Cathy Ashton: 10 things to know
From the FT’s Westminster blog
Cathy Ashton is Europe’s new foreign policy supremo. Even friends are stunned that someone so low key could have been elevated to such a high profile job. To date she has served as EU trade commissioner, leader of the Lords, and as a junior justice and education minister. Here are 10 more details about her:
– She spent most of her early career working for Business in the Community, a charity set-up by Prince Charles
– She quit as Tony Blair’s farming minister after four days in 2006. She refused to take on the job as a part-time adjunct to her post at the Department for Constitutional Affairs
– One of her best moments as Leader of the Lords came when Ireland voted against the Lisbon treaty. She had been astute enough to agree a position with Gordon Brown beforehand, so when the Irish result interrupted a Lords debate on Europe, she was able to rise to her feet immediately and give the treaty her full backing
– She was an administrative secretary for CND between 1977 and 1979 (I wonder what her MI5 file says?) and was later elected a vice-chairwoman
– She is married to Peter Kellner, the left-leaning former journalist turned YouGov pollster
– She spends her weekends back at home in the UK and travels to Brussels on Monday mornings
– She is a big X Factor fan but only mentions enjoying the theatre in Who’s Who
– A full-size Dalek stands in the corner of her sitting room. It was a present from Peter
– Lord McNally is one of her most excitable admirers: “She has a very seductive manner,” he once told his peers. “Indeed, in my daydreams I sometimes think…of Antony and Cleopatra, with me as Antony—but she already has an Antony.”
– She shuns some accoutrements of the high life (”I don’t know any oligarchs. I don’t think I’ve ever been on anyone’s yacht.’) but she is not known to compromise on restaurants in Brussels
Van Rompuy and Ashton: big enough for the big EU jobs?
November 19, 2009 5:09pm Comment
So it looks as if it is to be Herman Van Rompuy, Belgium’s prime minister, as the full-time president, and Catherine Ashton, Britain’s EU trade commissioner, as the foreign policy supremo. This is the culmination of eight years of efforts, starting with the EU’s Laeken Declaration of 2001, to reform the bloc’s institutions and give the EU a more dynamic world profile.
Carl Bildt, Sweden’s foreign minister, thinks the EU had a historic opportunity in its grasp and flunked it - at least as far as the full-time presidency is concerned. The British government itself was saying more or less the same thing until tonight. It was adamant that the EU needed a big-hitter as president to convince the rest of the world that the EU was going places. Now it has participated in a classic EU trade-off that has produced exactly the result it said would be no use to anyone.
But the British are no more complicit in these decisions than the French, the Germans and everyone else. Fernch President Nicolas Sarkozy switched his support to Van Rompuy from Tony Blair, the ex-premier of the UK. Germany, conscious of its traditional role as an ally to the EU’s smallest countries, never really wanted Blair in the first place. And in many ways, they were right about Blair - but for the wrong reasons. He came with an awful lot of baggage - not just the Iraq war, but the way his actions too often failed to match his words when it came to Britain’s national neurosis over the EU.
So perhaps the real difficulty was that no other “big-hitter” put forward his or her candidacy for the presidency. We had, as far as I recall, someone from Luxembourg, someone from Estonia, someone from Latvia, someone from Ireland, someone from Finland… No Frenchman, German, Italian or Spaniard was ever mentioned for the EU presidency.
Wise EU heads always said that the presidency would be defined by the first person who held the job. Well, now we know. Intelligent, civilised, modest, with a calming sense of humour - a consensus-builder and an organiser. Good qualities. But has the EU been ambitious enough?
Van Rompuy-Brit combination would signal EU disunity on Turkey
November 19, 2009 3:14pm Comment
The sun is shining in Brussels and the sky has an unseasonably blue, cloudless, late-November-in-Rome quality as European Union leaders make their way here for the summit of summits - the event where they will choose the EU’s first full-time president and new foreign policy chief. I wonder if the weather will be so fine when the leaders finally drag themselves away from the negotiating table after what is shaping up to be a night of relentless hard bargaining.
