Ursula von der Leyen has lost Europe’s trust. She doesn’t deserve a second term | Alberto Alemanno

Ursula von der Leyen has lost Europe’s trust. She doesn’t deserve a second term | Alberto Alemanno

The commission president can no longer command a convincing majority. Rejecting her would be good for European democracy

After being hand-picked by the 27 EU leaders as the nominee to preside over the European Commission for a second five-year term, Ursula von der Leyen now needs to win the approval of the European parliament. The 65-year-old German politician needs an absolute majority when the 720 MEPs vote on Thursday: 361 votes. For this she can rely on the three pro-European political groups that won a majority of the seats in the European elections last month and supported her in 2019 – her own centre-right European People’s party (188 seats), the Socialists (136), and the liberals of Renew (77).

Yet individual MEPs from all three groups have already gone public to say they won’t back von der Leyen. They include France’s conservative Les Républicains from the EPP, German, Irish and Romanian liberals as well as French and ItalianSocialist delegations, among others. Moreover, as the vote is held by secret ballot, some may support her candidacy in public but still push the “no” button in Strasbourg.

Alberto Alemanno is the Jean Monnet professor of EU law at HEC Paris and Europe Futures Fellow at IWM in Vienna

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