What is wrong with the European Commission?
The European Commission, a crucial EU institution, is beset
with difficulties. It is popular with neither governments nor voters. Twenty
years ago, many people looked to the Commission to set the EU’s agenda and take
the lead in managing crises. But few people expect the Commission to play that
role today.
Ever since the time when Jacques Delors ran the
Commission (1985 to 1995), its authority vis-à-vis EU governments has been
waning. The member-states – and especially the big ones – have sought to
constrain an institution that they consider over-mighty.
The Lisbon treaty, in force since 2009, created two
important institutional innovations: the permanent president of the European
Council, a post now occupied by Herman Van Rompuy; and the European External
Action Service (EEAS), a body now led by Catherine Ashton. Both of these carry
out some tasks that the Commission used to do and have contributed to its sense
of insecurity.
Paradoxically, the euro crisis has led to the Commission
gaining unprecedented formal powers – on the surveillance of national economic
policies – but further eroded its standing and credibility. National
governments have provided the money for helping countries in trouble, so they
set the terms for bail-outs. The Commission has had to leave the high politics
to the European Council, and often to a few key governments, while focusing on
its subordinate though important technical role.
The eurozone’s travails have accelerated a longstanding
shift in the nature of EU governance. The EU used to take few executive
decisions that were politically salient. The Commission proposed laws and
regulated, while the Council of Ministers and European Parliament passed laws.
Both the Commission and the Council acted, from time to time, as an executive –
for example the former blocked corporate mergers and the latter imposed
sanctions on countries in other parts of the world.
But the euro crisis has drawn the EU into taking
increasingly political executive decisions. The EU has forced heavily-indebted
counties to cut budget deficits, pass painful reforms and wind up banks. The
Commission may propose such measures, but only eurozone prime ministers or
finance ministers have the authority to take these decisions.
These are long-term trends, but personalities also
matter. The current ‘college’ of commissioners contains few heavyweight
politicians. Within the Commission, Barroso is a strong leader who dominates
his colleagues; given the number of commissioners – one for each of the 28
member-states – he may have no choice but to rule with a firm hand. But outside
the Commission, some governments complain about what they perceive as weak
leadership. During Barroso’s second term as president, which started in 2009,
Berlin, Paris and London have become more critical of the Commission. Even some
of the smaller member-states, traditionally allies of the Commission, complain
about it more than they used to.
A number of governments accuse the Commission of failing
to prioritise; of implementing new initiatives too slowly; or of focusing
insufficiently on fixing the eurozone. Some of this is unfair: the politicians
who criticise the Commission for not coming up with relevant solutions to the
eurozone’s problems are sometimes the same ones who get annoyed when it does
propose a big idea, such as eurobonds. And while the Germans have sometimes
whinged about the Commission being too soft on countries under surveillance,
many others believe that it has been too Germanic in its enthusiasm for
budgetary discipline. Evidently, the Commission cannot please everyone.
Two reasons, in particular, explain the member-states’
diminishing confidence in the Commission. First, they argue that the Commission
proposes too many detailed rules, particularly in areas such as the
environment, food safety and social policy. In May 2013, for example, Polish
ministers complained about Commission attempts to regulate the shale gas
industry and to ban menthol cigarettes – both of which are popular in Poland.
In the same month the Commission proposed banning olive oil in re-usable
bottles, but then climbed down after a storm of protest. Earlier in the year,
German politicians sharply criticised a Commission proposal to set quotas for
women on company boards.
Some senior Commission officials acknowledge that the
institution can be over-active. But they blame the increasing sway of the
Parliament over the Commission. And that is the second reason why some national
capitals have turned against the Commission.
The Parliament has exerted more influence over the second
Barroso Commission than the first, and not only because the Lisbon treaty gave
it more power. Lobbyists and NGOs find it quite easy to get MEPs to support
their projects for new EU rules. The Parliament then puts pressure on
commissioners to come up with new directives. They are loath to annoy the
Parliament since it can make trouble. Another reason why commissioners like to
propose new rules is to justify their existence. The Commission’s
secretariat-general works hard to cull what it regards as superfluous
legislative proposals, but does not always win arguments against commissioners.
None of this is to say that that the Commission should
ignore the Parliament. That body is better placed than any other to vet the
work of commissioners and, working with the Court of Auditors, to criticise
their mistakes. Before the appointment of the last two Commissions, the
Parliament played an admirable role in questioning sub-standard
commissioners-designate and forcing them to withdraw. Given the Parliament’s
powers of co-decision over new laws, the Commission cannot and should not
ignore it.
