Row over race to succeed EU’s Juncker

BRUSSELS - The race to succeed Jean-Claude Juncker as head of the first post-Brexit European Commission begins later this month — and in typical EU style it is starting with a row about how the race should be run.

While the EU’s French Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier is the rumoured early front runner to take charge of the bloc’s executive arm in 2019, the process itself has not even got off the ground.

At stake is not just a power struggle between national leaders and the European Parliament over who chooses Juncker’s successor, but questions about democracy that could give fresh ammunition to eurosceptics opposed to the EU. Juncker was picked in 2014 by a new and controversial “Spitzenkandidat” system — German for “lead candidate” — under which the biggest political group in the European Parliament gets to nominate its candidate for the job.  The European Council of 28 national leaders then makes the final choice, “taking account” of the parliament’s nomination.

 The whole parliament gets a vote at the end. But many of those national leaders, who will discuss the issue at a Brussels summit on February 23, oppose what they view as a stitch-up by MEPs that robs countries of their power to pick who will fill one of the continent’s most influential roles.

 

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