Von der Leyen takes shots on chin in vaccine
mess
Missteps in vaccine rollout weaken Commission
president’s standing among national leaders and members of her own college.
Von der Leyen faces a deficit of trust |
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN, JACOPO BARIGAZZI AND MAÏA DE LA BAUME
February 7,
2021 7:02 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/von-der-leyen-vaccine-europe-coronavirus/
Suddenly, VDL stands for Very Damaged Leader.
Two weeks
of turmoil over the EU’s mishandled coronavirus vaccine strategy has weakened
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in the two institutions that
matter most to her ability to carry on effectively as the top boss in Brussels.
In the
European Council, among the heads of state and government who appointed her,
von der Leyen faces an erosion of confidence. Some leaders now fear they
relinquished too much control over procuring the vaccines needed to end the
pandemic and reopen economies. Even heads who are publicly backing the EU’s
joint-purchase plan admit it has been too slow and fallen far short.
In the
Commission, among the 26 college members working under her — whose votes on EU
policy are, theoretically, equal to her own — von der Leyen faces a deficit of
trust amid allegations that she and her top aides are too controlling and
insular. Some, like Irish Commissioner Mairead McGuinness, felt especially
burned after being left in the dark about an initially botched vaccine export
control regulation.
How serious
or lasting the damage to von der Leyen remains to be seen. Some EU officials
and diplomats predict that she will find herself reined in much more tightly by
the Council. As national leaders face public outrage over the slow vaccine
rollout, they may have little appetite to grant the Commission greater
authority on health policy, as it has requested, or on anything else.
Exactly how
and why the Commission stumbled so badly on vaccines will be discussed during a
European Council tele-summit later this month. But one senior official said the
mood had changed dramatically since the leaders’ last video conference on
January 21, when they expressed concern about the slow pace of procurement but
also full support for the Commission’s efforts.
“They had
the backing of the 27,” the senior official said. “Days later, they have lost a
lot of leaders — openly and less openly — along the way.” The official said
some leaders felt they no longer had a grip on the situation. “We have to take
back control of this system we have put in place,” the senior official said.
“Otherwise, we risk losing the confidence of our citizens.”
The
official said that von der Leyen had come in for criticism, in particular, over
her failure to consult with capitals, especially Dublin, on the proposed export
ban regulation. An initial version of the regulation set off a political
firestorm because it triggered an emergency override of the Brexit Withdrawal
Agreement’s sensitive rules regarding the Northern Ireland border. Von der
Leyen reversed course and dropped the override but the mistake seriously dented
her credibility.
“If you
take an important decision like this you have to consult your member states,”
the senior official said.
Like
McGuinness, and many commissioners, Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief Brexit
negotiator who during his four years battling London became a walking symbol of
EU27 solidarity, was also blindsided by the override attempt. He quickly spoke
out loudly and forcefully against it.
“That
incident has weakened von der Leyen, even though it is in the member states’
interests not to weaken her more,” a Commission official close to Barnier
said.
In a bid to
contain the fallout, von der Leyen met behind closed doors last week with
political groups in the European Parliament — the EU institution with the power
to oust her — and delivered a series of vague mea culpas, in which she accepted
responsibility but did not explain specifically what went wrong with the Brexit
override. She acknowledged that she and other officials had failed to
anticipate the myriad difficulties vaccine manufacturers would face in scaling
up production.
Speaking to
MEPs, and in two group interviews with reporters, von der Leyen said that in
the end, it was all on her. “Whatever in the Commission is being done or
decided, I have the full responsibility for,” she said in an interview with 10
news organizations including POLITICO.
In another
interview, von der Leyen urged waiting until the end of her five-year mandate
to judge her successes and failures, and she similarly has urged patience on
assessing the vaccine program. “We should sum up what the delivery is or what
the achievements and the downsides were when we’re done with the whole
process,” she said.
Many
national leaders are reluctant to criticize von der Leyen, or Brussels,
publicly — partly because they are, in fact, von der Leyen’s bosses and therefore
share responsibility, and partly because they do not want to embolden
euroskeptics seeking to damage the EU.
