EurActiv Logo
EU-Nachrichten & Politikdebatten
- durch Sprachenvielfalt -
Bulgaria News
Turkey News
Germany News
Spain News
France News
United Kingdom News
Poland News
Czech Republic News
Slovakia News
Hungary News
Romania News
Serbia News
Greece News
Italy News
Bulgaria Turkey Germany Spain France United Kingdom Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary Romania Serbia Greece Italy
EurActiv.com Réseau

ALLE SEKTIONEN BROWSEN

Sehr geehrte Leserinnen und Leser!

Auf Grund des großen Erfolgs von EurActiv Deutschland findet die komplette deutschsprachige EU-Berichterstattung des EurActiv-Netzwerkes nun über Euractiv.de statt.

Die deutschsprachige Fassung von EurActiv.com wird nicht mehr aktualisiert, alle bisherigen übersetzten Texte bleiben aber im Archiv für Sie verfügbar.

Wir freuen uns, Sie künftig auf EurActiv.de begrüßen zu dürfen!

Strukturen wichtiger als Namen, sagen Experten

Veröffentlicht 19. November 2009 - Aktualisiert 29. Januar 2010
Druckoptimierte VersionEinem Freund senden

Vor dem heutigen EU-Gipfel, bei dem die politische Führung Europas den Präsidenten der Union auswählen will, drängten Experten gestern (18. November) die Regierungschefs dazu, weniger über die Namen der Kandidaten und mehr über die weit reichenden Veränderungen – und möglichen Probleme – nachzudenken, die der Lissabon-Vertrag für die Struktur der EU-Institutionen bedeuten wird.

A conference at the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) presented a number of policy priorities for the incoming European Commission, but above all underlined the importance for the EU of speedily getting to grips with the many unanswered questions concerning the set-up of the European institutions in the Lisbon Treaty era. 

As EU leaders meet in Brussels today to decide on a first permanent president of the European Council and a new souped-up foreign minister, the CEPS experts cautioned that while a media frenzy continues to rage over the potential candidates for these positions, the EU must get its house in order if, as it hopes, the new treaty and positions will finally allow the 27-member bloc to become a key player on the global stage. 

"The grand strategic question," notes CEPS senior fellow Michael Emerson, "is what the EU is going to do on the global level". The goal, he argued, should be for the EU to become "the leading proponent of normative foreign policy in the world". 

Such a process will not happen overnight, he cautioned, emphasising that many of the mediocre aspects of EU foreign policy are likely to remain for some time. 

For example, Emerson noted that the current situation whereby the EU as well as numerous EU member states holds seats on international bodies is "absurd". On the UN Security Council, France and the UK hold permanent seats while the EU has none, and other organisations, such as the OSCE, are characterised by "over-representation of small member states and under-representation of the EU". 

New Brussels power games 

Meanwhile, internally, plenty of problems loom on the Lisbon Treaty horizon. 

Former Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) John Bruton, until very recently the EU's ambassador to the USA and himself a long-shot candidate for the EU president job, noted at the conference that while the Council president would chair meetings of EU leaders, the system of rotating EU presidencies between EU member states would continue. 

Therefore, while the EU new president and foreign minister will chair the meetings of EU heads of state and foreign ministers, respectively, the country with the rotating presidency – starting with Spain in January 2010 – will chair the meetings of all other ministers. 

"Ensuring that the work of the rotating presidency country follows priorities that are coherent with the overall plan of the council presidency will be a major task," Bruton noted, adding that this is not something that will simply fall into place. 

It is equally unclear, said Bruton, how the new high representative will juggle the double-hatted role of being a globe-trotting EU foreign minister while also serving as a vice-president of the Commission. On a practical level, the former Irish PM argued that the high rep could face intense schedule difficulties because the position does not have its own private airplane, complicating the business of criss-crossing the world while also attempting to represent his/her home country at weekly Commission meetings. 

In fact, Bruton believes the EU president may occasionally need to "fill in the gaps" for the high rep when the latter is unable to travel. The relationship between the two new positions will be absolutely crucial, he argued. "They will need each other," he concluded. 

CEPS fellow Piotr Kaczynski elaborated on the question marks surrounding the high rep, noting that nobody knows how the relationship between the holder of the new position and Commission President José Manuel Barroso will play out. "Is Barroso his/her boss?" he asked. 

The high rep will have a very special position in the new commission, he said, but nobody is quite sure how it will evolve. 

Finally, Kaczynski alluded to yet another undefined relationship, namely that between the high rep and the other commissioners, particularly those in the so-called "RELEX (external relations) family" – development and trade officials. There are many massive changes and many uncertainties ahead, he concluded. 

Nächste Schritte: 
  • 19 Nov. 2009: Special EU summit to decide on the Lisbon Treaty 'top jobs'.
  • 1 Dec. 2009: Entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty.
  • Jan. 2009: European Parliament hearings for new commissioners.
Hintergrund : 

The Treaty of Lisbon, which enters into force on 1 December 2009, introduces the new 'top jobs' of a high-profile president who will chair EU summit meetings for a two-and-a-half year term and a High Representative for Foreign Affairs, who will also be a vice-president of the European Commission (see EurActiv LinksDossier on 'Choosing Mr(s). Europe').

Nationality, geography (North-South, East-West), gender, the size of the country, and political affiliation and stature are all taken into account when European leaders horsetrade over the top EU jobs. 

More in this section

Advertising