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by Aerroon 1198 days ago
>Jim's company needs to win a regular tender and have to respect a very long list of regulatory and financial requirements.

Yes, because without this bidding, the process falls into corruption. No such process exists for appointing EU commissioners. There's no "regular tender" that the candidate has to win.

>ministers are appointed by the Prime Minister who is not elected, but appointed by the parliament, by a majority of the votes.

The ministers answer to the PM. They are effectively one governmental unit, EU commissioners are not part of it. If the government gets a vote of no confidence then the government is dissolved as a group. EU commissioners can't be recalled mid-way through their term though, which isolates them from this.

1 comments

> No such process exists for appointing EU commissioners

I'm really struggling to understand why you keep lying about this.

First of all, there is no such process for any politician everywhere in the World.

Because they are not building roads where people drive their kids on and they are not the solely responsible for building them, in democratic countries there's a lot of them contributing to a synthesis, there's government, there's opposition, there's third parties (so called because... you know!)

Secondly, There's no "regular tender" it's bullshit.

Of course there is, nobody would be candidated to be a commissioner if there's no ground.

I wouldn't be chosen by any party, ever!

Because I have no chances of winning the tender.

Thirdly, and most importantly, there's a vetting process in place in the EU, and any of the commissioners there has more enemies than supporters, including those who are competing for the same seat.

So please stop your anti-EU propaganda and talk about the points you think are problematic in EU, not some fantasy issue that does not exist.

> The ministers answer to the PM. They are effectively one governmental unit, EU commissioners are not part of it.

Just because the mechanic is slightly different it doesn't mean it's wrong.

In France the President is elected directly, in Italy it isn't, in USA it's somewhat in the middle. it's the process that makes institutions democratic, not the system you chose.

> EU commissioners can't be recalled mid-way through their term though, which isolates them from this.

It's the same for parliament members in Italy unless they either die or resign, so what?