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===Commissioner's oath===
===Commissioner's oath===
Each Commissioner is required to take an oath, officially the before the [[Court of Justice of the European Communities]], officially the '''Solemn undertaking before the Court of Justice by the President and the new members of the European Commission'''. The oath taken by the members of the current Barroso Commission is below[http://ec.europa.eu/commission_barroso/pdf/oath_en.pdf];
Each Commissioner is required to take an oath, officially before the [[Court of Justice of the European Communities]], officially the '''Solemn undertaking before the Court of Justice by the President and the new members of the European Commission'''. The oath taken by the members of the current Barroso Commission is below[http://ec.europa.eu/commission_barroso/pdf/oath_en.pdf];
[[Image:Leonard Orban oath.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Leonard Orban taking his oath before taking office in 2007]]
[[Image:Leonard Orban oath.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Leonard Orban taking his oath before taking office in 2007]]
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Revision as of 14:44, 4 September 2007

File:Barroso Commission Group 07.jpg
The Barroso Commission, the current commission,

A European Commissioner is a member of the 27-member European Commission. Each Commissioner within the college holds a specific portfolio and are led by the President of the European Commission. In simple terms they are the equivalent of national ministers.

Appointment

The Commissioners are appointed by the member-states together with the President, who decides upon their portfolio. The Commission in its entirety then seeks the approval of the Parliament and the Council of Ministers (by qualified majority).

It should be noted however that although Commissioners are allocated between member-states they do not represent their states; instead they are to act in European interests. Normally a member-state will nominate someone of the same political party as that which forms the government of the day. There are exceptions such as Commissioner Burke (of Fine Gael) was nominated by Taoiseach Haughey (of Fianna Fáil), or where larger states had two seats, they often went to the two major parties such as in the United Kingdom.

Partly due to the member-state selection procedure, only 8 of the current 27 Commissioners are women and no minorities have ever served on a Commission to date. (more on the makeup of the current commission)

Commissioner's oath

Each Commissioner is required to take an oath, officially before the Court of Justice of the European Communities, officially the Solemn undertaking before the Court of Justice by the President and the new members of the European Commission. The oath taken by the members of the current Barroso Commission is below[1];

File:Leonard Orban oath.jpg
Leonard Orban taking his oath before taking office in 2007

"Having been appointed as a member of the Commission of the European Communities by the Council of the European Union, after the vote of approval by the European Parliament, I do solemnly undertake: to be completely independent in the performance of my duties, in the general interest of the Communities; in the performance of these duties, neither to seek nor to take instructions from any government or from any other body; to refrain from any action incompatible with my duties.

I formally note the undertaking of each Member State to respect this principle and not to seek to influence members of the Commission in the performance of their tasks.

I further undertake to respect, both during and after my term of office, the obligations arising therefrom and in particular, the duty to behave with integrity and discretion as regards the acceptance after I have ceased to hold office of certain appointments or benefits."

Accountability

In addition to its role in approving a new Commission, the European Parliament has the power at any time to force the entire Commission to resign through a vote of no confidence. This requires a vote that makes up at least two-thirds of those voting and a majority of the total membership of the Parliament. While it has never used this power, it threatened to use it against the Commission headed by Jacques Santer in 1999 over allegations of corruption. In response, the Santer Commission resigned en mass of its own accord, the only time a Commission has done so.

Portfolios

The make up and distribution of portfolios are determined by the Commission President and do not always correspond with the Commissions departments (Directorate-Generals). While some have been fairly consistent in make up between each Commission, some have only just been created or are paired with others. With a record number of Commissioners in 2007, the portfolios have become very thin even though the responsibilities of the commission have increased.[1]

Portfolio(s) Directorate-General(s) Commissioner
President SG, BEPA, SJ José Manuel Barroso
Institutional Relations & Communication Strategy COMM Margot Wallström
Enterprise & Industry ENTR Günter Verheugen
Justice, Freedom, & Security JLS Franco Frattini
Transport TREN Jacques Barrot
Administrative Affairs, Audit, & Anti-Fraud ADMIN, PMO, DIGIT, IAS, OIB,
OIL, (relations with) EPSO, OLAF
Siim Kallas
Economic & Financial Affairs ECFIN Joaquín Almunia
Internal Market & Services MARKT Charlie McCreevy
Agriculture & Rural Development AGRI Mariann Fischer Boel
Competition COMP Neelie Kroes
Trade TRADE Peter Mandelson
Fisheries & Maritime Affairs FISH Joe Borg
Environment ENV Stavros Dimas
Health SANCO Markos Kyprianou
Development & Humanitarian Aid DEV, AIDCO, ECHO Louis Michel
Enlargement ELARG Olli Rehn
Employment, Social Affairs, & Equal Opportunities EMPL Vladimír Špidla
Taxation & Customs Union TAXUD László Kovács
Financial Programming & the Budget BUDG, OLAF Dalia Grybauskaitė
External Relations & European Neighbourhood Policy RELEX Benita Ferrero-Waldner
Education, Training & Culture EAC Ján Figeľ
Regional Policy REGIO Danuta Hübner
Energy TREN Andris Piebalgs
Science & Research RTD, JRC Janez Potočnik
Information Society & Media INFSO Viviane Reding
Consumer Protection SANCO Meglena Kuneva
Multilingualism SCIC, DGT Leonard Orban

Politicisation

File:EU commissioner Margot Wallström September 30 2004.jpg
Margot Wallström: "the EU has to get more political and controversial"

Commissioners are also required to remain above national politics while exercising their duties in the Commission in order to maintain independence. However that requirement has slowly been eroded as the institution has become more politicised. During the Prodi Commission, Anna Diamantopoulou (Employment and Social Affairs) took leave from the Commission to participate in the 2004 Greek elections and resigned when she won a seat despite her party losing. Romano Prodi campaigned in the 2001 Italian elections while still President.[2]

Recently, Louis Michel (Development & Humanitarian Aid) has announced that he is to go on unpaid leave to take part in the 2007 Belgian elections.[3] Although he has positioned himself so as not to be elected, the European Parliament's development committee asked the Parliament's legal service to assess if his participation violates the treaties. [2]

Michel claimed that politicisation of this manner is part of reconnecting the Union with its citizens. The Commission revised its code of conduct for commissioners allowing them to; "be active members of political parties or trade unions." To participate in an election campaign they are required to "withdraw from the work of the commission for the duration of the campaign."

Politicisation has even gone so far as commissioners backing national candidates, with Neelie Kroes (Competition) backing Angela Merkel in the 2005 German elections and Margot Wallström (Institutional Relations & Communication Strategy) backing Ségolène Royal in the 2007 French elections.[4] Wallström defended this claiming that the EU has to get more political and controversial as being a vital role in communicating the Commission.[5] Wallström has been notable for engaging in debate and politics, she was the first commissioner to start her own blog.

Reform

The number of Commissioners is currently one per member state. This has been seen as making the Commission grow too large with each expansion. Under the European Constitution the size would be reduced to two-thirds of the members, rotated between them.[6] Other ideas that have been floated are the creation of junior members for smaller states[7], the creation of "super-commissioners"[8]

See also

References

Template:Barroso Commission