Good morning. A scoop to begin: The EU’s outgoing competitors chief Margrethe Vestager has warned an overhaul of the bloc’s merger guidelines would open a “Pandora’s box”, in a sideswipe at plans for her newly-announced successor to rethink the bloc’s antitrust rules.
At this time, the EU’s Dutch commissioner provides us his tackle the new-look fee introduced yesterday, and our Berlin workforce stories on Friedrich Merz lastly asserting his bid to be the subsequent German chancellor.
Spider’s internet
Linking up, going hand-in-hand: that’s the key change within the new European Fee introduced yesterday, in line with the (re)minted Dutch commissioner Wopke Hoekstra, write Alice Hancock and Andy Bounds.
Context: Ursula von der Leyen announced the names and portfolios of her new commissioners yesterday, lining up six govt vice-presidents overseeing 20 commissioners — many with overlapping tasks. Our mates at Politico have made a handy chart.
Hoekstra, a member of von der Leyen’s centre-right European Folks’s get together, has proved himself a loyal foot soldier for the European Fee president. He was rewarded with a second time period as local weather, internet zero and clear progress commissioner.
The previous Dutch finance minister, who can even have duty for taxation, will report to 2 govt vice-presidents, the Spanish socialist Teresa Ribera answerable for competitiveness and the French liberal Stéphane Séjourné, who will head up industrial coverage.
The tangle of political allegiances shouldn’t be an issue, Hoekstra stated: “I come from a rustic the place working collectively throughout get together traces is important.”
“My view has at all times been that our job is to repair the massive issues for Europeans, they usually don’t care in any respect about small politics and the issues sadly we preoccupy ourselves with an excessive amount of. They care about supply.”
Meaning intertwining local weather coverage “way more firmly along with the entire area of the economic system, business, innovation [and] tax”, Hoekstra stated. “That’s the step change, that’s the watershed factor within the strategy of this fee.”
However meaning a number of commissioners have a couple of boss, and coverage areas comparable to sustainability are cut up amongst varied fiefdoms.
“It’s extra difficult within the sense that you’ve a variety of cross-links . . . nevertheless it really displays the truth that we have to have insurance policies which are general co-ordinated,” a senior fee official stated.
Extra sceptical observers famous that the overlaps had been to von der Leyen’s benefit, on condition that they strengthen her function as the final word resolution maker.
One EU diplomat famous that whereas she had given large European nations vice-president posts, she had put in “loyal henchmen” comparable to Hoekstra below them to supervise the “meaty bits” of coverage implementation.
Chart du jour: Cold and warm
Though air-con accounts for 4 per cent of greenhouse gasoline emissions, customers are more and more opting for it, writes Lex.
Worthy opponents
When Friedrich Merz lastly introduced he was running as the centre-right chancellor candidate in Germany’s nationwide election subsequent yr, Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats breathed a sigh of aid, write Guy Chazan and Gideon Rachman.
Context: The SPD, which is presently polling at simply 15 per cent, means behind Merz’s Christian Democrats (CDU) on 33 per cent, has little chance of winning the Bundestag election scheduled for September subsequent yr. However many within the get together are satisfied that if it involves a duel between Merz and the incumbent, Scholz will prevail.
“Merz has no authorities expertise in any respect,” stated Nils Schmid, the SPD’s international affairs spokesman. “And he’s additionally obtained a really quick fuse. I’m positive we will beat him.”
The large worry amongst Social Democrats had been that it wouldn’t be Merz working because the centre-right’s candidate for chancellor however Hendrik Wüst, prime minister of North Rhine-Westphalia. However he introduced earlier this week that he wouldn’t be working.
“Wüst would have been much more difficult for us,” stated Johannes Fechner, a senior SPD MP. Wüst is seen as a centrist serious about social points — “not like Merz, a pro-business technocrat who simply needs to shrink the welfare state”.
Certainly, since taking the helm of the CDU in 2022, Merz has worked hard to maneuver it in a extra conservative, business-friendly path, away from the fuzzy liberalism of Angela Merkel, who gained an influence battle towards him within the early 2000s and went on to rule Germany as chancellor from 2005-21.
However Merz’s critics suppose he has gone too far. “He runs the chance of shedding a few of the Merkel voters,” stated Schmid.
Merz additionally polls badly amongst younger individuals and ladies, a lot of whom see him as a Nineteen Nineties man. “The subsequent election can be about shaping the long run with Olaf Scholz, or going again to the previous with Friedrich Merz,” stated Dirk Wiese, one other senior SPD MP.
What to observe right this moment
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European parliament debates floods, organised crime, Hungarian visa scheme and mpox.
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Inaugural session of Turkish-Swedish ministerial safety talks in Ankara.
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