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Hard-right ECR group gets powerful EU Commission post, stirring Parliament

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, presents the new members of her team
Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, presents the new members of her team Copyright Dati Bendo/EC
Copyright Dati Bendo/EC
By Paula SolerVincenzo Genovese
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Socialists, Liberals and Greens oppose von der Leyen's appointment of Italian hard-right Raffaele Fitto (ECR) as executive vice-president of the new European Commission.

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Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's decision to appoint Italy's Raffaele Fitto, from Giorgia Meloni's hard-right party, as one of the six powerful executive vice-presidents (EVPs) has been criticised by moderates who backed her reappointment in the European Parliament.

Von der Leyen proposed Fitto as executive vice-president for Cohesion and Reforms on Tuesday when she unveiled her new dream team for the next five years after weeks of negotiations that saw her balance gender, political affiliation and geography.

But Iratxe García, the Socialist leader in the Parliament, said the appointment "does not meet the demands of our political family", claiming that the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group was not part of the majority backing von der Leyen for another term.  

Neither Socialists and Democrats nor EU liberals see Fitto's appointment as a "red line" for withdrawing support for von der Leyen's commission, but Fitto will need MEPs' approval to get the job.   

"We have already warned of this political decision by Ursula von der Leyen. She has confirmed it. We take note of that. Now it's time for the hearings and we will make real demands on Mr Fitto," French MEP Valérie Hayer, leader of the EU Liberals, told a press conference in Strasbourg.   

Competence, independence from national member states and a pro-European commitment will be three key requirements for Hayer's Liberal group, she said.   

The Greens/EFA group, on the other hand, believes that rewarding Italy's hard right with a vice-presidency could push the EU's majorities further to the right and expressed doubts about other commissioner appointments, notably the Hungarian and Austrian candidates: Olivér Várhelyi and Magnus Brunner.    

"He [Várhelyi] didn't perform very well in the previous term [...] and also, as far as I know, he doesn't know anything about animal welfare and health, so in that sense there are also concerns," said MEP Bas Eickhout, co-president of the Greens/EFA group, adding that an Austrian conservative in charge of migration was also a big concern for them.   

The Left group welcomed the gender balance achieved by von der Leyen, but not so much the fact that this is the most right-wing European Commission ever and that Fitto has been given an EVP position.   

"This is unprecedented and I think it says something about today's political orientation of the European Commission," said French MEP Manon Aubry, co-leader of the left-wing party.  

On the other side of the political spectrum, the hard-right grouping of Viktor Orbán's Patriots of Europe has concerns not only about specific candidates, but also about the distribution of the different policy areas.   

"I think the fundamental problem is that the European Commission wants to continue doing the same thing for five years, when Europeans voted in the elections for a change of course, which has not happened," MEP Jorge Buxadé (Spain/Vox) told Euronews.   

The next steps will see the European Parliament preparing the so-called 'commissioner hearings', where each candidate will have to secure at least a two-thirds majority in the relevant European Parliament committee(s) to be approved - which won't be an easy task for some. 

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