The European Commission: Friends in the Right Places

By Stizzard

“I AM French, I am deeply French, but here I will stand as a European commissioner.” Thus Pierre Moscovici, a French former finance minister, when seeking the European Parliament’s approval as economics and finance commissioner this autumn. Commission officials similarly plead European ambitions over national interests. But home ties are hard to break, so governments are keen to place their own in key posts.New members have made their mark in recent years (see left-hand chart). Italy’s representation has plummeted from almost 25% of the total in the 1980s. As host country, Belgium still does well. But the most striking recent trend has been the rise of Poland and Romania. In 2011 Poland slipped ahead of Britain, which now accounts for just 4.5% of the commission’s total staff.The old guard clings on at the top, however. At the end of 2013, of the 128 most senior positions, Germany held 20, Britain 13 and France 11. German influence in commissioners’ private offices (cabinets) has risen in the new commission led by Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker (whose chef de cabinet is German). Germany is also seen…

The Economist: Europe