12/09/24View in Browser

Von der Leyen can be persuasive, sometimes

By Georgi Gotev

 

Pursuing her goal for gender balance on the EU high table, European Commission President  Ursula von der Leyen has been able to make smaller member states change their mind, as three of them withdrew their male candidate, however, gender balance is unlikely to be achieved.

Romania’s Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu had proposed a male candidate, Victor Negrescu, a vice president of the European Parliament and a heavyweight in the S&D camp, despite his young age.

But ten days later, Ciolacu announced that another member of the European Parliament (MEP), little-known Roxana Mînzatu, was the new Romanian nominee for an apparently “relevant” portfolio, “even if her political experience is limited”.

Slovenia too withdrew its male candidate, Tomaž Vesel, a former president of his country’s Court of Audit, reportedly amid pressure from von der Leyen, and announced on Monday (9 September) that Marta Kos, a former diplomat and presidential candidate, is the new pick.

Bulgaria was the only EU country to comply with von der Leyen’s request that member states put forward one male and one female nomination. These were Ekaterina Zaharieva, former justice and former foreign minister, and Julian Popov, a former environment minister and a fellow of the European Climate foundation.

Having met consecutively with Zaharieva and Popov in the Berlaymont on 3 September, on 5 September, von der Leyen sent a letter to the Bulgarian caretaker prime minister Dimitar Glavchev, reportedly thanking him for the two candidacies and asking Bulgaria to nominate Zaharieva as the sole Bulgarian candidate. Glavchev responded positively to the request.

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Photo of the day
 Devotees celebrating during the immersion ceremony of the idol of Lord Ganesha at Bank Enclave, on 11 September 2024 in New Delhi, India. (Photo by Sanjeev Verma/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
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The Roundup

United Nations chief António Guterres has defended the work of the body’s Security Council amid talk of its ineffectiveness in the current global context, in an interview with Euractiv’s partner EFE.

EU Politics Decoded - Fractured Consensus: Migration debate highlights EU’s internal struggles

French Economic and Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire announced on Thursday (12 September) that he would not stay in post after the new government is announced next week, taking on a professorship in economic policy and geopolitics at the University of Lausanne, saying "love you and leave you" in his farewell speech.

The European Union’s top court ruled on Thursday (12 September) that a Hungarian decree setting regulated prices for basic foodstuffs undermines fair competition, in a dispute first brought before a national court by international retailer SPAR.

A report drafted by EU defence companies on EU research and innovation funding calls out governments for not supporting projects financially and for a lack of long-term perspective for their projects.

Europe’s carmakers are struggling as they navigate a slowdown in electric vehicle (EVs) sales and fierce competition from China. Euractiv contacted MEPs from carmaking countries to ask them what the EU can do to turn the situation around.

As Germany is to start checks at all its land borders, clarifications from the authorities on how such checks will work suggest that the actual disruption to those crossing the border could be less than anticipated.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis criticised Germany’s decision to introduce controls at its borders, saying such a move would endanger the Schengen Area, and hinted that Berlin’s current welfare policies may be to blame for attracting migrants.

To avoid future electricity price hikes, the German government is looking to reverse the liberalisation of its electricity market and move towards a more interventionist approach with the establishment of fixed-price capacity markets.

Look out for…

  • European Commissioner for Budget and Administration Johannes Hahn meets with Philippine government representatives and investors to promote the EU, in Manila, Phillippines.
  • European Commissioner for Agriculture Janusz Wojciechowski is in Cuiabá, Brazil, participating in the G20 agricultural ministers’ meeting.
  • European Commission for Jobs and Social Rights Nicolas Schmit represents the EU at the G7 labour and employment ministers meeting in Cagliari, Italy, where he will meet UK Minister for Labour Alison McGovern and Canadian Deputy Minister of Employment and Social Development Paul Thompson.

[Edited by Alice Taylor-Braçe/Rajnish Singh]

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