Macron’s liberals pile pressure on von der Leyen
Centrists’ numbers are set to drop in the EU election,
but that doesn’t stop them upping the ante on the Commission incumbent.
Ursula von der Leyen's coziness with parties to the
right of her own conservative camp is raising eyebrows in Paris and putting her
in Macron’s crosshairs. |
MARCH 20,
2024 5:29 PM CET
BY ELISA
BRAUN AND EDDY WAX
https://www.politico.eu/article/macrons-liberals-pile-pressure-on-von-der-leyen/
BRUSSELS —
Macron to von der Leyen: Remember who put you in Brussels.
The
European Commission president owes her job in part to French President Emmanuel
Macron after she was slotted into the role with his blessing in 2019. But as
she looks for alliances to shore up her reelection, her coziness with parties
to the right of her own conservative camp is raising eyebrows in Paris and
putting her in Macron’s crosshairs, the EU liberals’ unofficial team captain.
The
tensions with von der Leyen come at a moment when right-to-far-right parties
are expected to win more seats come June and centrist grouping of liberals in
the European Parliament find itself on wobbly turf.
And
pressure is piling up on Macron at home while he battles an increasingly
popular far-right National Rally and his closest ally in Europe, Dutchman Mark
Rutte, looks for an off-ramp to NATO.
Unwilling —
or perhaps unable — to pick a single face for their campaign, with Estonian
Prime Minister Kaja Kallas ruling herself out at the last minute, they unveiled
a relatively unknown trio of MEPs Sandro Gozi, Valérie Hayer and Marie-Agnes
Strack Zimmermann, a German MP who chairs the Bundestag’s defense committee to
lead their campaign.
The
liberals, who are gathering in Brussels on Wednesday to kick-start their
campaign, are far from a cohesive whole. The campaign platform to be launched
Wednesday night is composed of three separate streams: the classical liberal
pan-European grouping of liberal parties ALDE where Rutte has long ruled the
roost, a small Democratic party led by Macron ally François Bayrou and Macron’s
own Renaissance, whose MEPs dominate the European Parliament group.
ALDE
co-president Ilhan Kyuchyuk pushed back, saying: “In most cases Renew Europe
was united [since 2019] and this will continue.”
Every vote counts
Still,
every vote counts for von der Leyen, even from a fractured and fragmented
coalition partner that is firing shots at her.
She will
need a majority of 361 MEPs to back her in a vote later this year if, as is
expected, the European Council nominates her for another five-year term.
And von der
Leyen will need to keep Macron and France on side. Her next term could prove to
be tricky if she fails to listen to Paris’s growing list of grievances.
“We expect
any Commission president not to flirt with extreme forces but to shape the EU
from the political center with pro-Europeans,” said Valérie Hayer, who added
that the future Commission needed to include liberals’ proposals.
But
Europe’s liberals, grouped under the Renew Europe name in the European
Parliament, aren’t packed with too much punch as recent polling indicates they
are on shaky ground, making them a less powerful challenger to von der Leyen.
POLITICO’s
Poll of Polls suggests Renew could drop from its third-placed kingmaker
position in the European Parliament to fourth or even fifth spot in the next
Parliament, behind factions on the right-to-far-right.
Dialing up
the threats to not support von der Leyen could be a way for Renew to remain
relevant and push their priorities for the next term in the Parliament.
“It is
implementation time for defense, competitiveness, Green Deal and a bold
migration policy, this goes hand in hand with investments… Any candidate with
Berlaymont ambition should be aware of those priorities,” said Hayer.
Von der
Leyen’s European People’s Party grouping, conversely, looks likely to emerge as
the largest grouping in the European Parliament once again after the June
election, giving her conservative family the right — as they see it — to
propose her for another term as Commission president.
To be convinced
“For us
it’s not a done deal,” said ALDE co-president Kyuchyuk, referring to her
group’s endorsement of von der Leyen. “This European Commission was successful
on some issues but also had some doubts and hesitations,” he said, pointing to
the Green Deal as an example and calling for the Commission to be more
accountable to MEPs.
Macron’s
man in Brussels Thierry Breton, the European commissioner for the internal
market who reports to von der Leyen, was one of the first to launch a scathing
attack on the European Commission president, questioning the extent of support
she received from her own center-right family.
Though the
public denunciation of his boss provoked consternation among those close to
Macron and even with Macron himself, the message reflected a consensus among
Europe’s centrists, said MEP Sandro Gozi, one of Renew’s top team of three.
“We are in
an electoral campaign, and I think that Thierry Breton stated what was the
reality,” said Gozi, who slammed von der Leyen’s willingness to work with
parties right of the EPP.
“If you ask
me about Ursula von der Leyen, she has been clear in saying she doesn’t want to
build up alliances with [far right’s group] ID, but she has been very ambiguous
on [other far right group] ECR, and she should be much more clear,” said the
Italian MEP, who aims to campaign on Macron’s list in France again.
Romanians
in the grouping have also said they won’t back von der Leyen, accusing her of
turning a blind eye to corruption.
“The truth
is that she doesn’t come from our family,” said a person familiar with Renew’s
campaign, who requested anonymity to speak more freely.
In 2019,
Renew Europe joined a coalition with von der Leyen’s EPP and the Socialists to
pass major pieces of legislation.
Some of
Renew’s MEPs have controversially sided with the EPP when it ranged its forces
against Green Deal laws such as on restoring nature, a sign that for all its
criticism of the EPP’s rightward shift, some liberals are willing to get into
bed with them at crucial moments.
Attacking
von der Leyen for opening a door to populist parties might also come back to
haunt Renew, though. In the Netherlands, the VVD party — a core pillar of ALDE
— has been holding government formation talks with Geert Wilders.
“It was
just coalition talks, they never engaged seriously about it,” said Kyuchyuk.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário