Kuwait Times

Tajani poised to lead European parliament

-

Italy’s Antonio Tajani, an ally of former premier Silvio Berlusconi, moved closer to being elected the new European Parliament president yesterday after two key groups formed a “pro-European” alliance against rising populism. The vote for the new chief of the EU’s only elected assembly will be closely watched in European capitals, including London, as it the parliament that will have a final say on any eventual Brexit deal.

The 63-year-old centre-right politician comfortabl­y won the first round of voting with 274 ballots but failed to secure a majority in the 751-seat parliament based in Strasbourg, France. The silver-haired Tajani is a former European commission­er who has faced criticism over the Volkswagen “Dieselgate” emissions scandal and previously served as spokesman for scandal-plagued Berlusconi.

If confirmed, he will replace Germany’s Martin Schulz, a socialist who during five years in office made the office of European Parliament president far more prominent than it had ever been before. Early yesterday the head of the parliament’s Liberal group, former Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstad­t, pulled out of the race and threw his support behind Tajani, the candidate of the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) grouping. “It is absolutely necessary. With Trump, with Putin, with many other challenges Europe faces, it is key we cooperate to reform our union,” said Verhofstad­t. The deal secures Verhofstad­t’s important role as parliament’s chief negotiator in talks over Britain’s departure from the European Union. EPP party chief Manfred Weber said: “Our partnershi­p is based on content and on reforms for Europe.”

‘Grand coalition’breaks down

The coalition agreement struck between the two groups calls for a European defense force at a time when US President Donald Trump has cast doubt on the future of the US-led NATO alliance. It also calls for the European Parliament to have “full involvemen­t” in the negotiatio­ns over Britain’s exit from the EU after its shock referendum vote in June last year.

The new alliance comes after a decades-old “grand coalition” between the centre-right and the socialists-under which they rotated the post of parliament chief between them-broke down. Socialist candidate Gianni Pittella, another Italian, got 183 votes. Pittella said he will not accept an EPP “monopoly” of the EU’s top jobs — held by EPP members Jean-Claude Juncker, the European Commission president, and Donald Tusk, the head of the European Council. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait