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EU leaders to name president at special summit

Published 12 November 2009
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The European Union's heads of state and government will name a president and foreign policy chief over dinner on 19 November, but diplomats say agreement on the appointments has still not been reached.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, who is leading consultations among the 27 member states, announced on Wednesday (11 November) that EU government leaders would meet in Brussels over dinner to decide on the new positions.

The appointments are being made under the EU's Lisbon reform treaty and are intended to give the bloc more global clout as emerging powers such as China become more influential following the global economic crisis. 

"After an introductory round of consultations with his fellow heads of state and government, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt has decided to convene an extra informal summit on 19 November," the EU's Swedish Presidency said. 

Reinfeldt has made clear the president of the Council of EU leaders, a new post, is likely to be chosen from among sitting or former heads of government. 

Diplomats say there is strong backing for Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy as president, signalling they want a relatively low-profile leader (EurActiv 02/11/09). 

But French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner says former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker are still in the running. 

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband has won support to become EU foreign policy chief but has said he is not available, leaving doubts over who will be given the job (EurActiv 09/11/09). 

Various scenarios 

Filling the jobs has been marred by power struggles among small and large member states and conflicting visions of what role the politicians would play in Brussels. 

"There are a few names that have been thrown up in the air [to be president] and we are looking at a majority candidate, not a consensus candidate," said one EU diplomat, underlining the problems securing unanimous support for one person. 

"The consultations are not over [...] Hopefully we can avoid major disputes at the summit." 

The EU is calling an extra summit, even though it has a regular summit scheduled on 10-11 December, because it wants to speed up the appointments. 

A new European Commission, the EU's executive arm, can be installed only when the two jobs are filled. Any delays could cause problems because it would mean the Commission would have to operate for a prolonged period on a caretaker basis. 

Van Rompuy, 62, has consensus-building skills that could suit Germany and France, the traditional driving forces in the EU. Juncker has strong economic credentials, but France is likely to oppose him. 

Blair's chances are limited by his backing for the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and by Britain's absence from the list of 16 countries that use the euro currency. 

With Miliband unlikely to step forward, front-runners for the foreign policy post include former Italian Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema, EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, who is Finnish, and former Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik. 

(EurActiv with Reuters.) 

Background: 

After ratification of the Lisbon Treaty was completed (EurActiv 03/11/09), Swedish Prime Minister Frederik Reinfeldt stepped up discrete consultations to put names and faces on the two top jobs introduced by the Lisbon Treaty: a high-profile president who will chair EU summit meetings for a two-and-a-half year term and a revamped foreign policy chief, called the High Representative for Foreign Affairs. 

Reinfeldt, who has impressed so far in his temporary EU president role, said that he was not himself a candidate for the permanent Council president job (EurActiv 30/11/09).

With former British Prime Minister Tony Blair apparently out of the running (EurActiv 29/10/09), other names are being persistently circulated, including: 

  • Belgian prime minister Herman Van Rompuy;
  • Dutch prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende;
  • Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, and:
  • Former Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga.

But as the interested parties maintain their silence, any new 'information' is mere speculation.

As for potential candidates for High Representative, the situation appears even more confused, with agreement apparently only reached as to the fact that if the Council president comes from centre-right circles, the foreign policy chief should be a socialist (EurActiv 19/10/09).

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