“We should
not shoot ourselves in our feet” a senior EU diplomat said. “What happened was
certainly a mistake, and it was admitted,” the diplomat said, referring to the
Brexit override issue. “But we are all on the same boat, we all need vaccines
to be delivered quickly and this is the clear priority for all of us … let’s
turn this page quickly and move on.”
Overall, EU
countries, especially smaller ones, remain strongly supportive of von der
Leyen’s effort to keep the EU unified on vaccine purchases and on their
response to the pandemic in general, including border controls and COVID
testing standards. National leaders, however, have made little secret of their
disappointment about the lack of sufficient vaccine doses.
Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who often seeks domestic advantage at the expense
of Brussels, accused the Commission of slowing the vaccine purchases by being
tightfisted.
“The
Brussels vaccine procurement is progressing slowly,” Orbán told state-owned
Kossuth Rádió, on Friday morning. “My benevolent reading of this is that it was
important for the Brussels bureaucrats that we get vaccines as cheaply as
possible, which is understandable.” But he said citizens would prefer to pay
more to get the shots faster.”
“For us,
who are not Brussels bureaucrats but Hungarians, and we live here, and the sons
of the different nations who organized in the union, for us the money is not
irrelevant, but secondary compared to life,” he said, adding: “This perhaps is
not as obvious in Brussels as it is here, in Budapest.”
Nevertheless,
in a joint press conference with Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš later in the
day, Orbán said that a political debate on the handling of the crisis should
wait until after the pandemic and that he supported von der Leyen’s work.
Babiš, who had come to Hungary to discuss the country’s experience battling
COVID, said the best vaccines are those that are safe and immediately available
— and that it was important not to make vaccines’ place of origin into a
political question.
Perhaps the
surest sign that von der Leyen is in some trouble came from public expressions
of confidence from German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President
Emmanuel Macron, two of her most reliable supporters whose backing normally can
be taken for granted. But even they did not try to deny that the EU has been
slower to obtain vaccines than hoped.
“On vaccine
production, I think we are in the middle of the battle and in the middle of the
battle we have to fight,” Macron told reporters on Friday, adding that he fully
supported the common purchase program to ensure equity among EU countries.
Later, Macron added: “I want to salute the work of Mrs. von der Leyen and her
European commissioners.”
But even
Macron, in a velvet-gloved punch at Brussels, pronounced himself “very
admiring” of the swifter vaccine efforts in the U.S.
Dutch Prime
Minister Mark Rutte also acknowledged the EU’s shortfall but said all leaders
are struggling to manage the pandemic, himself included. “The Commission is
doing a tremendous job and there was sincere disappointment about the
enormously rapid decline in the numbers of vaccines that we would receive,”
Rutte told reporters in The Hague on Friday. “The Commission really tried to be
diligent in taking the right steps. If I were to be doing a flawless job in the
Netherlands I could comment on the European Commission, but that is not the
case.”
Meanwhile
in the College of Commissioners, where von der Leyen wields ultimate power,
outright rebellion is unlikely but some officials say she is facing pressure to
widen her circle of advisers, and improve communication not just among
commissioners but in her own cabinet.
The two
aides closest to her — chief of staff Björn Seibert and executive
communications adviser Jens-Alexander Flosdorff — are longtime lieutenants who
came with her from Berlin, where she was German defense minister. Some aides
who are not as closely trusted say much of the president’s cabinet is
Balkanized, with information shared on a need-to-know basis.
The
presidential cabinet’s reputation for a tough work environment has in some
cases made it difficult to recruit for positions, including a post as foreign
affairs adviser, which is now filled on an acting basis.
Other
officials suggested that the criticisms of von der Leyen’s working methods were
exaggerated, and that the recent turmoil reflected how the Commission’s role
has shifted in the past decade from the so-called “guardian of the treaties” to
crisis manager requiring fast executive decision-making, including purchasing vaccines
for the entire EU in a pandemic — a responsibility for which the Commission has
little experience, in a situation for which there was no precedent.
