Ursula von der Leyen’s second term depends on new
‘frenemies’
Vulnerable European Commission president will again
need votes from ideological rivals
Andy Bounds
and Alice Hancock in Brussels APRIL 17 2024
https://www.ft.com/content/81340ed3-effb-4033-96bc-3110c6c8f123
Ursula von
der Leyen needed a little help from her political foes to secure her first term
as president of the European Commission.
With some
lawmakers in her own camp voting against her or abstaining, she scraped through
the European parliament vote in 2019 with a margin of only nine votes, to win
the EU’s top executive job, helped by nationalist parties in Poland and
Hungary.
As she aims
for a second, five-year term this year after June’s EU elections, the
centre-right von der Leyen is again going to have to find “frenemies” to secure
the votes she needs.
“She’s got
a good record to run on. But any politician who gets things done inevitably
burns bridges,” said Simon Hix, politics professor at the European University
Institute, a research institute in Florence. “The coalition that elected her
has gradually eroded over time.”
The
difficulties she faces were demonstrated this week by the resignation of her
choice to become the EU’s small and medium enterprise envoy after a political
backlash from her fellow commissioners and MEPs.
Markus
Pieper, who, like von der Leyen, comes from Germany’s Christian Democratic
Union party, was appointed in January despite achieving lower scores than two
other applicants during the appointment process. Last week, the parliament
passed a resolution calling on von der Leyen to reconsider the decision, while
four commissioners from rival parties also objected.
Over her
five years in office, von der Leyen has steered the bloc’s response to the
Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and pushed
through ambitious legislation aimed at fighting climate change and transforming
the bloc’s economy with a “Green Deal”.
She is
credited with marshalling an €800bn joint borrowing programme to cushion the
impact of the pandemic and with the common purchasing of vaccines. The EU is
now considering using money from these schemes for Europe’s defence industry
and to arm Ukraine.
“She’s the
most high-profile commission president since Jacques Delors,” said Hix, in
reference to the Frenchman who built the single market and initiated EU social
policies in the 1980s.
But initial
impressions that von der Leyen, a former German defence minister, would sail
through to a second term have given way to a realisation that the politics are
becoming increasingly difficult to navigate.
Von der
Leyen can no longer count on the support of the right-wing nationalist parties
that supported her five years ago, after she withheld EU funds from Warsaw and
Budapest over rule-of-law disputes.
A narrow
parliamentary majority in her favour is still likely to emerge eventually
following EU elections in June, but she will again have to find
parliamentarians from outside her own political family to vote her in for a
second term.
In 2019 she
secured 383 votes in the 747-strong assembly — fewer than her predecessor
Jean-Claude Juncker, who had 422. The new parliament will have 720 seats,
meaning that she needs 361 votes.
Three
parliamentary groups — her own centre-right European People’s party (EPP), the
centre-left Socialists and Democrats and the liberal Renew — backed her bid in
2019. But up to 100 MEPs from those groups either voted against her or
abstained.
She passed
because many of the 35 lawmakers from Poland’s then-ruling Law and Justice
(PiS) party and the party of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, Fidesz,
voted for her, as well as a handful of non-aligned members and one Green.
The numbers
look challenging again this year. Far-right groups are gaining traction and if
current opinion polls are correct, the three centrist groups that are likely to
support her will secure 395 out of 720 seats. That means her re-election could
be at risk if a few dozen lawmakers rebel against the party line — and if no
other MEPs vote in her favour.
To pre-empt
that, von der Leyen has been courting Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni,
whose Brothers of Italy (FdI) party is expected to secure about 30 seats. The
commission chief has already tacked right and backed Meloni’s tough stance on
illegal migration.
Meloni’s
party currently sits together with the Polish PiS party in the
ultraconservative ECR group — but some in von der Leyen’s EPP party have made
overtures to get FdI to switch over to them.
Officials
in Brussels say von der Leyen’s tactic could alienate lawmakers who sit with
leftist and green groups, and encourage more rebellion within her own camp.
Valérie
Hayer, leader of Renew and an ally of French President Emmanuel Macron, has
said she considers Meloni to be far right and that if the Italian leader backs
von der Leyen publicly, Hayer would withdraw the group’s support for the
commission president.
But other
liberals from countries including the Netherlands and Sweden are less
ideological and on a national level have joined with parties that are in the
same groups in the EU parliament as Orban’s Fidesz or Meloni’s party.
The
Socialists, forecast to come second after the EPP and part of the 2019 pro-von
der Leyen bloc, are also committed to excluding the far right from any
power-sharing deal.
“We won’t
negotiate with the extreme right and the candidate for the European Commission
presidency should commit to our priorities,” said Iratxe García Perez, the
Socialist group’s leader in parliament.
“Whoever
wants our support should commit to our priorities: a just [green] transition,
both to a more sustainable and digital economic model; rule of law and
equality.”
The Italian
premier, who has forged an unexpectedly warm working relationship with von der
Leyen since coming to power in 2022, has kept quiet about whether she would
support a second term for the German.
Carlo
Fidanza, a Meloni ally and leader of her party in the European parliament, told
the Italian newspaper La Stampa that “it was too early to say” what Meloni
might do. About von der Leyen’s re-election bid, he warned: “Experience teaches
us that in these negotiations, often you enter a Pope and come out a cardinal.”
On the
left, von der Leyen could also seek the backing of the Greens, who are expected
to lose dozens of seats compared with 2019. Back then, they refrained from
supporting her in a first vote but they subsequently backed her team of
commissioners after she made more green policy pledges.
In recent
months, von der Leyen has watered down those climate policies to appease angry
farmers who have been protesting across the bloc.
Bas
Eickhout, a lead candidate for the Greens for the commission presidency, said
they could potentially support von der Leyen for a second term but only with
strong commitments to a “Green Deal 2.0”.
“We are in
the kingmaker’s position,” Eickhout said. Like Renew’s Hayer, he ruled out
teaming up with the Meloni-led group, which he described as “not pro-European”.
There are
also national interests at stake. Les Républicains, the French lawmakers within
the EPP, have already said they will not vote for von der Leyen because she is
too close to President Emmanuel Macron, who is from Renew.
“There are
lots of jigsaw puzzle pieces. She’s just going to have to find the right ones,”
said Hix.
Additional
reporting by Amy Kazmin in Rome
This story
has been corrected since first publication to give the right description of the
European University Institute


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário