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Günter Verheugen

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Günter Verheugen
Verheugen in 2007
European Commissioner for Enterprise and Industry
In office
22 November 2004 – 9 February 2010
PresidentJosé Manuel Barroso
Preceded byJán Figeľ
Olli Rehn (Enterprise and Information Society)
Succeeded byAntonio Tajani (Industry and Entrepreneurship)
European Commissioner for Enlargement
In office
13 September 1999 – 11 November 2004
Serving with Janez Potočnik
PresidentRomano Prodi
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byOlli Rehn
Member of the Bundestag
In office
1983–1999
Personal details
Born (1944-04-28) 28 April 1944 (age 80)
Bad Kreuznach, Germany
Political partySocial Democratic Party (1982–present)
Other political
affiliations
Free Democratic Party (Before 1982)
Alma materUniversity of Cologne
University of Bonn

Günter Verheugen (German pronunciation: [ˈɡʏntɐ fɛɐˈhɔʏɡn̩]; born 28 April 1944) is a German politician who served as European Commissioner for Enlargement from 1999 to 2004, and then as European Commissioner for Enterprise and Industry from 2004 to 2010. He was also one of five vice presidents of the 27-member Barroso Commission (Barroso I). After his retirement, he is now honorary Professor at the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder).

Early life and education

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Born at Bad Kreuznach in Rhineland-Palatinate, Verheugen studied history, sociology and political science at the University of Cologne and at the University of Bonn.

Political career

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Verheugen was Secretary General of the Free Democratic Party of Germany (FDP) from 1978 to 1982, under the leadership of the party's chairman Hans-Dietrich Genscher. He left the FDP with many left liberal party members in 1982, because the FDP left the government of Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. In the same year, he joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

Member of Parliament, 1983–1999

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Günter Verheugen in 1976

In the 1983 Western German elections, Verheugen became a member of the German Bundestag. He was a member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs from 1983 to 1998. In the early 1980s, Verheugen mapped out a principled policy towards South Africa's apartheid regime, embarrassing many of Germany's major companies, including Mercedes-Benz and Deutsche Bank, by exposing their efforts to get round international sanctions in a book published in 1986.[1]

From 1994 to 1997, Verheugen was deputy chairman of the SPD parliamentary group, under the leadership of the group's chairman Rudolf Scharping. In addition to his parliamentary work, he chaired the Broadcasting Council of Deutsche Welle from 1994 until 1998.

Ahead of the 1994 elections, Scharping included Verheugen in his shadow cabinet for the party's campaign to unseat incumbent Helmut Kohl as Chancellor.[2] Within Gerhard Schröder's campaign team for the 1998 federal elections, he served as his external affairs advisor and accompanied him on his trips to Washington and Warsaw.[3]

Minister of State for European Affairs, 1998–1999

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In the first cabinet of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, Verheugen briefly served as Minister of State in the Federal Foreign Office under Minister Joschka Fischer. During Germany's presidency of the Council of the European Union in 1999, he led the negotiations on the Agenda 2000 package of EU policy reforms. Shortly after, he was in talks to be nominated as Germany's candidate for the European Union's newly created High Representative for Common Foreign and Security Policy; the post eventually went to Javier Solana.[4] In 1999, he left parliament and became EU commissioner for Enlargement of the European Union.

Member of the European Commission, 1999–2010

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Nominated by the German government of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, Verheugen first served in the European Commission as European Commissioner for Enlargement in the Prodi Commission, presiding over the accession of ten new member states in 2004. He continued in the following Barroso Commission as Commissioner for Enterprise and Industry, also being promoted to one of the five vice presidents.

On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the Élysée Treaty in 2003, the EU Commissioners of Germany and France, Verheugen and Pascal Lamy, jointly presented the so-called Lamy-Verheugen Plan that proposed a factual unification of France and Germany in some important areas – including unified armed forces, combined embassies and a shared seat at the United Nations Security Council.

As a Commissioner, Verheugen stated a desire to cut red tape, especially in order to make it more favourable to SMEs. He also highlights research and innovation as "twin keys to future competitiveness". He outlines his priorities as; better regulation, a modern industrial policy, SMEs and innovation. In order to promote competitiveness, he laid down three policies derived from the treaties; "Competitiveness and improvement of the business environment (Art. 157). Completing and managing the Internal Market for products (Art. 28 and 95) and Innovation and research framework programmes (Title XVIII)."[5]

Verheugen was heavily involved in work on the REACH regulation and ensuring its compatibility with the Lisbon Strategy.[6] He sees a common patent in the Union implemented by 2012 which he sees as important as patent application for the 24 million SMEs in Europe are on average 11 times higher than in the United States.[7]

In response to the refusal of countries to sign the Kyoto protocol, such as the United States and Australia, Verheugen asked President Barroso to look into whether the EU could implement taxes on products imported from those countries not taking low-carbon policies on board (Border Tax Adjustments).[8]

In October 2006, Verheugen accused European Union officials of being impossible to control, stating inter alia the purported impossibility of firing Directors-General (the highest grade in the EU civil servants structure). However, Article 50 of the EU's Staff Regulations empowers the commission to do precisely that. Former civil servant Derk Jan Eppink described Verheugen's position in the following terms:

