There seems to be a misconception here that commission decides how the EU is run.
The EU executive is the council of ministers. The comission simply excute the decision from the council of ministers.
For example. The Euro was an initiative from France and Germany supported by most other countries, it wasn't an initialive from some EU commissioner. But they're the bureacrats that execute the decision. It was the council of ministers that put together a rescue package for Greece and agreed all the conditions, not the EU Commision. The EU commision subsequently adminstrated the whole thing.
The Comission is equivalent to the British Civil Service, obviously Civil Servents are influential look at "Yes Minister" they can mould things to a certain extent, which is what all the fuss is about.
So in the end the EU is still run by the heads of states.
The council of ministers can sack the entire EU commision at any time they choose and no commisioner gets appointed without a majority vote in the council.
The EU executive is the council of ministers. The comission simply excute the decision from the council of ministers.
For example. The Euro was an initiative from France and Germany supported by most other countries, it wasn't an initialive from some EU commissioner. But they're the bureacrats that execute the decision. It was the council of ministers that put together a rescue package for Greece and agreed all the conditions, not the EU Commision. The EU commision subsequently adminstrated the whole thing.
The Comission is equivalent to the British Civil Service, obviously Civil Servents are influential look at "Yes Minister" they can mould things to a certain extent, which is what all the fuss is about.
So in the end the EU is still run by the heads of states.
The council of ministers can sack the entire EU commision at any time they choose and no commisioner gets appointed without a majority vote in the council.
Comment