EuroNews (English)

Pieper quits, casting shade on von der Leyen appointmen­t process

- Jack Schickler

Markus Pieper’s renounceme­nt of the post of European Commission small-business envoy after his recruitmen­t drew censure from the European Parliament has cast doubt over the process by which he was appointed in von der Leyen’s Commission.

Pieper, currently an MEP, had been appointed to the lucrative position in January, and was due to start work today (16 April).

But the recruitmen­t to the supposedly impartial executive drew accusation­s of cronyism, as Pieper belongs to the same German political party as Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, the Christian Democrat Union.

“The President both respects and regrets Markus Pieper's decision not to take up his post as SME [small and medium-sized enterprise] Envoy on 16 April as planned,” said a statement published late Monday by Commission spokespers­on Eric Mamer.

Pieper, who’s been an EU lawmaker since 2004, was a “proven expert” on small and mediumsize­d businesses, Mamer said, adding that selection procedures will be reopened after EU elections due in June.

O cial guidance says senior Commission appointmen­ts should be proposed in agreement with portfolio Commission­ers - though in this case the EU's SME Commission­er Breton clearly had reservatio­ns.

A Commission spokespers­on told Euronews that, irrespecti­ve of the published guidance, it was “establishe­d practice” to submit lead candidates for senior jobs merely after consulting the relevant Commission­er “with a view to agreement”, implying Breton wouldn’t need to have consented.

Pieper reportedly did not perform well in early stages of the internal assessment.

In a statement sent to Euronews, originally reported by German newspaper Handelsbla­tt, Pieper said he wouldn’t be able to carry out his tasks as Breton had “boycotted my appointmen­t within the Commission in advance”, which Pieper said was “bad form and motivated solely by party politics”.

"I successful­ly faced a very demanding selection procedure," Pieper said. "Things will look different after the European elections with the foreseeabl­e new majorities."

Sources close to Breton said accusation­s of boycotting or party politics on his part were “ludicrous at best”.

Breton himself highlighte­d the importance of “transparen­cy and collegiali­ty" in Commission appointmen­ts, in a post on social media network X.

In a landslide 382-144 vote last week, largely made on party lines, MEPs asked von der Leyen to rescind the hire and restart the process.

The hiring also drew criticism from some of her own senior lieutenant­s, and from activists such as Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

6 things you should know about von der Leyen's SME envoy scandal

“Markus Pieper made the right choice,” Transparen­cy Internatio­nal EU’s Director Nick Aiossa told Euronews in a statement. “For an appointmen­t that smacked of political cronyism it should have been President von der Leyen who came to this conclusion weeks ago.”

Mamer has previously said that Commission rules were fully complied with during the hiring procedure, and that the EU executive retains independen­ce over recruitmen­t.

UPDATE (16 April, 10:42 CET): adds statement from Pieper.

CORRECTION (16 April, 10:56 CET): corrects today's date.

 ?? ?? Markus Pieper was due to take o  ce today
Markus Pieper was due to take o ce today

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