Lee Williams writes:
Fresh starts are great, aren't they? They fill you with
hope for a better future.
So it’s wonderful that we have a new European
Commission coming in, especially one that is avowedly committed to greater transparency about the revolving door between EU
politics and big business.
This
is good news especially in light of recent fears about the transparency of
arguably the Commission’s greatest task ahead – the negotiation of the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).
However just
as you begin to feel the faintest stirrings of hope something comes along which
quite simply knocks you down and makes the terms "European
Commission" and "transparency" about as likely bedfellows as
Nigel Farage and an Afghan kitchen with HIV.
I’m referring
to the appointment of former oil baron Miguel Arias Cañete as the new European
Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy.
That’s right, in case you’re
worried one of your colleagues spiked your coffee, you did read those words
correctly - a former oil baron, dubbed by the The Times ‘Senor Petrolhead’, has
been put in charge of sorting out climate change.
Cañete was the president of two companies handling
petroleum supply in Spain.
He held major
shares in both companies until this September and his son was also a board member
until recently. His brother-in-law is now the president of both.
What was that
about the new Commission and a commitment to greater transparency about
revolving door politics?
When Cañete
became the Spanish minister for agriculture and the environment in 2011, he
immediately enacted reforms to the Spanish coastal law.
Cañete had links to
real estate and construction companies which could benefit from the reforms –
he was a former board member of one, his wife the sole representative of
another and his brother-in-law was the president of the national cement
manufacturer’s association!
Don’t check that coffee, this is all still reality.
Cañete’s
political path is as littered with potential conflicts of interest as a shark
on lifeguard duty.
In his time as a member of the European Parliament between
1988 and 1999 Cañete sat on the Agricultural and Rural Development Committee
where he fought for the inclusion of bull breeding in the list of agricultural
activities that receive payments from the EU.
His wife, Micaela Domecq Solís,
is the heiress and co-owner of a bull breeding business.
New commissioner for Environment, Maritime Affairs and
Fisheries, Karmenu Vella, has been a member of the Maltese parliament since
1976, a period of time which saw UK gambling company, Betfair, granted its
first overseas licence in Malta.
Vella was a
non-executive director on
the Betfair Maltese board.
He was also chairman of Orange Travel Group, which
specialises in cruise ships and outbound travel to Malta or at least he was
until 13 March 2013 when he stepped down.
It was the same day he was appointed
Maltese minister for tourism.
More coffee?
These are only two names out of half a dozen
new European Commissioners who have been singled out as having potential conflicts of
interest by Corporate Europe Observatory, a campaign Group for greater
democratic accountability in the EU.
We really shouldn't be surprised.
The EU has a long
history of revolving door politics, reaching perhaps its hallucinatory peak in
2013 when the Commission re-appointed an ex-EU official turned lawyer for Big
Tobacco – someone who had already been through the revolving door – to head its
ethical committee advising on…
guess what?... that’s right, revolving door reforms.
Or was that the peak?
Maybe it’s
just the coffee we drink nowadays or maybe we’re peaking right now with a new
Commission that is supposedly dedicated to greater transparency but which
contains a handful of Commissioners who could just as easily be viewed as
insider lobbyists for big business than as disinterested politicians.
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