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EU leaders endorse second term for Ursula von der Leyen as bloc’s top official

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EU leaders have endorsed a second five-year term for Ursula von der Leyen as European Commission president, although she failed to win the backing of Italy, the bloc’s third-largest member state.

A majority of leaders at a Brussels summit on Thursday night agreed to von der Leyen remaining in post, alongside choosing former Portuguese Prime Minister António Costa as the next EU Council president, who chairs meetings of the 27 heads of government, and Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas as the bloc’s next chief diplomat.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni abstained, rather than supporting von der Leyen. Hungarian Premier Viktor Orbán voted against.

Meloni’s stance came after she voiced her discontent that the three pivotal appointments had been proposed in a private gathering of six EU leaders last week that excluded her and her hard-right political grouping, which performed strongly in this month’s European parliament elections.

She said the appointment process was “wrong in method and substance”.

“I decided not to support it out of respect for the citizens and the indications that came from them in the elections,” Meloni added. “We continue to work to finally give Italy the weight it deserves in Europe.”

Von der Leyen told reporters after the vote that she was “very grateful” for the endorsement. “Indeed, Giorgia Meloni abstained. I think it is very important to work well . . . with the prime minister, with Italy, like with other member states. And this is a principle for me which I follow all the time.”

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said Meloni “clearly had her own views on how this whole process should have been conducted. And she made her views known . . . with total clarity, but the close personal ties we all have remain.”

Supported by Europe’s largest centrist parties, von der Leyen had been expected to remain commission president, as EU capitals preferred continuity over change given the turmoil buffeting the continent due to the war in Ukraine, tensions with China and political uncertainty in some of the bloc’s key member states.

“Kaja, Ursula and Antonio accepted,” said Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk. “Satisfaction. For Poland and for Europe.”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said the agreement on the EU appointments was “an important signal. With them we can make good and quick progress.”

Von der Leyen must now win a majority in the European parliament to secure her second term as head of the commission. A vote is scheduled to take place in the week of July 15.

A coalition of von der Leyen’s centre-right European People’s party, the Socialists and Democrats, and the liberal Renew Group have about 410 seats in the 720-strong chamber.

But because of potential defections in the secret ballot of MEPs, she could also need some votes from Meloni’s European Conservatives and Reformists group, which came third in the European parliament elections.

The Greens are also a possible source of support for von der Leyen, but are likely to demand strong commitments on the EU’s ambitious climate plans.




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