Gulf News

End of European supernatio­n

Now is the time not for risky shortcuts, but for meticulous measures that gradually earn the public’s trust

- Special to Gulf News

ince the Eurozone crisis began in 2008, the European Union has, from a political perspectiv­e, led an intergover­nmental life in supranatio­nal clothing. But as the EU prepares to negotiate Britain’s exit, it is becoming increasing­ly apparent that the Union no longer has any clothes at all. The question now is whether the EU’s status as an enterprise dominated by its member states is permanent.

The supremacy of member states — especially Germany — in EU decisionma­king is far from new. It was evident throughout the euro crisis, when German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her Finance Minister, Wolfgang Schauble, along with the European Council’s then-president, Belgium’s Herman Van Rompuy, took centre stage.

But the myth of European supranatio­nalism persisted. In particular, after JeanPaul Juncker took over as the President of the European Commission in 2014, the EU’s executive branch began to bill itself as a Brussels-based institutio­n capable of leading the way towards what Juncker called in his 2015 State of the Union speech “more Union in our Union”.

This year, Juncker delivered a far more sober speech. Indeed, it seems that the June Brexit vote has chastened not only Juncker, but all of the Commission’s Europhiles, who have largely been sidelined in the ensuing battle over what Europe will look like. (The notable exception is Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager’s very public stand on taxation, the outcome of which is still to be determined.)

‘Naive Euro-enthusiast­ic visions’

Instead, that battle has been playing out largely within the European Council, with Merkel assuming a central role. While it is impossible to say exactly what the EU that emerges will look like, it seems clear that it will look nothing like the Brusselsce­ntric, deeply integrated Shangri-La long sought by many at the Commission.

Council President Donald Tusk has been especially adamant on this point, criticisin­g “naive Euro-enthusiast­ic visions” and calling for a more modest Europe that promises less and delivers more. Tusk reiterated this position just before the recent informal European Council summit in Bratislava — the first not to include the United Kingdom — declaring that “giving new powers to European institutio­ns is not the desired recipe”.

Merkel, for her part, spent the summer preparing a member-state-led approach to the Brexit negotiatio­ns and Europe’s future. The discussion and outcome of the Bratislava summit underscore­d these efforts.

As for the Commission, its only real action in recent months was to appoint Michel Barnier in July as its chief representa­tive in the Brexit negotiatio­ns. With the Council taking command of that process, it is far from clear what Barnier will actually do. In fact, with member states’ domestic politics playing a more important role than the European Council in driving whatever EU policy momentum exists, even an intergover­nmental EU may be too much to hope for.

Consider Germany, where the dreadful performanc­e of Merkel’s Christian Democrats in a string of regional elections, including in her home state of Mecklenber­gWest Pomerania, has caused many to question the country’s trajectory. Now, the wait is on for next year’s federal election, which may send the country — and its approach to EU leadership — in a very different direction. Uncertaint­y is also coming from other directions: Italy will hold a constituti­onal referendum by the end of this year and France and the Netherland­s will hold elections next year.

None of this is to say that supranatio­nalism is a thing of the past. But it is likely that parochial interests will become even more dominant, at least until major elections are complete. An opening for a European approach may follow, but only if the current torpor does not lead to institutio­nal atrophy.

In the struggle over how Europe will develop, the EU institutio­ns lack the authority or support to put up much of a fight — or even fully enter the ring. But this may actually present an important opportunit­y for EU institutio­ns to work on closing the legitimacy gap.

This means resisting the urge to wax poetic about future actions that never actually materialis­e, or to roll out impressive-looking programmes with few real-world effects. It means, instead, completing key initiative­s, most urgently the banking union; improving accountabi­lity; and ensuring that the public understand­s what the EU institutio­ns are doing. And it means staying out of political conflicts, which neither the European Commission nor the European Parliament are in any position to win.

Being strung along

If this approach seems cautious, that is because it is. Now is the time not for risky shortcuts, but for meticulous, wellplanne­d, incrementa­l measures that gradually and consistent­ly earn the public’s trust. The relatively modest list of concrete priorities issued by Juncker and Commission First Vice-President Frans Timmermans is a good start.

Most people are not stupid. They can generally tell when they are being strung along, and they are tired of empty rhetoric and half-baked initiative­s. Only if the EU institutio­ns deliver genuine action, in a credible and transparen­t manner, can they ensure that the current inter-government­alism is just a phase and that the future of Europe is Europe.

Ana Palacio, a former Spanish foreign minister and former senior vice-president of the World Bank, is a member of the Spanish Council of State and a visiting lecturer at Georgetown University.

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Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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