In Denmark we usually have coalition governments, and when they are constituted you can see who’s important and who’s not from the ministries they are given.

Some ministries are more important - Finance, Justice, Foreign Affairs - and some are less important.

But which commission posts are the most important and powerful? I want to take a more active interest in EU politics, but that requires me to know what to look for :D

  • EvilCartyen@feddit.dkOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    2 months ago

    Thank you for your perspective :)

    So these positions run the largest operations. Linking that to power is probably somewhat misguided

    I guess, but then again - how much of a budget you have does say something about how much muscle you have, right? In a very real sense money equals power projection.

    • cabbage@piefed.social
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      The Commission is basically two completely different things. Actually it’s probably more than two things, but the way we often talk about it, it plays two key roles.

      One is that of a bureaucratic body that runs the union, delegates funds, oversees the implementation of EU legislation, submits observations to cases before the CJEU, posts content to @EUCommission@ec.social-network.europa.eu, and that kind of jazz. This is where there’s a huge number of employees, and it’s where a lot of EU funds are spent. We probably wouldn’t be talking here if it wasn’t for the Next Generation Internet programme, which is a part of Horizon Europe, which is seen as a scientific research initiative. So the Fediverse has a pretty direct relationship to things going on in the bureaucracy that I assume is positioned under the Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth.

      This is, however, largely bureaucratic. Doesn’t mean it’s not important, but it’s not where the juicy political decisions are made.

      The other role is that of a executive body. In the separation of powers in the EU,

      In its executive role, budget and staff might matter less. What matters is the political deals you can strike. Resources might help you craft better proposals that the Council and Parliament then needs to accept before it can be signed off to law, but the relationship to resources here is not that obvious.

      Then again, another bureaucratic role of the Commission is when power has been delegated to it to decide on a specific area, for example how to regulate a specific type of products. This is bureaucratic as hell, but it also gives direct decision-making power to the Commission to just decide pretty much as they please within a limited competence. So bureaucrats could absolutely mean power as well, albeit maybe not a very sexy type of power.