The timeline for establishing the next European Commission looks increasingly tight: the question is not whether it will be late – it will be – but how much pressure lawmakers will be under to greenlight new commissioners. A political holdup in Slovenia is preventing the government from submitting the nomination papers of its candidate for commissioner, Marta Kos. The gridlock in Ljubljana could make even the belated deadline of 1 December extremely difficult to meet. Perhaps more importantly, the tighter the scheduling becomes, the greater the pressure will be on members of the European Parliament (MEPs), to approve the commission candidates they are charged with scrutinising. Officially, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is due to reveal how she wants to divide responsibilities amongst the next crop of commissioners on Tuesday (17 September). That would allow the European Parliament to schedule hearings – probably in mid-October – the committees that will decide whether or not to approve each commissioner for the relevant job. For example, the budget committee will decide whether to approve the candidate for budget commissioner. But von der Leyen’s presentation is at risk of being delayed for the second time, because the Slovenian Parliament’s EU affairs committee did not, as expected, deliver its required opinion on Kos on Friday (13 September). Unless the committee meets on Monday, von der Leyen will be forced to postpone her announcement. Slovenian law requires the committee to give its opinion by 24 September, so the holdup in Ljubljana should be resolved by then at the latest – provided the government does not collapse. In theory, that means von der Leyen’s unveiling of the Commission portfolios would be delayed by a week or so, at worst. Sources in the EU institutions say that makes the 1 December target difficult, but not impossible. In addition to von der Leyen’s plan, the European Parliament also needs some paperwork – such as declarations of interests – from the nominees before it can schedule the hearings. |