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Barroso and Goldman Sachs – a dangerous liaison

Revolving Doors, Corporate Europe Observatory, July 19, 2016

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The news that José Manuel Barroso will become non-executive chairman at Goldman Sachs did not exactly come as a surprise.  This is a man who presided over the European Commission for 10 years and, from the beginning, his leadership followed a corporate agenda, with its close links to the biggest businesses and banks in the EU representing a key trait of the current European project. But this one move has catapulted the EU’s revolving door problem onto the political agenda, causing widespread jaw-dropping and reactions of disbelief, making it a symbol of excessive corporate influence at the highest levels of the EU.
Corporate Europe Observatory had already mapped Barroso’s numerous career moves in the months following the end of his term as Commission president. Since Autumn 2014, his 20+ new roles have taken him into the arts, academia and to the corporate lobbyfests of the European Business Summit and the Bilderberg Conference.  Our detailed report from October last year highlighted Barroso’s positions, as well as the roles with strong corporate links that other ex-commissioners have taken up: Viviane Reding, Karel De Gucht, Neelie Kroes to name but a few.
But the problematic revolving door moves of the former members of the Barroso II Commission have been especially controversial since 1 May 2016.  This is the date when the ex-commissioners no longer need to seek authorisation from the Commission for proposed new roles, and no longer face a ban on lobbying.  In just over two months, we saw former trade commissioner Karel De Gucht join the board of mining giant Arcelor Mittal; former digital agenda commissioner Neelie Kroes joined the boards of tech firms Uber and Salesforce; and now Barroso is about to become chairman of Goldman Sachs International.
When Kroes joined Uber, Dutch media asked us if we agreed that such revolving door moves had contributed to the low esteem with which many European citizens regard the EU institutions, including those in the UK who voted in a majority for Brexit and to leave the EU.  While probably all member states have their own national revolving door problems, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that European politicians who are seen to be acting for private interests over the public interest, and who then move so swiftly via the revolving door to lucrative new jobs, can really fuel public cynicism – and EU scepticism.
Against this backdrop, the Barroso move to Goldman Sachs is particularly outrageous. Goldman Sachs had a central role in causing the 2008 financial crisis, the tremors of which are still being felt across the EU, with many citizens suffering under austerity to this day.  Goldman Sachs is also a major lobby player in Brussels.  It declared an EU lobbying budget of at least €1,000,000 and has had at least 22 high level meetings with the Commission since December 2014.  That level of Commission access is already impressive, and it can boast of recent meetings with at least seven commissioners: Hill, Dombrovskis, Katainen, Oettinger, Moscovici, Cañete and Malmström.  Goldman Sachs won the “Worst EU Lobbying Award” in 2010, nominated alongside derivatives lobby group ISDA, for aggressive lobbying to defend their ‘financial weapons of mass destruction’, and taking first place with 59 per cent of the votes.
Will the Barroso case be a turning point in how the EU and specifically the Commission handle revolving door moves?  It is certainly encouraging to see the swift reaction from French European affairs minister Harlem Désir who called the move “scandalous” and said that “the European commission president should be above the pressures of private interest.  The restriction on being hired by a private company should be extended”.  The European Ombudsman was also quick to respond, pointing out that the EU treaty (article 245) states that former commissioners should behave with integrity and discretion when it comes to certain appointments or benefits.  Staff at the EU institutions have also expressed their outrage via an online petition, and there has been speculation that the EU Council might discuss the matter.  Politico reports that the French Socialist delegation to the European Parliament has called for sanctions on Barroso by cutting his pension from the Commission when he reaches 65 years of age.
But so far, it seems like the Commission either does not understand or does not care about the seriousness of its revolving door problem. Sources in the Commission have reportedly said that Barroso’s Goldman Sachs role does not constitute a breach of the current rules, and Commission chief spokesperson Margaritis Schinas has already ruled out any revision of the rules in the Code of Conduct for Commissioners.
CEO believes that there should be an extension of the mandatory cooling-off period from 18 months to at least five years for former Commission Presidents (and at least three years from commissioners) regarding direct and indirect lobbying activities, as well as other roles which could represent a conflict of interest.
Last week, Jean Quatremer, the EU affairs correspondent for the French daily Libération wrote that “Barroso has given Europe the finger.”  The question is now whether the EU institutions have the political will to do anything about it?
Check out Barroso’s RevolvingDoorWatch profile.


