Something is terribly wrong when pro-Europeans join the Eurosceptics at making fun of the president of the European Commission. Something is terribly wrong when in the toughest times since WWII we fight the crisis with nothing else but words. Something is terribly wrong when in any parliament the deputies have to get economic incentives to go listen the president of their executive…
When listening to the state of the European Union speech delivered by
J.M. Barroso on tuesday 7th September it was confirmed over and over
that yes: something is terribly wrong with the European Union... and guess
what? It is not Barroso. I wish I could join the pro-Europeans and the
Eurosceptics in lapidating the president of the Commission for being
undemocratic, lacking ideas, boring, non-delivering, fake, powerless,
etc. But that would be too easy. Plus it won’t help much.
The reason why nobody wanted to show up in the hemicycle to listen to
Barroso’s state of the union speech is not because they despise Barroso
as a person; it is just because everybody knows that the emperor is not
only naked but also incapable to deliver any of the reforms that the EU
needs to get out of the crisis. He just doesn’t have the power. Even if
Barroso would have the personality of Obama that would not make him
more attractive or powerful. It is a dead end.
The commission has done wonders during the last 60 years; the
community system has been one of the most important and for sure most
revolutionary pillars of the European project. Yet the times we live in
prove that we need more than the current European Commission to reverse
the decline of our continent.
The EU needs leadership as much as it needs the tools to act. Currently
it has neither of them. 2010 has shown that the “European” leadership is
in Berlin and the tools are in the EU capitals. Brussels is the place
where the member-states come to sit around the table to coordinate
national responses to the crisis, not where the European response can be
crafted. The European Commission has become a “privileged spectator” of
the dismantling of the European dream. In the best cases it coordinates
and facilitates the meetings but it can never decide. Let’s not forget
that the only participant in the negotiations looking after the European
interest is the European Commission, the other participants are there
to protect the interests of their national citizens. In 2010 we have
observed how the European interest has never prevailed over the national
interest. And the European citizens (who happen to be also citizens of a
member state) are paying the price for it.
The only way forward to avoid further decline is to reform the
governance of the union. This can be unpopular and insurmountable yet it
is necessary. If we want that deputies turn up to listen to the state
of the union speech we need to have the president of the European
Executive speaking to his electorate; the European citizens, presenting
the European solution to the crisis with the right tools; EU budget and
EU policies, and reassuring citizens and member states about his
commitment because he can deliver.
Currently the president of the Commission is just the minimum common
denominator of the will of the leaders from the member states. We have
seen how in times of crisis he has been pushed aside to let Merkels and
Sarkozys run the show. This needs to be fixed by, firstly, giving the
president of the European executive the backing from the European
citizens so that he has the responsibility and the legitimacy to impose
the European interest over the national interest. And secondly, the
European executive should have the tools to act and this means having an
European budget big enough to have an impact.
Power stems from the people and from the money. Barroso has neither of them; hence he gets little respect.
These are difficult times for the EU, and difficult times require bold
changes lead by courage and vision. The governance of the EU should come
out of the crisis fully refurbished; from the current weak and
compromising European Commission we will need to obtain a strong
European executive that should resemble as much as possible to a
government. A government with a federal budget to implement policies and
backed by the European citizens.
How to empower the president of the European Commission so that he can deliver?
Firstly by legitimising the position in the eyes of the European
citizens. Barroso was selected and not elected. The EU needs to turn the
European Parliament elections into European elections in which the
different European parties run at European level with a head of the list
who, if achieving the majority, should preside the European Commission
and maybe also the European Union. The current double-headed system of
the EU, i.e. Barroso & Van Rompuy, is clearly not helping to
identify the EU leadership and there is a need to debate whether the
positions should be merged –it wouldn’t require treaty changes-.
Secondly, by building a real European budget based on own resources
which could fill the empty words of the state of the union speech. The
EU budget would not be an added burden on the EU citizens, just a more
efficient allocation of expenditure. The new budget would add to the
current insignificant EU own resources with Eurobonds –as suggested by
the Commission- but also of taxes on speculative capital transactions and taxes on carbon, leaving the tax on labour to the member-states.
Unfortunately in order to allow the reform of both the European
electoral law and the creation of European taxes the EU needs to
unanimity from its member states. Once again the old blockade that has
stopped the union since its very beginning.
What would have happened if the state of the union speech would have
been delivered by chancellor Merkel? After all she has played a more
important role than anyone else in Europe on the EU response to the
crisis -she has the power and the money-… wouldn’t both the
pro-Europeans and Eurosceptics join again their critics in saying that
Europe is taken over by one or two member states and this is
democratically unacceptable? Well, this is what 2010 has taught to those
who still refused to see: Europe is run by a few EU capitals –not
Brussels-.
For all this, dear pro-Europeans and euro-sceptics, Barroso is not
the problem but just one more of the symptoms of a much larger European
problem.
What is terribly wrong with Europe is that its member-states and
citizens refuse to accept that, like it or not, European governance
needs an European government. The impact of this on the national
sovereignties is scaring everybody from moving forward; yet in view of
latest developments we can confirm that the decision to be taken is not
whether member states should be giving away more sovereignty to the EU
but rather whether they prefer that their sovereignty is taken away by
force -i.e. Greek crisis- or with their consent and participation –i.e.
Coal and Steel Community-.