Meloni holds up a drowning von der Leyen (Photo by Pier Marco Tacca/Getty Images)

Elections EU bubble News Opinion

Von der Leyen, clever political sidestep or dead man walking?

2 minutes read

Right-wingers have for the last year talked, more in hope than in earnest, about a swing to the Right in the European Parliament following next week’s elections.

Some Euro MPs even admitted – off the record – that the most likely outcome was in fact no change i.e. another centrist majority based on the Socialist Group and the European People’s Party.

But just days before the vote, a right-wing majority looks increasingly likely.

And confirmation of this probability has come from the most unlikely source: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

In her somewhat desperate search for re-appointment, von der Leyen has openly flirted with Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the lead player in the assembly’s right-of-centre European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group.

This has infuriated the Socialists, the Liberals, and the Greens, many of whom have been VdL’s allies. All have now threatened to dump her.

“Political agreements with Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right are not an option,” said Valérie Hayer, leader of the European Parliament’s Renew (Liberal) group.

 “We will never cooperate nor form a coalition with the far right!” said the Socialists in a statement. “You can be sure that not only are we excluding forming a majority if the ECR is on board, but we are also going to put pressure on the other groups,” said Terry Reintke, lead candidate for the Greens.

Does the German bureaucrat know which way the wind is blowing? Or is she making a big miscalculation?

Either way, she seems to be burning her bridges.

While 99 per cent of European citizens will remain totally oblivious to the machinations of the assembly’s political groups, a right-wing majority in the European Parliament would be big news in Brussels.

It has never occurred in the assembly’s history, and the ramifications are therefore difficult to predict. 

Question number one: will von der Leyen survive under the new order?

Elements of the ECR group and the European People’s Party might back her, but the hard-right Identity and Democracy group probably will not, in part because they are mainly in the Ukraine ‘pro-peace’ camp.

VdL rightward sidestep is either a brilliant political ploy or the last trick of a woman whose career has come to a dead-end.

 

Key Topics

More like this

Paris police have banned a concert organised by the hard-left party La France Insoumise (LFI) as part of France's annual Fête de la Musique (music day) celebrations, citing concerns that the event could attract anti-police activists and fuel public disorder. Getty
News

Paris police ban hard-left music concert over fears of anti-police agitation

By Anne-Laure Dufeal

New leaders take their seats as the European Council meets in Brussels
Premium
News

New leaders take their seats as the European Council meets in Brussels

By Antonio O'Mullony

Opinion

Is the American century ending?

By Ralph Schoellhammer

Spanish judge places Zapatero's daughters and secretary under investigation
News

Spanish judge places Zapatero’s daughters and secretary under investigation

By Brussels Signal