EuroNews (English)

Von der Leyen’s portfolio paradoxes

- Jack Schickler

Commission President Ursula von der Leyen pledged to get rid of “rigid stovepipes”, as she unveiled plans for her second mandate yesterday (17 September).

She may indeed seek to avoid the kind of stiff structures that can lead to isolated and contradict­ory policymaki­ng.

But complex compound portfolios and overlappin­g responsibi­lities risk making her Commission look more like tangled spaghetti.

Weird pairings

One common theme of the new portfolios she has handed to her 26 lieutenant­s is the creation of exotic compound briefs.

Slovakia’s Maroš Šefčovič will pair trade - a f lagship policy area where Brussels holds significan­t power - with overall relations with other institutio­ns such as the European Parliament.

Denmark’s Dan Jørgensen has been given responsibi­lity for housing alongside energy, while Belgium’s Hadja Lahbib combines crisis management and equality - prompting outrage from activists who worry she’ll have to split her time between pandemics, forest fires and women’s rights.

Those choices may be as much about the quality of the candidate as the portfolio. Šefčovič is seen as a safe pair of hands who’s hoovered up many miscellane­ous duties in his time in Brussels;

Lahbib, as a woman with Algerian roots, is perhaps viewed as a good pick for equality in the normally lily-white, male-dominated Commission.

Socialist MEPs, having insisted on a post to tackle Europe’s housing shortage, wanted it to go to one of their own, and Jørgensen is one of the few centre-left options von der Leyen had.

Bumping heads

In other cases, overlaps among portfolios are likely to lead to duplicatio­n or territoria­l infighting. Such squabbles are nothing new: there’s been a longstandi­ng dispute over who’s responsibl­e for food policy between the Commission’s health and agricultur­e services.

Those aren’t necessaril­y now resolved: according to the brief sent by von der Leyen, Hungary’s Olivér Várhelyi remains responsibl­e for food safety and affordabil­ity - though Luxembourg’s Christophe Hansen is officially designated as “commission­er for agricultur­e and food.”

Worse still, Várhelyi will have to tussle with Lahbib over the newly establishe­d Commission department for Health Emergency Preparedne­ss (DG HERA).

Among her duties as Commission­er for the Mediterran­ean, Croatia’s Dubravka Šuica is invited to fix tensions in the Middle East, “promoting all the steps needed for a two-state solution” to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­n Territorie­s.

That might seem a tall order for the former mayor of Dubrovnik, whose previous responsibi­lities included preparing a report on demography and organising the Conference on the Future of Europe.

It also may mean bumping heads with Estonia’s Kaja Kallas, responsibl­e for the EU’s overall foreign policy.

Cooperatio­n between the two “is not clear yet”, one senior commission official said today; while Kallas will deal with “questions of war and peace,” the requiremen­t for frequent travel to the region means it’s too big a job for one person, added the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Hearing trouble

In some cases, von der Leyen’s picks might lead to trouble when she submits her roster for confirmati­on by the European Parliament.

Alongside his climate brief, the Netherland­s’ Wopke Hoekstra has been handed responsibi­lity for tax - though he’s a finance minister from a country that’s long been in Brussels’ sights for aggressive tax planning, and the Paradise Papers leak of 2021 revealed his links to the Virgin Islands, a tax haven.

Related Who holds the economic power in von der Leyen’s new Commission?

Ireland’s Michael McGrath may also feel the heat for having opposed a 2018 referendum to legalise abortion.

The topic is only indirectly related to the justice portfolio he’s been handed.

But it’s also the kind of issue that resonates in Brussels, as Malta’s Roberta Metsola discovered when her longstandi­ng opposition to abortion nearly stymied her bid to become European Parliament President in 2022. GerardoFor­tunacontri­buted reporting.

 ?? ?? Ursula von der Leyen outlined her new Commission on 17 September 2024
Ursula von der Leyen outlined her new Commission on 17 September 2024

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