The problem is that over the past four years the
Commission has become much closer to the Parliament than to the Council on many
issues. The Commission should be accountable to both – it is appointed by
governments and approved by the Parliament. But it should also be independent
of both.
The politicisation of the Commission is a problem. There
has always been some ambiguity over its contradictory roles: it is a political body that initiates
legislation and brokers compromises among the member-states, but also a
technical body that polices markets and rules, and negotiates on behalf of the member-states.
During the euro crisis the Commission’s technical role has grown, which makes
the ambiguity more problematic. When it pronounces, say, that France may be
given two further years in which to meet the 3 per cent budget rule, is that
the result of objective economic analysis or a reflection of the shifting
political climate in national capitals? This ambiguity gives governments and
others an excuse to criticise the Commission.
Politicisation can mean favouring political parties. Some
socialist politicians claim that the Commission has been over-indulgent of
Viktor Orban, the prime minister accused of curtailing political pluralism in
Hungary, because his European People’s Party is the leading force in the
Commission and the Parliament. There is not much evidence for that particular allegation,
but if the Commission becomes too party-political, its ability to carry out
technical functions effectively – or in this case, to act as a guardian of
liberal democracy – may be compromised.
Next year’s European elections could accelerate the
Commission’s politicisation. Most of the pan-European political parties say
they will each designate a candidate for Commission president. After the
elections they want the European Council to propose the candidate of the party
with the most MEPs as president – and then the Parliament to invest him or her.
Were the European Council to propose any other name, MEPs would reject it.
If this scheme works, there might be a bit more interest
in the European elections. But it is far from certain that the political
parties and the European Council will, in the end, play this game. If they do
allow the Parliament to appoint Barroso’s successor, the Commission is likely
to become more beholden to the Parliament – and the leading party within it –
than is currently the case.
Such an outcome would be alarming, because the EU needs a
strong and independent Commission – to consider the wider European interest,
draw governments’ attention to long-term trends, propose solutions to pressing
problems (whether in the wider EU or the eurozone), work doggedly to deepen the
single market, and perform its monitoring role in eurozone governance. As the
eurozone integrates, one key task will be to ensure a smooth relationship
between the countries inside the euro and those outside it. Decisions made by
the eurozone should not damage or fragment the single market.
So what can be done to strengthen this flagging institution?
The most important step requires not a treaty amendment or an institutional
reform, but simply an agreement among heads of government. They should decide
to reinforce the Commission’s independence by appointing strong figures as
commissioners, and above all by ensuring that a heavyweight politician takes on
the presidency.
The member-states should mandate the new president and
his team to maintain their independence from the European Parliament, and
support them in their efforts to do so. After the last European elections the
Commission and the Parliament reached an ‘inter-institutional agreement’,
covering future legislation and procedures, which gave the Parliament several
things that it wanted. The Council of Ministers spurned the opportunity to make
this a tripartite arrangement; if it had done, it could have balanced the legislative
activism of the Parliament and pulled the Commission closer to it. After the
next European elections the three main EU institutions should seek a tripartite
accord on the EU’s work programme.
As for reform of the Commission itself, the problem of too
many commissioners needs to be tackled. There are not enough important jobs for
28 of them, and with so many people around the table, substantive discussions
are almost impossible. The one-commissioner-per-country rule encourages both
governments and those they appoint to the Commission to assume – in breach of
the treaties – that the job of commissioners is to represent their homeland.
So the next president should divide his or her
commissioners into seniors – who could become vice presidents – and juniors.
There should be an informal understanding that, though all commissioners are of
equal legal status, the senior ones will co-ordinate the work of the juniors in
their particular areas of responsibility. The seniors should meet regularly. In
the longer run, when the treaties are re-opened, the EU should adopt a system
whereby big countries would always have a commissioner (though not necessarily
one of the top jobs) and smaller countries would take it in turns.
Another useful treaty change would be to give the
European Council the right to sack the Commission. The Parliament has that
power and by threatening to use it forced the resignation of the Santer
Commission in 1999. If the treaties said that either body could sack the
Commission, its equidistance between governments and MEPs would be reinforced.
And that would help to give the EU the strong and independent Commission that
it needs.
Charles Grant is director of the Centre for European Reform