
by Tarik Cyril Amar
July 09, 2025
from
RT Website
Tarik Cyril Amar,
a historian from
Germany working at Koç University, Istanbul, on Russia,
Ukraine, and Eastern Europe, the history of World War
II, the cultural Cold War, and the politics of memory |

Ursula von der Leyen.
© Philipp von
Ditfurth/Getty Images
Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the
European Commission that runs the EU is finally facing a long
overdue
no-confidence vote.
Its chances of success, all observers agree,
are very small.
And yet, this is an important moment...
That's because the single most powerful
politician in the EU is not, for instance, German Chancellor
Friedrich Merz or French President
Emmanuel Macron
(notwithstanding their own delusions of grandeur), but Ursula von
der Leyen, the president of the EU Commission.
Because,
in NATO-EU Europe, the true measure of
power now is the ability to spoil whatever sorry remnants of
democracy are still standing.
And in spite of very tough
competition, von der Leyen is the worst, most corrupting spoiler of
them all.
This is due to three facts.
- The first is structural:
The EU was
designed not to be a
'democracy' - however flawed
- but one big, entrenched, and growing
'democracy deficit'.
Its purpose has never been to shaft the US,
even if American President Donald Trump can't stop whining about
that.
The EU's real core function is to extinguish
democracy in Europe by shifting genuine power from nation-states
with some, if already meager, popular participation in political
decision-making to an unelected bureaucracy, of which the
Commission is the center and top.
- The second fact is a matter of
individual character and hence responsibility:
Ursula von der Leyen is the embodiment of
an insatiable lust for personal, unaccountable power.
She won't admit it, of course, but her
behavior speaks volumes:
Von der Leyen does not see herself as a
public servant but firmly believes that it is the public
that must serve her.
Think of these two factors - the structural
and the individual - if you wish, as broadly similar to what
happened during the rise of Joseph Stalin in the former
Soviet Union:
Like the EU, the post-revolutionary
Communist party was built to restrict political
decision-making to a small and self-selecting group of true
believers.
And only those confessing the correct
"values" were even
offered a chance to join.
Like von der Leyen, Stalin managed to turn
this deliberately created
"democracy deficit" to his own advantage by basing his
personal despotism on it.
If you think that analogy is far-fetched,
consider that in both cases, the rise of the Soviet despot and
that of the European Commission president, real power has been
concentrated in an overbearing and invasive bureaucracy that,
formally, should only be an executive organ.
There is a reason why, if you take one tiny
step back, "general secretary"
sounds rather similar to
"commission president."
- And then there is the third
fact that has facilitated von der Leyen's performance as
NATO-EU's top spoiler.
In this respect, she certainly does not
resemble Stalin at all, but rather one of the many Eastern
European satraps of Cold War Eastern Europe.
Like trusty Walter Ulbricht of early
East Germany or Poland's Boleslaw Bierut who suffered a
heart attack when Khruschev made Stalin the fall guy,
von der Leyen is a vassal leader, just working for
another outside empire.
So obviously, so shamelessly that even
Politico has - rightly - labeled her the EU's
"American
president."
The charges that her political opponents in
the EU parliament have just used to initiate the current
no-confidence vote are less fundamental - while still reflecting
stunning misbehavior - and more specific, as they have to be.