Verheugen is worried about mandarins having too much power because he's really not in charge. If you've been in a job for eight years and you're still not in charge, you have a problem. Verheugen is a foreign policy man; he was one with the FDP (Germany's free-market liberals) and then the SPD (Social Democrats). That's his thing. In Brussels, he's weighed down in the details, he gets lost in legislation and he's not really interested in the Enterprise and Industry portfolio. That's why he was so enthusiastic about enlargement because that's foreign policy. But he's been weakened by the mandarins, and by complaining about the bureaucracy he has only made things worse. Employing his girlfriend as his head of cabinet didn't help. He has become ridiculous, but no one wants him to go. When you have a commissioner who is so undermined, you stand a good chance of overruling him and getting your way.[9]

Later years

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Since leaving public office, Verheugen has held a variety of paid or unpaid positions, including the following:

In 2014 Verheugen was awarded the Mercator Visiting Professorship for Political Management at the Universität Essen-Duisburg's NRW School of Governance. He gave both seminars and lectures at the university.[13]

From March 2015, Verheugen headed the European integration work stream in the Dmytro Firtash-backed Agency for the Modernisation of Ukraine (AMU),[14] a non-governmental organization developing a comprehensive program of modernization of Ukraine and looking for investment resources for its implementation.[15] Verheugen led the Agency's sectoral division for the institutional reforms recommendations aimed at the integration of Ukraine into the EU and civil society building.[16]

Controversy

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In 2001, former Czech Prime Minister Václav Klaus accused Verheugen of a "tragic misuse of his position", after Verheugen warned that the country's hope of joining the European Union swiftly would take a setback if the right-leaning Civic Democrats won the 2002 elections. On 5 November 2004, during a press conference, Verheugen mentioned that the future prime-minister of Romania would be Mircea Geoană (of the PSD) and that Romania would end negotiations with the EU with just four days before the Romanian legislative and presidential elections. Following this, Romanian journalists accused him of meddling in Romanian politics.[citation needed]

During his time in office, photographs appeared showing Verheugen holidaying with Petra Erler, the head of his private office.[17] A Commission spokesman backed him by saying "the private holidays of Vice President Verheugen in Lithuania this summer did not violate the rules applicable to members of the Commission". Despite this, there was a minor political row over Erler's appointment with allegations of her being appointed due to their friendship. These allegations were later aggravated over photos of them together on holiday holding hands, and then on a naturist beach together in Lithuania.

Positions

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Verheugen regards the Ukrainian government as a "puppet regime"; he claims that the Maidan movement was a planned coup d'etat; and that Russia could not be blamed for waging a war against Ukraine;[18] he also called Svoboda members of the Ukrainian government richtige Faschisten ("true fascists").[19]

On cutting EU bureaucracy

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  • "Many people still have this concept of Europe that the more rules you produce the more Europe you have."
    (October 2006)
  • "The idea is that the role of the commission is to keep the machinery running and the machinery is producing laws. And that's exactly what I want to change."
    (October 2006)
  • "We must ask the question of whether so many decisions need to be taken in Brussels."[20]
    (June 2016)

Honours

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National honours

Foreign honours

References

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  1. ^ Nearly man European Voice, 25 May 1999.
  2. ^ Ferdinand Protzman (30 August 1994), German Opposition Names Shadow Cabinet in Hopes of Votes New York Times.
  3. ^ Nearly man European Voice, 25 May 1999.
  4. ^ Tim Jones and Simon Taylor (5 May 1999), Prodi plans cabinet-style 'government' in Brussels European Voice.
  5. ^ Mission Statement ec.europa.eu
  6. ^ Interview with Günter Verheugen, vice-president and commissioner for enterprise and industry Archived 13 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine euractiv.com
  7. ^ EU patent in five years, says industry commissioner euobserver.com
  8. ^ Time to tax the carbon dodgers news.bbc.co.uk
  9. ^ Former EU Mandarin Spills the Beans on Commission Intrigue Deutsche Welle
  10. ^ EU Policymaker Guenter Verheugen Joins Fleishman-Hillard's International Advisory Board Archived 22 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine FleishmanHillard, press release of 12 July 2010.
  11. ^ Advisory Board Archived 28 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine Turkey: Culture of Change Initiative (TCCI).
  12. ^ Leigh Phillips (28 April 2010), Ex-industry-commissioner takes job with RBS EUobserver.
  13. ^ KG, Westdeutsche Verlags- und Werbegesellschaft mbH & Co. "Prominenter Gastprofessor an der Universität Duisburg-Essen: Günter Verheugen kommt". lokalkompass.de (in German). Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  14. ^ the Agency for the Modernization of Ukraine
  15. ^ Program of modernization of Ukraine and looking for investment resources for its implementation
  16. ^ "the program development for the Ukrainian economy". Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  17. ^ Verheugen's Fall from Grace: Political Scandal Hits the EU – SPIEGEL ONLINE
  18. ^ "'Das Gemetzel muss beendet werden'".
  19. ^ "'Gefahr einer Spirale nach unten!'".
  20. ^ Ishaan Tharoor, "Brexit marks the revenge of a nation", The Washington Post, 28 June 2016
  21. ^ G. Verheugen počasni građanin Šibenika index.hr. Published 14 October 2004. Access date 30 June 2023.
  22. ^ Slovak republic website, State honours : 1st Class in 2004 (click on "Holders of the Order of the 1st Class White Double Cross" to see the holders' table)
  23. ^ President awards thirty high state distinctions
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Political offices
Preceded by German European Commissioner
1999–2010
Served alongside: Michaele Schreyer
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New office European Commissioner for Enlargement
1999–2004
Served alongside: Janez Potočnik
Succeeded by
Preceded byas European Commissioner for Enterprise and Information Society European Commissioner for Enterprise and Industry
2004–2010
Succeeded byas European Commissioner for Industry and Entrepreneurship