EU summit seeks way out of election quagmire

European Parliament President Martin Schulz and candidate for the Socialist party to become European Commission president, looks down during an interview, at the European Parliament in Brussels, Sunday.

By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — European Union leaders on Tuesday sought a way to bounce back from the weekend's landmark elections that saw a partly hostile and largely apathetic public question their project of closer cooperation as never before.

The parties of leaders like French President Francois Hollande and British Prime Minister David Cameron were shaken to the core by anti-EU challengers, yet they have offered starkly different alternatives on how to deal with the situation ahead of Tuesday's EU summit.

Hollande has said that "France's future is in Europe" and has remained steadfast in the defense of joint policies and common stands. Cameron will increase his calls for drastic reforms to pull powers back from Brussels and give individual member states more breathing space to set their own policies.

The first battle will likely be over Jean-Claude Juncker, the former prime minister of Luxembourg and longtime leader of the group of nations with the euro currency, who wants to replace Jose Manuel Barroso as leader of the EU Commission.

The post is important since the commission proposes legislation and runs much of the day-to-day affairs of the EU.

Juncker is seen as a master dealmaker in backrooms and a committed federalist which is anathema to the Brits.

He wants the post because he is the chief candidate for the European Parliament party group that got more votes than any other, the center-right EPP group, but was challenged for the job at a meeting ahead of the summit by Martin Schulz, president of the S&D Socialist of European Parliament group and Guy Verhofstadt of the liberal ALDE group.

All three groups saw their support fall in the elections: EPP dropped from 274 seats to just 213, the S&D Socialist...

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