Source
In essence, they target von der Leyen's - and the whole
Commission's - scandalous handling of,
-
the Covid-19 crisis (scandalous by the
way from any angle, whether you approve or disapprove of
vaccines)
-
her subsequent and illegal refusal to
provide key information on what
she and the CEO of big pharma company Pfizer were up to during that period in
messages that were private but should not have been
-
waste (to say the least) in the handling
of a 650 billion-euro post-Corona crisis recovery fund
-
the misuse of a legal loophole to boost
armaments spending via the EU
-
last but not least, the weaponization of
digital legislation to interfere in the recent Romanian, as
well as German elections...
What all these transgressions have in common is
not only that they may very well be criminal.
They are also all variants of the same,
fundamentally simple ruse:
the manipulation or even fabrication of
"emergencies" that are then
exploited as cover for constantly escalating abuses of power.
If there is one main principle of von der Leyen's
power grab, this is it. Again, Stalin knew a thing or two about that
trick.
In sum, the sponsors of the no-confidence vote
conclude,
"that the
Commission led by President Ursula von der Leyen no longer
commands the confidence of Parliament to uphold the principles
of transparency, accountability, and good governance essential
to a democratic Union."
They call on the Commission,
"to resign due
to repeated failures to ensure transparency and to its
persistent disregard for democratic oversight and the rule of
law within the Union."
And they are obviously right.
If the EU was a halfway lawful, honest, and
sensible organization, this should be a slam-dunk case of no
confidence, and the Commission, with Ursula von der Leyen at its
head, should fall.
There is a precedent, too:
In 1999,
an entire EU Commission did resign, even without a
no-confidence vote...
A devastating report on corruption, fraud,
nepotism, and mismanagement was enough.
Clearly, if anything, the EU has only regressed
since then.
Today it has a Commission which the EU's own
transparency chief has chastised as not only unelected and opaque,
but also staffed with "consiglieri,"
a term from mafia lingo.
And where the gang consists of
"consiglieri," the boss must be
a don...
Yet the EU now is not only highly dysfunctional
but, in the wider sense of the word, fundamentally corrupt.
Tactics
will beat principle any day, no exceptions.
That is why most of the over 700 parliamentarians
in the European parliament will fail to do the right thing and eject
von der Leyen and her Commission.
Meanwhile, the usual dirty tricks have been
employed against von der Leyen's challengers.
Let's not even focus on the petty and brazen
procedural tactics deployed by the European Parliament's president,
Roberta Metsola, to stifle debate on the no-confidence
motion, as
rightly castigated by AfD member of parliament Christine
Anderson.
Or von der Leyen's own cringeworthy attempt to
blame any criticism of her once again on
"extremism," "polarization,"
and manipulation by - as she clearly implied - the big bad Russians
and "Putin" personally.

Source
In a similar daft spirit, the head of von der
Leyen's conservative grouping in the European parliament, Manfred
Weber
declared the whole vote
a
"waste of
time" - at least he is
honest about his contempt for democratic procedures and the rights
of parliamentarians, you might say - and, of course, a boon to
Russia.
Perish the thought that if anything
"plays into the hands" of
any opponents of the EU, it is
precisely the Commission's authoritarianism and corruption as well
as cheap, demagogic attempts to shut down legitimate criticism by
shouting,
"Russia, Russia, Russia...!"
The leader of the no-confidence motion,
Gheorghe Piperea, with a background as a lawyer and judge in
Bucharest, is routinely being smeared as
"far right," for instance
in the New York Times.
This label is then extended to all those who dare
rebel against the Commission, and - step number three - used to
justify not supporting their initiative. So devious, so simple...

Gheorghe Piperea,
a Romanian member of
Parliament,
accused Ms. von der
Leyen's European Commission
of "failures to
ensure transparency."
Credit:
Jean-Christophe Verhaegen
Agence France-Presse
- Getty Images
Source
In reality, the issue of where exactly Piperea
and his supporters stand on the political spectrum is simply
irrelevant.
What matters is the case that they are advancing,
and that is iron-clad.
Indeed, if this has to be done by the
"margins" of the European
Parliament, then shame on its self-appointed
"center" - and even more so for
helping protect von der Leyen further by helping defeat this long
overdue challenge to her misrule.
But that is, of course, the real issue here:
Von der Leyen bears enormous individual
responsibility, including for the EU's criminal and evil - there
are no other words - support for
Israel while the Zionist
apartheid state is committing the
Gaza Genocide and
one war of aggression after another against its neighbors,
near and far.

Source
But Von der Leyen,
can only be what she is thanks to structures
designed to both imitate and in reality, kill democracy.
And also thanks to the large majority of
those without a conscience - at the very least - in the EU
Parliament.
Von der Leyen, like all villains of history, is
not alone:
she is merely the very worst...!
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