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PA Wire/Press Association Images
EU're not for me

Cameron move to force vote could open the door for Kenny to take EU President role

Jean Claude Juncker is the favourite for the job, but David Cameron may force a vote that could see Enda Kenny elected.

BRITISH PRIME MINISTER David Cameron will force fellow EU leaders to vote on who should head the bloc’s executive body if they try to impose Jean-Claude Juncker, Downing Street sources said Sunday.

Cameron, who views the former long-serving Luxembourg prime minister as a federalist who will not adopt the modernising reforms he says the European Union badly needs, has vowed to “fight this right to the very end”.

London feels Juncker is an EU insider to the bone, who will not heed the backlash voters inflicted in last month’s European Parliament elections, but instead press on regardless with Brussels business as usual.

The vote could open the door for Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny to take Europe’s top job.

European centre-left leaders meeting in Paris yesterday backed Juncker — who is from the centre-right — and the row is set to dominate the two-day summit of all 28 EU leaders starting Thursday.

“The Social Democrats accept that… Juncker must be president of the European Commission.” said Germany’s Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, who heads the country’s Social Democrats and also attended the Paris talks.

Cameron, who leads Britain’s centre-right Conservatives, wants a delay in the nomination process in an effort to find a consensus candidate.

However, if leaders are unwilling to consider any alternatives to Juncker, Cameron will call a vote, forcing his counterparts from around Europe to say why Juncker should be eased into the job unopposed.

“British officials have been clear… that if there was the political will to find consensus then the decision on commission president could and should be delayed but if leaders are not even willing to consider alternative names, despite their widely expressed misgivings, then a vote should take place,” a Downing Street source said.

Cameron “believes it is important that each leader sets out their position clearly when such an important principle is at stake — handing power to the parliament through a back-room deal.”

EU leaders have traditionally named the commission head on their own, but under new rules they now have to “take into account” the results of European parliamentary elections last month, though exactly what that means remains unclear.

© AFP 2014

Read: Poor us: Ireland is less wealthy than the EU average

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