EuroNews (English)

Von der Leyen staffing turbulence plays into EU elections

-

Jack Schickler

Controvers­ial small-business envoy Markus Pieper now won’t take up duties at the European Commission - but the scandal takes place at a sensitive time in Brussels.

A decision to hand a lucrative €20,000-a-month o cial post to Pieper, a member of the same German political party as Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, could have complex repercussi­ons ahead of European elections due in June.

In a statement posted on X, Pieper himself said the role had been “abused for party political reasons”, and accused EU Industry Commission­er Thierry Breton of having “boycotted” his appointmen­t.

“Things will look di erent after the European elections with the foreseeabl­e new majorities,” Pieper added - suggesting that future Commission o cial recruitmen­ts could be in uenced by June elections projected to see a rise in support for right-wing parties.

Sources close to Breton said Pieper’s allegation­s were “ludicrous at best”, while Commission Chief Spokespers­on Eric Mamer declined to comment.

But Mamer was candid that pre-election turbulence has played a role, after MEPs voted 382-144 in favour of rescinding the appointmen­t.

Exclusive: Commission vanguard turn on von der Leyen envoy pick Exclusive: Von der Leyen envoy row intensi es as NGOs call for cronyism probe

“The context in which this whole procedure has evolved in recent weeks is not serene,” Mamer said. “Waiting for the end of elections will bring us to a point in time where the procedure can take place in a better environmen­t.”

The Pieper hire drew controvers­y given allegation­s he scored worse on assessment tests than other candidates, and was not supported by Breton, the portfolio Commission­er for the role, in apparent contradict­ion to o - cial senior appointmen­t guidelines.

Piepergate comes at a sensitive time

It comes at a key moment in Brussels, with changeover­s pending at both Commission and Parliament.

Von der Leyen is currently campaignin­g for a second veyear term in o ce as candidate of the centre-right European People’s Party.

According to most polls, the EPP will likely come rst, but she’s unlikely to win an outright majority. To be voted into o ce, she’ll almost certainly have to form some kind of coalition with the MEPs currently her rivals.

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

And those lawmakers are certainly making hay from the scandal.

Von der Leyen “went too far” in appointing Pieper, and “his resignatio­n was the only way out of the unbearable situation” she and the EPP had created, said a post on X by the Socialists and Democrats, the Parliament’s second biggest party.

Daniel Caspary and Angelika Niebler, MEPs who lead the EPP’s German delegation, said it was “regrettabl­e” that the appointmen­t had been “sabotaged” and become a “pure election campaign issue”.

“Markus Pieper would have been a very good SME envoy for the European Commission,” Niebler and Caspary said in an emailed statement. “His years of commitment to small and medium-sized companies made him ideal for this task.”

Though Piepergate won’t change the price of butter, EU hiring crises can sometimes have an outsize impact.

Long ago in 1999, a previous Commission president, Jacques Santer, was forced to resign after a scandal in which one of his Commission­ers hired a dentist to a senior advisory position.

And in a speech last week, the EU’s Ombudsman, responsibl­e for investigat­ing cases of maladminis­tration, highlighte­d “some causes for concern” in the politicisa­tion of o cial roles.

Though she didn’t refer to the Pieper case directly, Ombudsman Emily O’Reilly said “there has also been an overt political evolution in the outlook” of the Commission’s most senior decision-making body, and warned that “this drift toward overt politicisa­tion might extend deeper into the workings of the system.”

Mamer said today that “there is no reason” for O’Reilly to probe the Pieper case further, as the Commission "respected all of the relevant procedures when it came to the selection process.”

UPDATE (16 April, 15:40 CET): adds Niebler/Caspary statement

 ?? ?? Ursula von der Leyen's hiring practices are under the spotlight
Ursula von der Leyen's hiring practices are under the spotlight

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from France