© REUTERS/ Vincent Kessler
A growing rift is developing within the EU amid reports European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker is under pressure from German officials to resign following the British exit from the EU.
The pressure on Juncker comes as member states remain divided on whether to accelerate EU integration or take a more pragmatic approach to centralizing power in the wake of the
UK's referendum decision.
As debate continues on the EU's future in the face of growing Euroskepticism, a German government minister told the Sunday Times newspaper that German Chancellor Angela Merkel had come to view Juncker as "part of the problem" with the EU.โ"Juncker has time and again acted against the common interest, and his reaction to the British referendum has been very damaging," the source said.
It's understood that Juncker's language about Northern Ireland and Scotland โ including his
meeting with SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon โ ruffled feathers across the bloc, and were seen by Berlin as being "unnecessarily provocative."
โ"This is not a time for institutional bickering," the source added, "but the pressure for him to resign will only become greater and chancellor Merkel will eventually have to deal with this next year."
The comments aren't the first to speculate on Juncker's position as EC chief, with Czech foreign minister Lubomir Zaoralek suggesting the 61-year-old should "contemplate quitting" after the UK voted to leave the bloc.
โ"Right now I can't see the European Commission chairman as the right man for the job," Mr Zaoralek told local media.
"I don't want to call on anyone [to resign], but... someone in the EU maybe should contemplate quitting, because [Brexit] is a responsibility someone should have assumed."
Integration at Heart of EU DivideThe disagreements across the EU are based on differing opinions over continued integration in the face of
growing euroskepticism.
While Juncker, along with nations such as France and Belgium, have been strong proponents of further European integration, and have seen Brexit as a chance to speed up such processes, a number of other member states have rejected such ideas, with
German officials arguing that a more pragmatic, less centralized approach to EU membership needs to be adopted in the wake of rising anti-EU sentiment.
โA number of Eastern European member states have already expressed concern over Juncker's leadership, leading to reports Germany could team up and try and force him to step aside.
This division has also been evident in the response of various EU leaders to the UK's referendum decision to lave the EU.
โWhile German Chancellor Merkel has urged member states to give the UK time before triggering Brexit negotiations, others such as France have looked to place pressure on London to kick off talks sooner rather than later to avoid ongoing uncertainty.
UK government officials have argued that
Article 50, the trigger needed to start Brexit discussions, should not be taken until either later this year or early 2017 to give officials more time to prepare for negotiations with Brussels.
stirring the pot again.
I bet the Sunday Times' source is NOT a German govt minister.
In any event, the ONLY party that has ever and always "viewed Juncker as part of the problem with the EU" has been the Brits, who blocked his earlier appointment on the grounds that he was 'a federalist'.
Their ability to 'be many voices' all at once never ceases to amaze me! Here's a Sunday Times story - probably another Brit intel plant-job - claiming a German source and published by a Russian news outlet that is ostensibly trying to combat exactly this sort of misinformation, but which ends up taking the bait and spreading the Brits' propaganda for them!