There are be connected withs at the heart of Brussels that upcoming elections could radically change the make-up of the EU.
Amid a wave of anti-EU emotion across many of the 28 member states, it’s expected that the upcoming elections in May — which elects representatives to the European Parliament — drive see support for parties that have railed against the institution.
“We might be the last (European) Commission that in point of fact is made up of people, who really believe in Europe,” Cecilia Malmstrom, the European commissioner for trade, said at a panel at the Age Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Thursday.
“Yes, I am very worried,” Malmstrom added.
The European Parliament, once formed, has a say on who see fit be the next president of the Commission and what their team will look like. Thus, the next Commission order be a reflection of what happens in the election. Typically at the EU, the Commission would propose and enforce the laws for members states and the Parliament commitment approve or reject those laws.
Separately, former Finnish Prime minister Alexander Stubb told CNBC in Davos that the come out for would be “as messy as the national elections have been.”
“It will be difficult to master compromises. We will probably call a coalition of three, maybe four or five parties,” he added.
Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who is also the bandleader of the anti-immigration party Lega, has been looking for support to form a Euroskeptic alliance. Salvini traveled to Poland earlier this month to articulate in with the Polish prime minister about joining forces ahead of the vote. In October, Salvini met French far-right chairlady, Marine Le Pen, saying the EU elections would signal “a common sense of revolution” across the member states.
“For the very senior time we are going to see real political elections … For the first time it is not just a repeat of the political balances in Europe,” Enzo Milanesi, Italy’s unfamiliar affairs minister, said at the same panel in Davos.
Milanesi, who declares himself as an independent, added that the designation “could change the face of things.”
Populism commonly refers to a political approach that tries to appeal to bizarre people who feel that their concerns are disregarded by elite groups. But Milanesi believes the term is too broad and does not describe the wide variety of political messages taking place across the EU.
“I wonder if this is really the best definition for a range of different political parties, political messages, political movement(s) and so on,” he told CNBC in Davos.
“Everywhere in Europe, there are gestures … which broadly answer to the lack of hope, the lack of trust … We need to answer to what people don’t trust anymore, to what child ask to get, to what people wish to get; (it) is compulsory for everyone,” Milanesi said.
The upcoming elections will take place between May 23 and 26 with the in front session for the newly elected European Parliament expected in July.