Under
pressure to act decisively, in an era of blazing-fast news cycles and
incessantly-twittering political chatter on social media, the president’s
office has far less time to collaborate among the 26 commissioners.
“I’m aware
that a country might be a speedboat and the European Union more of a tanker,
but this is the strength of the European Union,” von der Leyen said in a recent
interview, describing the decision-making challenges on vaccine contracts
during the pandemic. Asked specifically about communication within the college,
the president praised the overall collaboration
“This
college has grown together,” she said. “We have managed so much over the last
year. It’s impressive to see how much we have grown into one team. Just for
this pandemic. I think the number was that we had about 1,500 decisions that
have been taken in the short amount of time and close to 900 emergency
decisions, which of course then the pressure, the time pressure is always very
high. This I acknowledge. And it’s, it’s a never-ending task … to communicate
to all sides.”
The demands
for the Commission to react with such speed have increased substantially since
the 2015 migration crisis, Berlaymont insiders said, and became a new modus
operandi under former President Jean-Claude Juncker and his cabinet chief,
Martin Selmayr, who each had long experience in Brussels. Selmayr knew
particularly well how to sail the proverbial tanker faster than its design
intended, but officials with knowledge of the von der Leyen cabinet’s work
methods said that Seibert during his first two years in Brussels has in fact
relied on seasoned Commission hands. Several officials said that allegations
that von der Leyen was taking orders from Berlin were unfairly exaggerated,
though they acknowledged her long history with Merkel allows more frequent
consultation.
After the
chief executive of AstraZeneca, Pascal Soriot, escalated his battle with the
Commission by giving a public interview insisting that he was not obligated by
contract to produce a set number of vaccine doses but rather to make a “best
effort,” officials said that von der Leyen and her team were under intense
pressure to respond and to exert some control.
EU
officials said the president became convinced that Soriot was lying about
production problems at a plant in Belgium and, in fact, was simply giving
preference to vaccine orders from the U.K. The result was the rushed, and
flawed, export ban regulation. Other officials said they believed von der Leyen
and the Commission had mismanaged the vaccine contracts and had failed to
exercise proper oversight or learn the details of the manufacturing process in
order to police it — essentially that their most serious mistakes happened
behind the scenes.
One EU
official said von der Leyen needed to make some highly public personnel changes
to restore confidence. “We need some sort of discontinuity, it could be an
appointment, a reorganization,” the EU official said. “Something that shows a
difference.”
Philippe
Lamberts, a Belgian member of the European Parliament who is co-leader of the
Greens group, said the Commission missteps were understandable. “Did the
European Commission make mistakes in the handling of the pandemic? Yes of
course, who does not,” Lamberts said. But he said that von der Leyen, the
Commission’s first woman president, was unfairly criticized.
“I find
that there is a gender bias,” Lamberts said. “Now I hear, ‘Well she
centralizes. She’s a control freak.’ When a man does that well it’s strong
leadership, the guy knows where he wants to go. When a lady does that, she’s
basically inept as a leader.”
Some of the
toughest criticism of von der Leyen has come from her home country of Germany,
where the contest to succeed Merkel, von der Leyen’s political patron in their
center-right Christian Democrat Union party, is heating up.
Jens Geier,
a member of the European Parliament who leads the German Social Democrat
delegation, said that the export control regulation was not the first time von
der Leyen’s team had bypassed relevant commissioners in pushing through a major
initiative. Last spring, Geeier said, a senior commission who should have been
involved was cut out of the initial drafting of the EU’s coronavirus rescue
plan.
“This is a
pattern she brought from Berlin,” Geier said. “She keeps things under the
closest control possible, and gives nobody the opportunity to say something, or
be consulted. It is damaging for her credibility because her style of
leadership has caused a serious crisis, and she must draw lessons from it.”
Geier added: “She probably has reasons to rethink her leadership style.”
Lili Bayer,
Rym Momtaz, and Eline Schaart contributed reporting.


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