EU
leaders are trying to decide who could best lead the European
Commission. It is the most powerful job in Brussels, shaping EU policy
in key areas such as economic reform, immigration and ties with other
global powers.
The spotlight is on former Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker - the candidate of the centre-right bloc which won the May European elections. He is regarded as a traditional "federalist" by the UK Conservatives and many other national politicians. They want the Commission to act less like a government and to focus more on developing the single market in key areas such as digital technology and energy.
Mr Juncker was one of the architects of the euro and has been at the heart of the controversial bailouts, which saw tough austerity terms imposed on Greece, Portugal and several other debt-laden countries.
He has been a key ally of Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel in demanding budgetary discipline in the eurozone. But he also defends the Common Agricultural Policy - accounting for nearly 40% of the EU budget - and European "solidarity", that is, transfers from richer countries to develop the EU's poorest regions. Critics say much of that spending should be better targeted or reined in.
It is still up to the national leaders - the European Council - to come up with a name, who will then be presented to the parliament for approval.
But the candidate now needs a "double majority" - that is, approval in both the Council and parliament to get the job.
In the Council it has to be a "qualified majority" - so no single country can veto the choice. Each country has a voting weight in the Council, depending on its population - so Germany has more weight than Malta, for example. That is the meaning of "qualified". So if the UK wants to block Mr Juncker it needs enough support from "weighty" countries to swing the vote.
Once that vote has been held - probably at the end of this month - it is the turn of the parliament to vote. And in parliament the candidate requires an absolute majority - 376 votes in the 751-seat assembly. The vote is expected in mid-July.
For the first time the Council has an explicit requirement to make the choice "taking into account the elections to the European Parliament".
A majority in the parliament takes the view that the lead candidates ("Spitzenkandidaten") put forward by the main pan-European parties must be the ones considered by the Council. So parliament can veto the Council's choice, unless both sides agree on a compromise candidate.
The Commission also acts as guardian of the EU treaties - it can levy fines on governments or firms which breach or ignore EU law. And it negotiates far-reaching trade deals between the EU and other countries, affecting millions of jobs.
The Commission's powers increased during the eurozone crisis - in particular, it now vets national budgets before they are adopted, in the so-called "European Semester" procedure.
The famous clash between former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and former Commission President Jacques Delors in the 1980s highlighted the importance of the president's job. The late Lady Thatcher felt Mr Delors - chief architect of the euro - was trying to turn the EU into a "superstate".
Mr Cameron wants a figure who will concede some ground on sovereignty - that is, allow more UK opt-outs. That is a priority for him ahead of his proposed in/out referendum on EU membership in 2017.
But there is no sign that the European Parliament will accept candidates other than those put forward by the parties. And the runners-up to Mr Juncker are also, broadly speaking, federalists: the Socialists' Martin Schulz and Liberals' Guy Verhofstadt.
They include: Danish PM Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Finnish PM Jyrki Katainen, Irish PM Enda Kenny, Polish PM Donald Tusk, Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde and the former Director-General of the World Trade Organization, Pascal Lamy.
The choice depends on various factors and has to be balanced against the candidates for other top EU posts, which are also up for grabs.
The EU will also appoint in the coming months: a new High Representative for foreign policy (replacing Baroness Ashton) and a new European Council President (replacing Herman Van Rompuy), as well as a whole new Commission team.
Some countries may prefer to get a powerful commissioner's job, rather than one of the top posts, if it is an area of particular national interest. The UK is reported to be eyeing the trade commissioner job, and Poland may be happy to get the energy portfolio.
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