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Wildcards, headwinds as new EU executive to take over

European Commission president-elect Ursula von der Leyen has met a key pledge for gender balance with her team line-up © AFP/File / LUDOVIC MARIN

Brussels, Belgium, Sep 10 – The European Commission’s next chief is to unveil her new executive team on Tuesday that, from November 1, will take on a range of tricky challenges, from climate change to an unpredictable US and the Brexit aftermath.

President-elect Ursula von der Leyen will divulge the portfolios of her vice presidents and commissioners, drawn from each member state, minus Britain whose government wants to leave the bloc on October 31.

If her selection is approved by the European Parliament and EU leaders, it will boast near gender parity, with 13 women and 14 men, meeting one of von der Leyen’s key modernising pledges.

The global issues they face will include the fight against climate change, trade wars, defending international institutions and defending Europe’s commitment to democracy and the rule of law.

Europe’s new executive will have to navigate a tricky relationship with US President Donald Trump, seen as unpredictable and unreliable by many © AFP/File / JIM WATSON

They will face headwinds from America, an ally seen by many as unreliable and isolationist under President Donald Trump, who is pressuring Europe on trade and for cracking down on the tax strategies of Silicon Valley giants.

Iran’s shrink-back from the landmark nuclear deal it struck with world powers after America’s exit, and more generally tensions across the Middle East as well as an assertive Turkey and a troublesome Russia also present foreign policy wildcards for Brussels.

And problems to confront within the European bloc include slowing growth, members such as Poland and Hungary spurning EU principles of solidarity and rule of law, and the populist current that is sustaining far-right politicians.

– Mind the gap –

Von der Leyen spent the last couple of weeks interviewing and vetting a list of candidates whose names were confirmed on Monday, though not their commission posts.

If British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gets his way, Brexit will take effect the day the new European Commission takes office © POOL/AFP / Charles McQuillan

The first big drama they will likely star in will be Brexit, which, if British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gets his way, will be effective from the first day of the new Commission.

Even if that is the case — which is not entirely certain given fierce British parliamentary opposition to the no-deal Brexit that Johnson says he is willing to impose — negotiations to work out Britain’s relationship with the EU will drag on for years.

“Our working assumption is that Brexit will happen on the 31st of October,” a European Commission spokeswoman said Monday.

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With Brexit, the EU would also have to find a way to fill the budget gap left by the departure of the UK, a top-tier economy in the bloc.

Negotiations are under way for the next budget cycle covering 2021-27 and meant to amount to 1.28 trillion euros ($1.4 trillion), but remaining EU members are reticent to increase their contributions to cover the shortfall.

To spur growth in the EU, von der Leyen has vowed to ease the fiscal rectitude that has notably been the hallmark of her home country of Germany.

That issue has taken on added urgency with ominous signs of a possible global recession, or at least a pronounced slowdown not helped by the US-China trade war.

Von der Leyen, previously Germany’s defence minister, will be able to call on experienced hands on her team.

They include former Italian prime minister Paolo Gentiloni and outgoing Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders.

There are also holdovers from the previous Commission — Margrethe Vestager from Denmark and Phil Hogan from Ireland for instance, taking on new roles — along with Commission vice president Frans Timmermans.

– Political currents –

Von der Leyen will also have to surf competing political currents within Europe.

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French President Emmanuel Macron is carving out a pronounced role on the global stage, which could influence the Commission line-up © AFP/File / Ludovic MARIN

That is why on Tuesday, attention will be focused on how she divvies up portfolios among the dominant political families, as well as among western and eastern EU states, and how her priorities will be reflected by the heft of each directorate.

On Monday, a source close to the Commission selection process acknowledged to AFP that von der Leyen has “some problems to work out” in configuring her team.

The traditional influence exerted by EU heavyweights France and Germany will also be scrutinised, especially as President Emmanuel Macron has been carving out a more pronounced global leadership role while Chancellor Angela Merkel is to bow off the political stage in 2021.

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