Von der
Leyen faces political crisis after groups threaten to withdraw support
Socialists
and liberals outraged that EPP sided with far right in pulling “greenwashing”
legislation and could now block EU’s law-making process.
European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's center-right European People's
Party is the biggest group in European Parliament, but it relies on votes from
the Socialists and liberals. |
June 20,
2025 9:02 pm CET
By Max
Griera
BRUSSELS ―
Ursula von der Leyen is facing the biggest challenge yet to her authority as
European Commission president after political groups threatened to withdraw
support over her decision to cancel climate-friendly legislation.
“We are on
the brink of an institutional crisis,” Valérie Hayer, chair of the liberal
Renew Europe group, told POLITICO.
Von der
Leyen is from the center-right European People's Party and although it's the
biggest group in the European Parliament it relies on votes from the Socialists
and liberals to get its way. The Commission's ability to introduce EU laws
risks being blocked if the groups refuse to play ball.
The
Commission announced on Friday that it was pulling the Green Claims directive ―
a landmark law that would hold companies accountable for unfounded
environmental claims ― even though it has already passed through many stages of
the legislative process.
That move,
which the EPP group in Parliament requested the Commission make on Wednesday,
was applauded by the right-wing European Conservatives and Reformists and the
far-right Patriots for Europe, the group of France's Marine Le Pen and
Hungary's Victor Orbán.
“If the
Commission withdraws the text, we at Renew consider this act as seriously
jeopardizing the platform of the pro-European majority,” Hayer said.
Socialists
and liberals accused von der Leyen of siding with far-right forces ― which
demand the EU ditches all its green policies ― and ignoring the will of their
groups that voted her into office.
While there
are no formal coalitions in the European Parliament, the center-right EPP,
Socialists and liberals ― broadly the traditional pro-EU mainstream ― have
relied on each other for support and signed a cooperation agreement in
November.
Yet the EPP
has repeatedly aligned itself with right-wing and far-right political groups in
the house to push through some measures, set the agenda, or kill green files.
They did so this week when they brought down a report on financing development
projects and two AI and patents bills, and created a new body to scrutinize NGO
financing.
'We will
stop protecting her'
This week's
withdrawal of the greenwashing law may be the last straw for the Socialists and
liberals, which have also been dismayed at some of von der Leyen's other
actions, including the so-called Pfizergate saga, where the EU court ruled
against the Commission over its refusal to release text messages between the
commission president and the head of vaccine-maker Pfizer during the Covid
pandemic.
“The debate
on Pfizergate, we protected her from it, if this continues like this, we will
stop protecting her,” a senior Renew official said. The Socialists and liberals
could "stop playing the game and making deals in other files with EPP,”
effectively blocking the EU’s legislative process, they added.
“The problem
now is that the Commission is also answering to the alternative right-wing
majority, not the centrist platform,” the official said.
A
spokesperson for the EPP said it welcomed the Commission’s announcement,
claiming that the current text under negotiation would have “led to a
bureaucratic nightmare for companies."
As well as
being angry at the cancelation of the proposed law itself, both centrist
parties accuse the EPP and the Commission president of bypassing the EU’s
legislative process. The anti-greenwashing bill was already being negotiated
between Parliament and EU Council ― representing national governments ― after
both institutions already approved their positions after months of work.
A Socialist
official added the situation has brought them to question “the whole basis of
support for von der Leyen, and if she really goes through with this, that would
be seen as breaching the platform, there is no platform left.”
"The
Commission should be aware of the importance of the alliance and the
commitments." S&D group chair Iratxe Garcia said.
The
greenwashing law in the form the negotiations were taking would "go
against the Commission’s simplification agenda," said Commission
spokesperson Stefan De Keersmaecker. "Our objective has been to find an
agreement on a legislative proposal that would reduce administrative burden and
complexity for companies, and in particular smaller companies."
He added:
"Obviously, the Commission remains fully committed to fighting
greenwashing and ensuring that consumers are correctly informed and will
continue to work on this objective."
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