Macron ‘loved’ me sniping at von der Leyen, says
French commissioner
Thierry Breton stirs the pot. Again.
Thierry Breton said that Ursula von der Leyen, in a
"totally unprecedented move," had breached the neutrality of her
position as European Commission president by announcing she was a candidate to
remain in the Commission's top job. |
APRIL 8,
2024 12:20 PM CET
BY ELISA
BRAUN AND EDDY WAX
France’s EU
Commissioner Thierry Breton said French President Emmanuel Macron actually
“loved” his social media swipe at European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen.
Breton’s
dig at the Commission chief, who is also his boss, stirred criticism in
Brussels and Paris when he published it on March 7 — but the European internal
market commissioner is defiant.
“You should
know that I leave nothing to chance, I wait for the right moment,” Breton told
Libération, which published a long profile about him on Monday.
Breton said
that von der Leyen, in a “totally unprecedented move,” had breached the
neutrality of her position as European Commission president by announcing she
was a candidate to remain in the Commission’s top job.
He added
that Macron “loved” his public attack on the Commission’s chief. At the time,
one French official told POLITICO’s Brussels Playbook that the social media
jibe made Macron “extremely angry.”
Breton — a
supporter of Macron’s centrist Renaissance party — publicly pointed to what he
said was lackluster support received by von der Leyen from her own European
People’s Party group.
“Despite
her qualities, Ursula von der Leyen has a minority within her party,” Breton
wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “The [EPP] seems not to believe in its own
candidate,” he added, reposting an item that made it seem as if von der Leyen
had less than 50 percent of support from party delegates.
However,
von der Leyen was the only name on the EPP’s ballot that day to be its lead
candidate and received 400 votes in favor, with 89 against — out of a total 499
votes.
The post
was widely criticized within Macron’s Renaissance party and also led to an
internal memo circulating in the Commission to remind commissioners not to
undermine the institution which employs them.
Before
commenting during the interview on the storm created by his tweet, Breton asked
his communication adviser: “Am I allowed to say that?”
Macron’s
office did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Breton’s
latest remarks.
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