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Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Martin Schulz's revenge: Will the European Parliament block the UK's EU Commissioner?

If you read our press summary this morning (if not, do sign up!) you would have seen - before anyone else outside Germany incidentally - that Lord Hill, the UK's nominee for EU Commissioner, is already at risk of becoming a victim of an increasingly assertive European Parliament.

Martin Schulz – the ‘European Commission Presidential candidate’ who was re-selected President of the European Parliament after his socialist group in the EP came second in the European elections - was made persona non grata by Labour in the run-up to the European elections.

He was seen as too federalist, and someone who would only give Ed Miliband additional headaches shortly after Labour ruled out an In/Out referendum. He’s had a rough ride in the UK over the Spitzenkandidaten, where he clashed head on with the Tories and most other British people. He may now take his revenge.

Speaking to Deutschlandfunk radio this morning, he said of Lord Hill:
"I cannot imagine that, with his radical anti-European views, provided that he has them, [Lord] Hill can get a majority in the European Parliament…It will become clear if Mr Hill approaches us without prejudice, and that will certainly influence whether or not he gets a majority."
The European Parliament cannot formally reject individual Commissioner-nominees, but can veto the entire European Commission. Therefore, MEPs have de facto 'blackmailing powers' to pick off individual nominees. Interestingly, Schulz added that a rejection of Lord Hill in such a way "cannot be ruled out".

In fairness, Schulz was asked a clearly leading question when making these comments:
"David Cameron has proposed the eurosceptic Jonathan Hill as [the UK's] next EU Commissioner, and [he's] a determined sceptic of the euro and the EU. Can one assume that the next EU Commission  will become significantly more eurosceptic, blocking things from the inside?"
So, is this posturing or is Schulz meaning business? Well, as for now, we should treat the comments with caution. Even if Schulz is serious, he will need to get a majority of MEPs to agree that Hill should be rejected on basis of "radical anti-European views, provided he has them". Hill isn't exactly on record spewing out Farage-type anti-EU slogans. The point about Lord Hill is that he's a very different type of political operator altogether: he's someone who strikes deals, rather than engaging in shouting matches or trading in platitudes.

Schulz will struggle to build a case on this one - not least since Lord Hill seems like exactly the type of pragmatic, deal-maker type person MEPs should like. Still, it's a strong statement from Schulz.

2 comments:

Average Englishman said...

More silliness. There is no chance that the Parliament would drop the entire Commission because they do not like the UK's nominee.

Firstly, they know that if they were successful all they would get with this attitude would be an even less EU friendly candidate as a replacement.

Secondly, it would screw up the orperation of the EU machine too much, which would only strengthen Dave's hand by giving him some good headlines in the UK.

So, all threats and nonsense as usual.

Rik said...

Fully agree with AE, looks clearly bluff (if not outright stupidity).
Looks pretty safe for 'Dave' to call that when it should be necessary.