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The EU Is Poised for Another Tussle on Jobs

The EU Is Poised for Another Tussle on Jobs

(Bloomberg) -- Even though European Union governments have already chosen who will lead the bloc’s top institutions, they’re bracing for another round of horsetrading, as discussions on the assignment of the executive’s most sought-after portfolios -- from competition to climate change -- begin.

Following her confirmation by the European Parliament last month, EU Commission President-elect Ursula von der Leyen is accepting nominations from member states for the team of senior officials who will be in charge of proposing and monitoring legislation across the continent over the next five years.

The EU Is Poised for Another Tussle on Jobs

Von der Leyen, who will assign portfolios to individual commissioners, has already started the process of vetting candidates. The nominees will go before European Parliament committees starting Sept. 30 to answer questions from lawmakers. During the week of Oct. 21, the entire team will be subject to confirmation by the assembly in Strasbourg, France, before it can assume its duties.

Some countries are sticking with known entities: The EU’s antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager, one of the most visible commissioners thanks to her crackdown on big-tech behemoths and on corporate tax evasion, has already been nominated by the government in Denmark for another term. The Netherlands has also put forward Frans Timmermans, the commission’s vice president who has been at the forefront of enforcing rule-of-law issues, for another five-year post.

Gender Equality

The commission proposes and enforces European laws on everything from auto emissions to energy pipelines. It also monitors national economies, negotiates trade deals, runs a diplomatic service, manages the bloc’s budget and acts as Europe’s competition authority.

While the jobs assignment is in theory up to the president, national lobbying, backroom deals between governments and personalities matter. And while the commissioners are supposed to represent the interests of the EU and not their native state, getting an important portfolio is seen as a matter of national prestige, supposedly reflecting each capital’s influence in the bloc’s politics.

Complicating things further, von der Leyen has pledged a gender-equal commission leadership. Her demand may meet resistance from heads of government, which have traditionally enjoyed the freedom to nominate whoever they wanted, rewarding loyalists or even occasionally expelling internal opponents to Brussels.

Some of the nominees who have been proposed so far: 
  • Spain: Josep Borrell (has already secured the foreign-policy portfolio) 
  • Ireland: Phil Hogan (renomination, currently in charge of agriculture and rural development)
  • Austria: Johannes Hahn (renomination, currently in charge of enlargement portfolio)
  • Slovakia: Maros Sefcovic (renomination, currently vice president for energy)
  • Czech Republic: Vera Jourova (renomination, currently justice commissioner)
  • Hungary: Laszlo Trocsanyi (currently justice minister in his country)
  • Finland: Jutta Urpilainen (former finance minister in her country)
  • Latvia: Valdis Dombrovskis (renomination, currently financial services)

--With assistance from Alessandro Speciale, Jasmina Kuzmanovic, Milda Seputyte, Dara Doyle, Radoslav Tomek, Peter Flanagan, Matthias Wabl, Andrea Dudik, Sotiris Nikas, Paul Tugwell, Peter Laca, Aaron Eglitis, Ott Ummelas, Rafaela Lindeberg, Kati Pohjanpalo, Joao Lima, Zoltan Simon, Christian Wienberg, Helene Fouquet, Jonathan Stearns and Alexander Weber.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nikos Chrysoloras in Brussels at nchrysoloras@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, Richard Bravo, Zoe Schneeweiss

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