By general consent, the frontrunner is Herman Van Rompuy, the amiable, haiku-writing Belgian prime minister. Even a speech he gave in 2004 that reveals him to be an implacable opponent of Turkey’s entry into the EU (Turkey has been an official candidate for the past four years) doesn’t seem to be doing Van Rompuy any harm. Well, why should it? It fits in perfectly with the views of French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
It has been clear for the past week that Merkel and Sarkozy would be perfectly happy to put Van Rompuy in the presidency. Yes, he is almost unknown outside Belgium. Yes, it is hard to see President Barack Obama or President Hu Jintao taking him entirely seriously. Yes, he is no Tony Blair. But he will be good at building consensus among EU governments. He will be good at organising the work of the European Council. And that is what France, Germany and many small EU states want.
The question is whether the UK, seething with fury at Sarkozy’s betrayal of Blair and impatient with Germany and the rest for insisting on a president from a small country, will block Van Rompuy. If the UK does, a third candidate will get the job - and, frankly, it is anyone’s guess who it will be (except that I cannot imagine it will be Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker, because the UK and France share a distaste for him).
What many countries, including Germany, hope is that Prime Minister Gordon Brown will chill, accept Blair has no chance, and then accept the job of foreign policy high representative for the UK. It is there for the British if they want it - that seems to be the message from most of Europe. The obvious choice is Foreign Secretary David Miliband, but lately he’s been ruling himself out.
I’ll tell you what, though. Miliband and other potential British candidates are all strong advocates of Turkish entry into the EU. So we could end up with a EU president (Van Rompuy) and a EU foreign policy chief (a Brit) who disagree on a fundamental aspect of the EU’s foreign relations.
What an excellent recipe for a united Europe.
Scarcity of women candidates for EU jobs signals trouble ahead
November 17, 2009 1:18pm Comment
My colleague Philippe Ricard wrote a fine piece in Monday’s Le Monde about the scarcity of women candidates for top positions in the European Union - not just the first full-time president and the new foreign policy high representative, but the next 27-member European Commission.
He made the point that if only a few women are nominated to the new Commission, the European Parliament is likely to cause real trouble when the nominees appear for their confirmation hearings, expected to start in December. The legislature does not have the legal authority to reject individual nominees, but in 2004 it demonstrated that it had the political strength to force their withdrawal when it torpedoed the appointment of Rocco Buttiglione, an Italian conservative, as justice commissioner. Moreover, the parliament does have the legal power to reject the Commission in its entirety - the so-called “nuclear option”.
Many MEPs show every sign of itching for a repeat performance of the Buttiglione affair, which is fondly recalled in the assembly as a defining moment in the parliament’s evolution. A scarcity of women would provide the perfect cover because it would be widely seen across Europe as inherently indefensible.
Could these tensions be eased by the appointment of a woman as the full-time president or the foreign policy supremo? In principle, yes. But officials from several countries have told me in recent days that the need for “gender balance” in the appointments is not regarded as of the same weight as the need for political balance (one person of the left, one of the right) - or the need to pick the best qualified candidates.
That last point sticks in the throat a bit, but there we are.
FT video: Christine Lagarde
November 17, 2009 11:16am Comment
The winner of this year’s FT ranking of European finance ministers, France’s Christine Lagarde, talks about tackling the economic crisis.
Further reading: Brussels
November 16, 2009 4:12pm Comment
UK needs different ‘top job’ in Brussels (William Hague, FT)
EU pressed to appoint more women to top jobs (Stanley Pignal, FT)
EU top job search is too narrow (FT editorial)
Investigating Iceland’s financiers (Stanley Pignal, FT magazine)
Single market bargaining (Charlemagne, The Economist)
Massimo D’Alema: Pair of Safe Hands, or Disaster in the Making?
November 16, 2009 1:30pm Comment
I confess to a certain surprise at the way that Massimo D’Alema is climbing up the list of candidates for the post of European Union foreign policy chief. At first sight the former Italian prime minister and foreign minister ticks far too few boxes to get the job. But there are, in truth, some straightforward reasons for his ascent - none of which reflects well on the EU.
First, the unticked boxes. 1) His communist past. This is usually condensed into: “He’s a former communist and therefore unacceptable to Poland and other EU countries, which suffered under Soviet domination while the Italian communist party was gorging itself on covert funds from Moscow.” In fairness, D’Alema abandoned communism 20 years ago. I spent five years in Rome covering Italian politics, and he never struck me as an extremist or a hardliner. Quite the opposite: he was highly pragmatic, in a shifty kind of way.
