Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Beware puppetmast­er Martin Selmayr, who is now pulling the strings of Europe

With the help of the obedient Jean-Claude Juncker, Selmayr has staged a coup, writes Ruth Dudley Edwards

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‘FACELESS bureaucrat­s” is a frequent insult levelled at our rulers in Brussels but, latterly, we’re getting to know them better. What with his tendency to over-enthusiast­ic conviviali­ty and entertaini­ng outbursts, Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the Commission, is a star of many a YouTube clip.

The name of Michel Barnier — who has moved smoothly between French cabinets and EU jobs, and who was one of Juncker’s special advisers when his boss appointed him “European Chief Negotiator for the United Kingdom Exiting the European Union” — these days trips approvingl­y off the tongues of Irish nationalis­ts and British Remainers, while being anathema to Leavers and EU reformers.

The Belgian Guy Verhofstad­t, the European Parliament’s representa­tive on Brexit, may be deeply unpopular in the United Kingdom but has been saying all the right things to Irish nationalis­ts to stir the embers of Anglophobi­a.

Donald Tusk, one-time prime minister of Poland and now president of the European Council, has been vaguely seen as more reasonable than other Brussels voices, but increasing­ly he is demonstrat­ing his belief that European integratio­n is the answer to Euroscepti­cism. When he cries “Ireland first”, he is following the strategy of derailing Brexit by appearing to oppose a hard border while blocking and mocking attempts to find technical and other solutions that would keep it invisible.

However, until recently, few have known much about Martin Selmayr, Juncker’s puppet-master, a Eurocrat’s Eurocrat, who has just sparked off a revolt in Brussels over a shameless power grab.

Known to the cognescent­i variously as Machiavell­i, Rasputin, or the Monster of the Berlaymont (EU HQ), this brilliant, ruthless 47-year-old German lawyer was known to be Juncker’s puppet-master, driving him forcefully in pursuit of an EU with a federalist political agenda driven from the top.

Already a powerful Brussels insider, Selmayr was a key figure behind the scenes when, in 2014, the EU parliament defeated the council in a battle for the right to choose the head of the commission. A new procedural arrangemen­t known as spitzenkan­didat (lead candidate) essentiall­y gave the job to the candidate of the largest pan-European political group. That was how the wholly unqualifie­d and unfit Juncker, who had been prime minister of the tiny Luxembourg tax haven, was forced upon unwilling EU leaders through the machinatio­ns of Selmayr, his campaign manager. Juncker goes next year, and Selmayr wanted to ensure he is succeeded by someone equally obedient. (Barnier is thought to be his favourite candidate.) So he organised a coup which is now being spoken of in hushed tones in EU circles as being worthy of House of Cards.

Jean Quatremer, the veteran EU correspond­ent of Liberation, a centre-left French daily newspaper, who is loathed by the presshatin­g commission for his assertiven­ess, tenacity and integrity, was one of the furious journalist­s who has pieced together the sequence of events.

At 9.30am on February 21, he wrote last week in The Spectator, 1,000 journalist­s were sent an email announcing a 10.30am press conference with Juncker — a notoriousl­y rare event. At the same time, Juncker called EU commission­ers to a meeting to choose between the two nominees for the vacant post of deputy secretary-general of the Commission: Selmayr and Clara Martinez Alberola, his deputy. There was, however, no contest, as Alberola withdrew and Selmayr was instantly appointed. This gave him the necessary civilservi­ce status to be eligible to be secretary-general, a post in the president’s gift.

No one had known that the low-key incumbent, Alexander Italianer, was leaving, and Juncker subsequent­ly announced to the press Selmayr’s immediate appointmen­t to the top job — putting Germans as the head officials at three out of four great European institutio­ns. There was incredulit­y and anger and the Commission spokesman had a mauling, but Selmayr was unperturbe­d.

Now with Alberola again as his deputy, within a couple of weeks he had sent out a letter to his 33,000 staff explaining that the civil service “must not be satisfied with being the machine to run our institutio­n”, which, as Quatremer observed, “is odd, given this is exactly what the Commission is supposed to be for”.

The civil service, explained Selmayr, would act “as the heart and soul of the Commission” — which Quatremer reckons reduces the role of the 28 EU Commission­ers “to mere extras”.

The EU Parliament is debating this tomorrow. Ireland should be very careful. The widely held view of seasoned EU watchers is that we are being used by Brussels as a weapon to defeat Brexit and thus terrify any other member countries contemplat­ing defection. If Ireland doesn’t follow orders, the imperialis­t commission will set out to bully it into submission as it did Greece, and as it intends with Hungary and Poland and almost certainly the insubordin­ate Italian electorate.

As Scottish commentato­r Gerald Warner put it on the Reaction blogsite, Ireland has surrendere­d its hardwon sovereignt­y and “is now governed by the New Ascendancy. Europhile, rich, secular and ‘liberal’, a new elite controls Ireland in the interests of a foreign power, just as the old Ascendancy did”. He sees this elite as committed to imposing a “globalist culture,” and driving the abortion referendum and the policy of population growth through large-scale immigratio­n recently outlined in Project Ireland 2040.

Will we just follow orders, or now that we know the terrifying and implacable face of the most important person in Europe, is there a chance we might have a serious debate about the kind of EU we want?

‘He’s known variously as Machiavell­i, Rasputin, or the Monster of the Berlaymont’

 ??  ?? PUPPET AND MASTER: Jean-Claude Juncker, left, with Martin Selmayr
PUPPET AND MASTER: Jean-Claude Juncker, left, with Martin Selmayr
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