German
conservatives pile pressure on von der Leyen to dismantle Brussels ‘machine’
Right-wing
lawmakers in Berlin are set to confront the Commission president over what they
view as excessive EU power and regulation in a closed-door meeting Monday.
April 27,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Oliver
Noyan
BERLIN —
German conservatives are preparing to confront European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen with a stark ultimatum: Rein in Brussels control and red
tape or face a new push to curb the Commission’s powers.
Von der
Leyen is set to attend a gathering of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s
conservatives in Berlin on Monday, where the group plans to face her with
tougher demands on fast-tracking cuts to what they see as burdensome EU
regulations weighing on German businesses, two of the lawmakers told POLITICO.
Drafts of
a new strategy paper by the conservative parliamentary group, which were
obtained by POLITICO, lay bare the increasingly hardball tactics German
lawmakers are deploying to get what they want in Brussels. The most recent
draft dated last Thursday, titled “agenda for sustainable reduction of
bureaucracy at EU level,” included a list of 27 demands directed at the
Commission.
One
proposed measure included in Thursday’s draft is to put the EU executive under
the supervision of an oversight body that would wield a “fundamental veto right
over any new legislation proposed by the European Commission.”
The draft
strategy paper suggests establishing this oversight body either as a new entity
at the European level or by expanding the competencies of the Regulatory
Scrutiny Board, which currently serves as an advisory body to the Commission.
However, such an overhaul of the EU’s institutional setting would likely
require a change to the European treaties.
Another
proposed measure calls on the European institutions to “adopt a more
restrictive interpretation of their powers,” and to consider scaling back their
activity more broadly by “cutting staff numbers in the European institutions.”
Until
recently, von der Leyen and Merz’s conservative Christian Democratic Union
(CDU) party — ideological counterparts in the European People’s Party — often
saw eye to eye on the need to boost competitiveness and slash regulation. But
the conservative pressure tactics in Berlin show how the Commission president’s
ostensible German allies are now losing patience with what they see as the slow
pace of reforms.
The push
comes as Merz and his governing conservatives face a growing urgency to fulfill
their election promises to revive Germany’s long-struggling economy by
undertaking sweeping reforms, including cutting regulations both at home and in
Brussels. But so far their efforts have largely failed. Last week, the German
government slashed its 2026 growth forecast by half, as the economy faces
additional headwinds amid the fallout from the war in Iran.
Struggling
to impose sweeping domestic reforms with his center-left coalition partners in
the Social Democratic Party, the chancellor has increasingly taken his ire out
on Brussels.
“This EU
Commission machine just keeps going on and on and on,” said Merz at a September
business event in Cologne. “Let me put it in somewhat vivid and figurative
terms: We need to throw a spanner in the works of this machine in Brussels now,
so that it stops.”
A
proposal in an earlier draft of the conservative strategy paper went even
further than the latest version, threatening the EU’s purse strings by making
member countries’ budget contributions conditional on the Commission’s success
in cutting regulation. That proposal — which was likely deemed too radical —
has since been dropped.
For its
part, the EU’s executive arm has attempted to cut back on regulations by
putting forward a series of omnibus packages meant to simplify existing laws,
especially regarding the Commission’s Green Deal. However, the German
conservatives argue those measures are far from enough.
Von der
Leyen already clashed with capitals over cutting red tape ahead of the February
EU summit in Alden Biesen. After Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz blamed Brussels’ regulations for the EU’s poor
economic performance, the Commission president pointed the finger back at the
member countries instead.
“We must
also look at the national level, there is too much gold-plating — the extra
layers of national legislation that just make businesses’ lives harder and
create new barriers in our single market,” she said at the time.
But
according to the conservatives’ draft strategy paper from Thursday, these
Commission initiatives are thus far “unsatisfactory in terms of both scope and
speed.”
The
latest draft is near completion and reflects the results of the second round of
internal consultations within conservative parliamentary group in the
Bundestag, during which all relevant working groups are able to propose
amendments.
For it to
become official conservative policy in the Bundestag, the parliamentary group
will still have to formally vote on the final draft, which is expected to take
place on Monday, a senior CDU source told POLITICO.
This
article has been updated. Rasmus Buchsteiner contributed to this report.

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