In a recent debate, Daniel Cohn-Bendit – representative of the Greens in the European Parliament (EP)
– presented a proposal to organize primary elections in order to elect the
successor of José Manuel Barroso.
Also recently, Guy Verhofstadt –
leader of the liberals in the EP – highlighted the possibility to elect the
president of the European Commission (EC) from the Members of the European
Parliament. All these debates are taking place 2 years before the EP elections
(in 2014), but already in 2010 I expressed a possible realistic calendar for primaries.
A recent visit to Bucharest of ex-prime minister
Tony Blair confirmed my theory that it is important to have primary elections
in the EU. National politicians showed enormous interest in Tony Blair, and
national media largely covered his presence in Romania:
all this visibility for a person who, although he did influence recent history
of the EU, hasn’t held any official political position in Europe
for a while.
Let’s imagine a mechanism in which
a left-wing oriented person, like Blair, will run as a candidate for the
presidency of the EC. Moreover, in order to have a “complete menu”, it would be
interesting to organise primaries, where the left-wing candidate for the
presidency is chosen by the European citizens from, for example, 4 eligible
left-wing candidates. Much like the French Socialists primaries in autumn 2011 (it’s true that in this example, the
primaries were for the national elections, but it was still interesting).
Let’s take the argument a bit
further and say that the 4 other left-wing candidates are for example: David
Miliband, Sergei Stanishev, Jose Luis Zapatero and Alfred Gusenbauer. All of
them would go to each Member
State to claim the votes
of the Socialists or Social Democrats from that state. I am sure that in the
weeks leading up to the primaries, there will be big media coverage around this
nationally: debates will be aired live across the country where the primary
will be held next, and the subject of campaigns will clearly be European
topics, not necessarily directly connected to local and national subjects and
issues.
This would facilitate the dream of
the EP, and the EU in general: debates across Europe
focussing on EU topics, which will be featured on front pages of newspapers,
and hours and hours on national television in order to ‘mediatise’ the possible
leaders of the EU.
More and more academics say that “the
EU public sphere will merge with the national public spheres”. The mechanism
discussed here will give more legitimacy to EU institutions, involving the
citizens in this communication game. I expressed this publically
already in 2009 and I hope that the window of opportunity offered by the 2014
elections will not be missed.
Dan LUCA / Brussels
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