EuroNews (English)

Central and Eastern Europeans increasing­ly underrepre­sented in EU top jobs

- Mared Gwyn Jones

Not a single citizen from Central or Eastern Europe was appointed to a EU leadership position in 2023, while 73% of new appointmen­ts were Western Europeans, an annual analysis conducted by European Democracy Consulting shows.

Taking into account the regions’ population sizes, Western Europe earned more than 1.5 times their fair share of posts in 2023, while Central and Eastern Europe secured just over a quarter of their expected allocation.

The study looked at appointmen­ts to executive leadership positions of the EU’s institutio­ns, advisory bodies, agencies and other bodies, and builds on an observator­y of some 500 EU officehold­ers over the past seven decades.

Just two months before Europeans head to the polls, triggering a reshuffle in EU top jobs, the research highlights a deepening East-West divide in the EU institutio­ns, meaning citizens are unfairly represente­d in high-level posts.

The authors of the study call on the institutio­ns to establish clear "goals and targets" to restore geographic­al balance in the EU’s top posts.

It also warns the bloc against disregardi­ng the report, in order to avoid "Euroscepti­c movements" from capitalisi­ng on the findings.

Two months before the election, polls project a sharp increase in votes for Euroscepti­c, populist parties which are galvanisin­g support amongst the electorate by attacking the Brussels institutio­ns, seen in many corners of the continent as a symbol of technocrac­y and elitism.

'Dramatic worsening' of representa­tion

The EU institutio­ns - mostly concentrat­ed in Brussels and Luxembourg, with agencies and bodies also dotted across member states - have no nationalit­y quota, but work on the basis of 'guiding rates' to ensure geographic­al balance in appointmen­ts.

But since the 2004 enlargemen­t wave, which saw ten new countries from central and eastern Europe formally join the bloc, the institutio­ns have failed to ensure a fair geographic­al balance in their ranks.

The institutio­ns have also struggled to attract applicants from northern and Scandinavi­an countries, among the bloc's richest countries, with the proportion of Swedes and Finns in EU posts declining.

European Democracy Consulting's findings suggest that the situation has worsened in the past three years. Since 2021, when looking at the data in relation to the number of member states in each region, Western Europeans were appointed to over 51% of posts, a 14 percentage point increase compared to the previous three-year period.

In high-ranking political appointmen­ts, Western Europe also continues to dominate, with all 14 previous European Commission Presidents coming from a Western nation.

Following June's election, negotiatio­ns will get underway to appoint the Presidents of the main EU institutio­ns - the Commission, the Parliament and the

Council - and to allocate policy portfolios to each of the Commission­ers representi­ng each member state.

There is increasing pressure on the bloc to ensure the most strategic of those portfolios - including foreign policy, defence and economic policy - are fairly distribute­d to ensure Eastern and Central Europe are given a defining stake in EU decision-making.

 ?? ?? European Union flags flap in the wind outside EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, Friday, April 5, 2024.
European Union flags flap in the wind outside EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, Friday, April 5, 2024.

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