2) His opinions of the US. D’Alema isn’t foolishly anti-American, but he has more than a few traces in him of that quintessential European personality, the austere leftwing intellectual who drips with cultural disdain for the US. This could be a real risk for the EU. If as EU foreign policy supremo he were to make critical remarks about the US in public, European influence in Washington would be killed stone dead - and there would be bitter recriminations in the 27-nation EU, making a mockery of the entire idea of a common foreign policy.
3) His linguistic skills. These days it would be crazy for the EU to have a foreign policy chief who doesn’t speak fluent English. D’Alema has picked up some over the years, but not enough. “He has Italian waiter’s French and not much English,” says one EU minister who has known him during his various spells in the Italian government.
4) The domestic Italian political factor. You have to ask yourself, why is Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi so eager to promote the candidacy of D’Alema, his political adversary? A little history is needed here. Back in 1996-2001 Berlusconi completely outmanoeuvred D’Alema in a lengthy set of negotiations over Italian constitutional reform that ended up going nowhere - to Berlusconi’s benefit. It must have crossed Berlusconi’s mind that D’Alema is quite capable of self-destructing in the EU foreign policy job, something that would damage his career and strengthen Berlusconi’s grip on the Italian political scene.
So why is D’Alema’s star on the rise? One reason is that France and Germany have never shown much interest in getting the foreign policy job (they prefer powerful economic posts on the incoming European Commission). Meanwhile, the UK persists in its stubborn support for Tony Blair as the EU’s first full-time president, thereby reducing the chances that David Miliband could become the foreign policy supremo. The behaviour of France, Germany and the UK has left a vacuum that has been filled by Italy, the EU’s fourth-ranking power.
The other reason is that D’Alema has the backing of Europe’s socialist parties. The key player in this game is Martin Schulz, the German who chairs the centre-left group in the European Parliament. Schulz is exploiting D’Alema’s candidacy for his wider purposes, which include maximising the legislature’s power relative to the EU governments and the Commission, increasing the left’s voice in Europe and consolidating his personal authority over the European centre-left.
It’s all pretty unedifying. Whatever happened to the idea that Europe’s top jobs should go to the best qualified candidates?
FT video: Spain ready for recovery
November 16, 2009 12:38pm Comment
Watch the Bank of Spain’s governor discuss the need to reform the labour market Continue reading "FT video: Spain ready for recovery"
The pace picks up on EU enlargement into the Balkans
November 13, 2009 3:59pm Comment
Enlargement of the European Union is, almost imperceptibly, moving forward once more. EU foreign ministers are expected next week to forward Albania’s membership application to the European Commission for an opinion. This is a necessary technical step on the path to entry - small, but important.
The Commission is already preparing opinions on the applications of Iceland and Montenegro. The opinions will take quite some time to deliver - longer for Albania and Montenegro than for Iceland - but the machinery is now in motion.
There are signs of progress elsewhere, too. For a long time Serbia’s efforts to draw closer to the EU have been held back by the refusal of the Netherlands to permit implementation of Serbia’s EU stabilisation and association agreement. The Dutch insist that Serge Brammertz, the chief United Nations war crimes prosecutor, must first of all declare that Serbia is fully complying with its efforts to capture war crimes suspects - principally, Ratko Mladic, the former Bosnian Serb military commander.
Brammertz is due to hand his latest report to the UN Security Council in early December, and the Serbian government appears confident that it will be positive. That would remove the Dutch veto and allow Serbia to make a formal application for EU membership.
Meanwhile, Croatia’s bid to join the EU is back on track after a compromise over a maritime border dispute with Slovenia. One possible complication here is that Slovenia may hold a referendum to approve the deal.
Nor will it be plain sailing for Albania. As Olli Rehn, the EU enlargement commissioner, pointed out this week, the Albanian socialist opposition has been boycotting parliament since the national election of June 28. The boycott “does not respect European democratic standards”, Rehn said, and could damage Albania’s chances of being granted the formal status of an EU membership candidate.
Of all the countries with EU aspirations, there remain serious problems over Bosnia-Herzegovina and Turkey and a frustrating deadlock over Macedonia. But the recent movement on enlargement is encouraging, nonetheless. Enlargement has been one of the EU’s great foreign policy success stories. With the Lisbon treaty finally in place, it’s time to step up the pace.

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I have been the FT's Brussels bureau chief since September 2007 and was previously the bureau chief in Frankfurt and Rome. In this blog you'll find my thoughts on everything from the European Union's foreign and economic policies to the fortunes of its political leaders - as well as the more light-hearted aspects of life in Europe.
