Scottish Daily Mail

THE ARROGANCE OF JUNCKER’S MONSTER

Top official in Brussels sleaze inquiry refuses to step down

- By David Churchill Brussels Correspond­ent

THE top Brussels official at the centre of an Eu sleaze probe last night insisted he will not resign.

Martin Selmayr has faced calls to quit after a watchdog suggested laws were broken in order to fast-track him for promotion. He was given the role of secretaryg­eneral of the Eu Commission – the most senior civil service post in Brussels – in a way that ‘stretched and possibly even overstretc­hed the limits of the law’.

But the official, Jean-Claude Juncker’s right-hand man in Brussels, was last night accused of ‘planetary-scale arrogance’ when he brazenly denied the fiasco was ‘embarrassi­ng’. The German, nicknamed ‘The Monster’ by Mr Juncker for his ruthlessne­ss, insisted that ‘no laws’ were broken when he was effectivel­y promoted twice in ten minutes.

Speaking to the Mail outside his smart apartment in central Brussels, he said: ‘Resign? I think resignatio­ns are for other people.’ Asked if it was embarrassi­ng for him and Mr Juncker, who was found partly at fault in the investigat­ion, he added: ‘I don’t think it is very embarrassi­ng at all. I think the European union is in a strong position.

‘We have a very good system for selecting senior officials.’

The 47-year-old lawyer added: ‘The European union is on the basis of law and we’ll continue to be on the basis of law. I’m a very qualified lawyer, that’s why I feel very confident. The European Commission has broken no laws.’

His comments come after Emily O’Reilly, the independen­t European Ombudsman, recommende­d a new process for appointing the post after ruling officials were guilty of ‘maladminis­tration’.

She also ruled that the Commission – the arm of the Eu which oversees Brexit and of which Mr Juncker is president – had damaged public trust in Brussels and its response to the allegation­s had been ‘defensive’ and ‘evasive’.

The Commission showed either ‘a lack of self-awareness’ or ‘a wilful refusal to admit to them’, she said. Critics yesterday renewed calls for Mr Selmayr to step down so the process can be re-run fairly. Tory MEP david Campbell Bannerman said: ‘Mr Selmayr’s comments are planetary-scale arrogance. This represents the rotten core of the Eu.’ Fellow Tory MEP daniel Hannan added: ‘No one takes the blame. No one resigns.

‘It’s precisely that kind of arrogance that people were voting against [when they voted for Brexit].’ Mrs O’Reilly’s report ruled that Mr Juncker allowed lines to blur between administra­tive independen­ce and his political closeness to Mr Selmayr, previously his chief of staff.

The report ruled that an urgency to fill the post was ‘created artificial­ly’ after the previous incumbent announced his retirement.

At the same meeting Mr Selmayr was first promoted to deputy secretary-general and then into the top job within about ten minutes.

The report added: ‘And all of this in a context where the proposed appointmen­t of a new secretaryg­eneral was not on the meeting agenda and no background papers had been circulated.’ It meant Mr Selmayr was effectivel­y parachuted into the Eu’s most senior civil service post. The Commission says some findings may be down to ‘misunderst­andings’.

Mr Selmayr, no stranger to controvers­y, is alleged to have leaked details of a key Brexit dinner at downing Street between Theresa May and Mr Juncker last year – a claim he denies.

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