EU
El comissari eslovac declara la candidatura per triomfar #Juncker
European Commission Vice-President Maros Sefcovic
Slovakia's member of the European Commission declared his candidacy on Monday (4 June) to succeed Jean-Claude Juncker as the EU executive's president, promising to try to ease tensions between western states and newer members from the ex-communist east, writes Tatiana Jancarikova.
Maros Sefcovic, a Moscow-educated diplomat who is Juncker's vice-president for energy, said he would seek the nomination of the center-left PES group in the European Parliament.
"I realize it's a long and difficult process," he told reporters in Bratislava, making the most public bid to succeed Juncker next year. "I will do everything to get the support of social democrat parties across the EU."
The field of possible candidates is wide and the outcome hugely uncertain.
Sefcovic, 51, who has been in Brussels since 2004 as Slovak envoy and then commissioner, said a Czech delegation suggested he run during a meeting in Slovakia of center-left parties that also included Polish, Hungarian and Bulgarian groups.
"I will do my best to use this process to put the spotlight on stronger industrial policy, a more assertive position of the EU in international trade and on understanding between new and old member states," he added.
The nationalist governments of Hungary and Poland in particular have been involved in a series of disputes with Brussels including over immigration and judicial independence.
With center-left parties performing poorly, Sefcovic would face an uphill struggle to get the job even if he wins the nomination of the PES (Party of European Socialists).
Whoever wins the PES nomination will struggle to secure backing by a majority of national leaders on the European Council. The European Parliament is trying to force leaders to nominate a successor to Juncker from among lead candidates on party lists for next May's EU legislative election.
Among other possible contenders widely cited in Brussels are EU's Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde and EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager, a left-leaning Danish liberal who also could not count on backing from her government at home.
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