not try and
do so much," said Cameron. "We need an approach that recognises that Brussels has got too big,
too bossy, too interfering. We need more for nation states. It should be nation
states wherever possible and Europe only where
necessary. Of course we need people running these organisations that really
understand that and can build a Europe that is
about openness, competitiveness and flexibility, not about the past."
In the past 48 hours, Cameron has phoned
several leaders, including Angela Merkel of Germany , in an attempt to build a
"stop Juncker" coalition. Merkel hedged her bets while declaring that
Juncker was her favoured candidate.
"Jean-Claude Juncker is our top
candidate," she said. "But firstly it is about content. We know we
can't manage this alone, but need a coalition."
Parliamentary leaders of five of the seven
main voting blocs insisted that Juncker be charged with trying to cobble
together a majority supporting him as president of the commission. But it is up
to the national leaders, not the parliament, to propose a new commission
president and Tuesday night's summit was expected to ignore the pressure for
now.
The parliament's move represented the first
gambit in what promises to be an exhausting protracted battle between rival EU
institutions over who gets to decide the next commission president.
The Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orban,
said Juncker could "definitely not" get the job. Cameron was also
supported by the Swedish leader, Frederik Reinfeldt. But Cameron cannot veto
the choice, which is carried by the majority.
The battle could run for months. The
outcome may depend on Merkel.
The session was expected to shelve the
issue until another summit at the end of next month and to focus instead on the
elections aftermath and policy priorities for the new legislature.
Cameron and the French president, François
Hollande, led their parties to historic defeats at the hands of the extreme
right in Britain and France and
appeared to be in a weak position at the summit following the disastrous
outcome.
Recrimination and anxiety among the EU's
elite surfaced particularly over developments in France .
Speaking at a conference in Berlin , Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister
and one of the most influential politicians in the EU, deplored the outcome of
the European election in France
where Marine Le Pen's FN made its biggest breakthrough to win the ballot with
25% of the vote.
"A quarter of the electorate voted not
for a rightwing party but for a fascist, extremist party," said Schäuble.
It is not clear how the remarks will be
received in France .
Relations between Paris and Berlin
have been frosty since Hollande was elected president two years ago, with much
of the French elite bridling at the perceived hegemony of Berlin at the height of the euro crisis. Le
Pen has previously gone to court in France seeking to ban her party
being labelled "fascist". She lost.
Le Pen's current ascendancy contrasts with
the dire state of the mainstream parties in France . The leader of the Gaullist
centre-right UMP, Jean-François Copé, resigned on Tuesday due to sleaze
allegations and the party appears to be in meltdown, while Hollande's governing
socialists sank to 14% in the European election, their worst ever performance.
The attack on the FN was taken up by
Viviane Reding, the vice-president of the European commission. Asked by a Swiss
television station whether the FN's triumph imperilled democracy in Europe , she responded: "It is absolutely dangerous,
like all fascism."
While neo-fascists from Greece , Hungary
and Germany won seats in the
Strasbourg parliament, the far right also scored
dramatic victories in Britain
and Denmark and did well in Austria .
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