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  • Names Of Commissioners From Newest EU States Emerge

    NAMES OF COMMISSIONERS FROM NEWEST EU STATES EMERGE
    By Mark Beunderman

    EUobserver.com, Belgium
    Oct 25 2006

    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - The names of the two likely new members of
    the European Commission have emerged, with Romania proposing liberal
    senator Varujan Vosganian and Bulgaria likely to nominate EU affairs
    minister Meglena Kuneva.

    Romanian prime minister Calin Popescu-Tariceanu officially announced
    his country's nomination on Wednesday (25 October), with EU accession
    of Romania and Bulgaria on 1 January 2007 fast approaching.

    "I strongly believe that the solid political experience and the
    professional profile of Mr Varujan Vosganian recommends him for this
    position," Mr Tariceanu said.

    Mr Vosganian, a 48 year old economist and a liberal senator, is a
    member of the Armenian minority of Romania. He is also a member of
    the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe, Europe's human
    rights watchdog.

    The move came as a surprise after press reports on Wednesday morning
    had suggested that Bucharest would pick justice minister Monica
    Macovei as its member of the EU executive.

    Meanwhile, Bulgarian officials on Wednesday could not give official
    confirmation of their country's commissioner-designate doing the
    rounds - EU affairs minister Meglena Kuneva.

    But government-linked news website eunews.bg referred to a report on
    Bulgarian public radio saying Sofia will put forward Ms Kuneva, who
    had already been frequently tipped for the post and who is well-known
    on the Brussels scene.

    The head of the Bulgarian centre-right observers group in the European
    Parliament, Maria Cappone, told her colleagues in statement that
    "the Bulgarian government has nominated the minister for European
    integration, Mrs Meglena Kuneva."

    The European Commission and EU member states still have to officially
    agree to Mr Vosganian and Ms Kuneva as the two new commissioners,
    with a commission spokeswoman saying today that commission chief
    Jose Manuel Barroso will only issue a statement once consensus on
    the issue is fully clear.

    Recent "consultations" between Sofia, Bucharest, the commission and
    EU capitals, suggest however that the two candidates emerging on
    Wednesday will be endorsed by Mr Barroso and national governments.

    Mr Barroso is thereafter solely responsible for the attribution of
    the exact portfolios for the commissioners.

    One EU official on Wednesday denied reports that Mr Barroso will split
    the justice and home affairs portfolio and create a new commissioner
    for immigration.

    Another suggestion doing the rounds on the tasks of the new
    commissioners is that the consumer protection and health portfolio
    will be divided - resulting in a separate new commissioner for health.

    Barroso tells parliament to shift date Meanwhile the European
    Parliament will hear the two commissioners-designate in late November,
    with the EU assembly still wrangling with the commission on when it
    will vote on the new members of the Barroso team - either just before
    or just after accession.

    Parliamentary group chiefs have picked 4 January as an investiture
    date for the new commissioners, in order to allow the Romanian and
    Bulgarian MEPs - who until 1 January have "observer" status only -
    to vote for their own commissioners as fully-fledged European deputies.

    But in a letter to the parliament's president Josep Borrell, commission
    chief Barroso has written that this is legally impossible.

    In the letter, dated 23 October, Mr Barroso writes that parliament has
    to finish its procedure "before" 1 January in order to allow the new
    commissioners to "take up their positions on 1 January," citing legal
    reasons enshrined in the accession treaties of Romania and Bulgaria.

    Political group leaders in the parliament are discussing the issue
    in Strabourg this week, considering the alternative of shifting the
    vote to December.
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