Perilous Times and The Revived Roman Empire
EU President, Herman Van Rompuy accused of acting like a
'Roman Emperor'
Herman Van Rompuy, the new president of the EU, has been accused of
having 'delusions of grandeur' over his choice of a summit venue.
By Bruno Waterfield in Brussels
Published: 7:00AM GMT 03 Feb 2010
Mr Van Rompuy has caused consternation in Brussels after he tried to
hold his first EU summit, dedicated to greater "economic union", in a
palace.
After pressure from Europe's capitals, Mr Van Rompuy switched the
Brussels summit to another prestigious, but less regal, building
hundreds of yards away from the usual office block venue where EU
leaders meet.
But diplomats are still predicting "chaos" when EU leaders meet next
week in the ornate, but badly equipped Bibliotheque Solvay, a cramped
100-year-old library which does not even include interpretation booths.
Talks, over two working sessions and lunch, will focus on proposals
from Mr Van Rompuy to give the EU more "economic governance" powers in
the aftermath of the recession and after implementation of the Lisbon
Treaty, which entered into force last month.
Mr Van Rompuy, who is President of the European Council, the
institution that represents EU leaders, originally wanted to hold the
gathering in the Palais d'Egmont, the 18th century Brussels palace
where, in 1972, Edward Heath signed Britain into the EU.
"That had to be stopped. Who does he think he is, a Roman Emperor?,"
said one diplomat.
Mr Van Rompuy's spokesman said that the idea was to move out of the
"not so cosy" glass and steel EU quarters to a venue reminiscent of the
Union's original informal "fireside" meetings of European leaders.
"The president wants to create a more intimate atmosphere for
dialogue," he said.
But diplomats are concerned Mr Van Rompuy might be trying to bounce EU
leaders into agreeing far-reaching economic proposals without proper
support from national delegations, which will be housed in a different
building without any communications links to the meeting venue.
Mr Van Rompuy has already ruffled feathers by calling the extra Feb 11
summit, as well as the traditional spring meeting in March, and by
insisting that he alone will draw up a paper proposing economic targets
and policy for the year 2020 to be set at the EU level.
"We are now moving beyond just monetary union to economic union," said
a senior EU official.
Many national officials are concerned that Mr Van Rompuy is too
"malleable" by pressure from France and Germany and is failing to take
into account the interests of all the 27 member states.
"Many countries, including Britain, are concerned over suggestions that
the EU would be able to take sanctions or collective redress against
those who do not follow economic targets," said a diplomat.
José Manual Barroso, the European Commission President, has suggested
that the summit will take new steps towards "economic government" at
the European level.
"All the logic of the Lisbon Treaty is to reinforce the European
approach, also in the economic case," he said on Tuesday.
The summit row comes amid confusion over implementation of the Lisbon
Treaty, which was supposed to make the EU better organised, and the new
presidential role played by Mr Van Rompuy. Criticism has also been
levelled at Baroness Ashton, the EU's first foreign minister, for a
"lacklustre and unimpressive" performance.