BRUSSELS (EUObserver) - Herman Van Rompuy and Jose Manuel
Barroso said goodbye to EU leaders on Friday (24 October) after attending their
final summit as presidents of the EU council and commission. For the Belgian
Van Rompuy it marks almost the end of an almost 5-year term in which he worked
behind the scenes to keep the EU united as it went through its deepest-ever
economic crisis and tried to find solutions from preventing it ever happening
again. He was the first ever permanent president of the European Council,
meaning the poetry-writing politician got to define the parameters of the job,
making it a chairman rather than presidential post and preferring to be
low-key. "Politics is a rough trade" he noted but said he had been given
loyalty and respect by colleagues. "I am leaving with the feeling that I have
done all that I could." He recalled the bitter negotiations on the EU's longterm
budget as requiring the most political skill and, like Barroso, remembered the
pride of collecting the EU's Nobel peace prize. "Not only is my mandate coming
to a close but so is my political and public life which has filled a large part
of my life," said Van Rompuy, who formally steps down on 30 November. He added,
in his typical style, "in my life I have never had the feeling of being
irreplaceable. There was a European Council before me. There will be a European
Council without me." Barroso, whose term finishes next Friday (31 October),
noted that he had attended 75 EU leader summits since he became commission
president ten years ago. He said that how the EU had evolved over the years made
him optimistic about its future, and spoke of "great" and "very difficult"
moments over the past decade. The Portuguese politician, who was generally
regarded as reactive rather than visionary president, spoke for longer at the
final press conference than Van Rompuy and mentioned that he had gathered his
"testimonies" which could be downloaded "for free". An earlier ceremony among
leaders saw the two leaders given porcelain plates as gifts a long with a signed
'family photo' of all the leaders. Van Rompuy's plate was inscribed with one of
his Haikus (Japanese poetry form) about Europe, written in his native Dutch;
Barroso a plate with his motto "Let's build Europe together". German Chancellor
Angela Merkel gave a little speech on behalf of everyone. She was chosen, she
said, because she was now the longest-serving EU leader. She said Barroso
worked as a lynchpin between the EU main institutions and reminded member states
of the rules "whether we liked it or not" and said leaders would "miss" having
Van Rompuy at the helm. While it was the two politicians' last summit, the
meeting is most likely to be remembered for a row with Britain over it having to
pay an extra €2bn towards the EU. Prime Minister David Cameron, in a
podium-banging press conference, said he would not pay it by the 1 December
deadline. The dispute escalated because it was initially unclear how the
figures were arrived at. Barroso spent much of his final press conference as EU
commission president going through the finer details of EU budget calculations
for member states.
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