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chrisb
chrisb
Aug 15, 2016 12:48 PM

Little hope now of a proper EU investigation of Goldman Sachs’ role in fixing the figures that allowed Greece to join the euro. (OK, there wasn’t much hope before).

Thomas
Thomas
Aug 15, 2016 3:24 AM

Here in the U.S. we had the people in government, who sold give away trade deals to the public here, go to werk for the foreign firms that made out very well at the expense of our corps and workers. What can we do….???? We have been bought and sold out by our own countrymen. The whole scheme of trade laws and rules are venues for the best bribes and patronage for our elected leaders. We can’ t even run our own countries anymore.. We have sold our rights, and they were purchased with our own tax money, swindied from us by those international organizations like the world bank, International Bank of Settlements, GAT, NAFTA. Goldman Sachs…et al…

Brian Harry, Australia
Brian Harry, Australia
Aug 15, 2016 4:33 AM
Reply to  Thomas

The “Kleptocrats” who run America couldn’t give a Tinkers Cuss about the American people. It’s “Mind over Matter”……They don’t mind and you don’t matter. Just thank your lucky stars that you weren’t conscripted into the U.S. Army 40+ years ago and sent to Vietnam. 58,000 brave young American soldiers were fed into the meat grinder, because of the governments lies.
The USA needs another “Revolution”, to take back their country from these parasites.

Jen
Jen
Aug 15, 2016 1:04 AM

This article should not come as a surprise to those who always suspected that the European Union project is an American creation masterminded by various US government and non-government agencies. Barroso and other EU officials’ connections with Wall Street and other US institutions should be seen for what they are: more strands in the spider web being wrapped around Europe by US corporate interests and the people behind them.

Vaska
Vaska
Aug 15, 2016 2:27 AM
Reply to  Jen

It’s also another confirmation of how utterly corrupted the EU political elite has become. Such complicity means that all attempts at reforming the EU from within are worse than Quixotic (I’m thinking specifically of Varoufakis’s DiEM25 “movement”).

joekano76
joekano76
Aug 14, 2016 11:22 PM

Reblogged this on TheFlippinTruth.

Brian Harry, Australia
Brian Harry, Australia
Aug 14, 2016 10:59 PM

I’d heard of America’s “revolving door” but I don’t really pay enough attention to Europe to realise that Europe also has one. But it all makes sense really. Mario Draghi is also an ex Goldman Sachs employee as is Mr Carney at the Bank of England(and as Australia’s current Prime Minister used to be).
The “Invisible Hand” that John Smith spoke of, has now been re-designed to serve the interests of Goldman Sachs.
I must say that I’m really worried about this TPP ‘treaty'(which Hillary Clinton supports) will be the final surrender of governments to the Fascist multi-national corporations, which began with “Globalisation”.

Seamus Padraig
Seamus Padraig
Aug 15, 2016 3:17 PM

It is doubtful that they will even wait for Hellary to assume command before imposing TPP on us. The word on the street is that Obama plans to do it himself after the election during the ‘lame duck’ period (Nov. 2016 – Jan. 2017). That, they hope, will minimize any backlash against her personally.

Brian Harry, Australia
Brian Harry, Australia
Aug 15, 2016 9:09 PM
Reply to  Seamus Padraig

Obama(“Change you can believe in”) has been a total disappointment. I hope you are wrong, but suspect that, that’s the plan. I think that the USA is one step away from being run by the ‘Devil’.

rtj1211
rtj1211
Aug 14, 2016 6:17 PM

Are you surprised? Barroso has never cared about anything but himself. Guy Verhofstadt is trousering loads as Greece is sold off to foreign corporations. He doesn’t care about anyone but himself either. No doubt others can list lots of other names who are similar.
What they rely on is everyone expressing outrage and then doing nothing.
If you want anything to change, someone, some body or some nation is going to have to do something to make people like Barroso realise that what he has done is not worth it……..

Beth D
Beth D
Aug 14, 2016 3:25 PM

Water finds its own level…or you can tell a person by the company they keep.

Jim Porter
Jim Porter
Aug 14, 2016 3:21 PM

This means he was in charge in 2008 when the Commission started a new department full of ex Goldman Sachs people, ex CitiBank people, ex J.P. Morgan (you get the picture), to ease the EU through that difficult financial period and all they did was fleece Greece, subjugate Spain, impoverish Portugal and dump on Italy. Aah, democracy.

Schlüter
Schlüter
Aug 14, 2016 2:13 PM

These guys are really not shy!
It leaves me speechless (whis is really something)!