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Polish PM favourite for top EU job

Published: 29 Aug 2014 - 01:45 am | Last Updated: 21 Jan 2022 - 11:50 am

BRUSSELS/PARIS: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has emerged as clear favourite for the key post of president of the European Council when EU leaders meet for a special summit tomorrow, several sources familiar with the selection process said.
If confirmed, his appointment to chair and steer policymaking meetings of EU leaders, would be a victory for the 10 ex-communist central and eastern European countries that joined the European Union a decade ago which have demanded that one of the top jobs go to a candidate from their region. It would also consecrate Poland’s rise as a major player in the 28-nation bloc alongside EU founders France and Germany.
The pro-European, centre-right Tusk, 57, has not acknowledged in public that he is a contender.
Two Brussels sources said current council president Herman Van Rompuy, who chairs and prepares EU summits, will consult fellow leaders on a package deal in a round of telephone calls yesterday and today.
“Van Rompuy is to call EU leaders today and if no one is opposed to Tusk there is a deal,” a person involved in the process said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Italian Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini, a centre-left socialist, would become EU foreign policy chief and Spanish Economy Minister Luis De Guindos would succeed Jeroen Dijsselbloem as chairman of euro zone finance ministers when the Dutchman’s term expires, the sources said.
A senior source in Tusk’s Civic Platform party said for the first time on Wednesday there were “different outcomes” possible for the prime minister, “including the option that Tusk takes one of the most important posts in Europe”.
Whoever wins the post of European Council president is expected to also chair euro zone summits, even if he or she comes from a non-euro zone country such as Poland, a third source said. “France accepted that in July,” the person said.
Britain was first to endorse Tusk publicly as a candidate on Tuesday, hoping to balance out former Luxembourg premier Jean-Claude Juncker, a veteran advocate of deeper EU integration, who was chosen in June to head the executive European Commission against fierce British objections.
Prime Minister David Cameron’s spokeswoman said Tusk shared Britain’s desire to reform the European Union.
An economic liberal and advocate of free trade, Tusk’s weak point is that he speaks little English and no French, making it harder for him to communicate to a wide audience.
Former Latvian Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis was the likely fallback candidate if Tusk stumbles or pulls out, the sources said. Former Estonian premier Andrus Ansip was also on the shortlist if the leaders want to give one of the posts to a member of the small liberal political family, they said.
REUTERS