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by ossobuco
460 days ago
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Nothing of what I said is incorrect, yet you chose to provide a condescending and pointless explainer instead of addressing my arguments. Why is VDL ruling the commission if her previous performance was terrible and she isn't viewed favorably by the majority of Europeans? Why was she appointed by MPEs with secret ballot? Given the current situation, do you really believe the democratic system in place for the EU provides efficient mechanisms for holding elected officials accountable for their actions? I'd honestly expect better from the supposed "cradle of democracy". |
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I provided an explanation with no particularly condescending tone. I have no idea how your arguments were not addressed.
> Why is VDL ruling the commission if her previous performance was terrible and she isn't viewed favorably by the majority of Europeans?
The opportunity to change is in the regular elections, both at national and EU levels. That's when unpopular leaders are replaced.
The fact that a particular leader is unpopular does not mean much, as they are indirectly elected (as so happens in paliamentarism).
> Given the current situation, do you really believe the democratic system in place for the EU provides efficient mechanisms for holding elected officials accountable for their actions?
Yes, I do. Depending on what you mean by "held accountable", of course. People sometimes use this jargon in a very loaded manner.
The main problem I see is not the "accountability", as the commissioner is accountable to the council that picked them.
The main problem is that the council is formed by national government representatives. This mixes EU politics with local national politics. I may vote for a given party in national elections for local reaasons (e.g.: housing and transportation), but I may disagree with their stance on the EU level.
I don't know a good way to resolve this dissonance outside of some sort of federalization of the EU (something I think would be positive btw).