The European Commission was approved by the Parliament with the lowest support ever, and it’s not clear which political groups it can count on. But it is not necessarily a bad thing for Ursula von der Leyen.
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00:00It's the smallest majority ever obtained by a new European Commission, having received
00:09the green light from MEPs on Thursday with 370 votes in favour or 54% of the votes cast,
00:17282 votes against and 36 abstentions.
00:21The lack of a stable majority will thus have its implications for the next five years.
00:25There is not really a majority in the European Union today, we have a right that feels all-powerful
00:31with Ursula von der Leyen, with Manfred Weber here in the European Parliament, who thinks
00:34that one day it can turn to the far right to form alliances, in particular to destroy
00:39environmental laws, and then the next day, when things get better, to turn to the coalition
00:43of democrats and pro-European forces.
00:47The three centrist groups that formed the majority in the previous legislature could
00:51not secure more than half of the total votes.
00:55For different reasons, the centre-right EPP and the centre-left S&D have suffered significant
01:01defections.
01:02Spain's Popular Party, an EPP member with 22 MEPs, voted against the new college because
01:09it includes Spanish Vice President Teresa Rivera, a member of its rival centre-left
01:14Socialist Party.
01:17This does not mean that these groups will always be divided on legislative issues, but
01:21it makes it more likely that the Commission can align itself with the right or left of
01:25the hemicycle to pass legislation.
01:30On content, I believe that we could also find some consensus, some agreement with the Greens
01:34on the one hand, or the European Conservatives and Reformists on the other hand, but once
01:38again it's the free groups in the centre of the European Parliament, the EPP, the Socialists
01:43and the Renew Group, they need to coordinate their policies, their activities, and then
01:49we will always have roughly 370 to 400 members, and that is a majority.
01:56The vote also revealed further fractures.
01:59The ultra-conservative ECR party was split in two, with some voting for and others against
02:05the new Commission.
02:07The Commission will therefore not be able to rely on a stable majority, and will instead
02:12have to rely on changing alliances.
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