Ursula von der Leyen can run, but can she also hide? | Paul Taylor

Ursula von der Leyen can run, but can she also hide? | Paul Taylor

The European Commission president is running for re-election. Yet a political cronyism scandal is dogging her path

Ursula von der Leyen became president of the European Commission in a backroom deal in 2019 without facing Europe’s voters. Now she is running for re-election almost without campaigning. The former German defence minister, 65, was chosen unopposed last month as lead candidate of the centre-right European People’s party for the European parliament elections on 6-9 June, although she does not plan to take a seat in the EU legislature. Since then, she has shunned media questioning as far as possible, and is refusing to commit to debating the other candidates in public.

She has not confirmed that she will show up for the high-profile Maastricht debate on 29 April, according to the organisers, and political sources say a major European newspaper had to drop plans to stage its own debate among the Spitzenkandidaten, or lead candidates, because von der Leyen would not pledge to attend.

Paul Taylor is a senior fellow of the Friends of Europe thinktank

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