Friday, 27 November 2009
A signal defeat for Britain engineered by Brown 
 Christina
 ================================
 EU OBSERVER  27.11.09
 Michel Barnier to take over internal market  portfolio
 ANDREW WILLIS
  BRUSSELS – Frenchman Michel Barnier will take charge of the internal  market portfolio in the next European Commission, a post that will include  oversight of the EU's financial sector.
 The announcement by commission president Jose Manuel Barroso on Friday  (27 November) is likely to cause alarm in some European capitals, especially  London, where the words ‘French' and ‘regulation' are considered to go  hand-in-hand.
 Talk of a separate portfolio for financial affairs had been doing the  rounds of Brussels corridors in recent days, but in the end Mr Barroso decided  it was a natural component of the internal market brief.
 "Financial services in Europe have a lot to do with the deepening of  the internal market," Mr Barroso told reporters, while announcing the full team  that will take over early next year.
 He said he was asking Mr Barnier "to deepen the internal market in all  of its aspects," adding that would lead to further growth in  Europe.
 French president Nicolas Sarkozy is rumoured to have recently made  several late-night calls to the Portuguese politician in order to secure the  full responsibilities for his man in Brussels.
 Mr Sarkozy was one of the chief voices calling for an overhaul of the  Europe's financial supervision following the fall of US investment bank Lehman  Brothers last year.
 As internal market chief, the centre-right Mr Barnier - a former  French foreign minister, who also served as a commissioner under Romano Prodi –  will now hold the agenda-setting key for future EU legislation in the  area.
 UK concerns
 The news on Friday means British Prime Minister Gordon Brown may face  further accusation at home of having selected the ‘wrong job'.
 A political carve-up in Brussels last week saw the UK's Catherine  Ashton take the new EU high representative job, while France successfully  secured the sought-after economic post.   [They’re too right.  This is total incompetence on Brown’s part  -cs] 
 "Our French partners have a different view on market issues that  touch on Britain's vital economic interests," said William Hague,  shadow foreign affairs spokesman.
 London's financial heartland contributes a disproportionate amount to  the British economy, but despite the concerns, it is unclear what the  Frenchman's appetite for financial regulation will actually be.
 And in a move that should allay some of Britain's fears, Jonathan  Faull, a senior UK civil servant in the commission, looks set to become  director-general under Mr Barnier.  [Watch him folks! -cs] 
 Member state governments and the European Parliament are currently  considering a raft of financial proposals put forward by the commission,  including plans for a new supervisory framework, greater regulation of  hedge-funds and curbs on bankers' pay.
Posted by
Britannia Radio
at
18:58














