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Kuneva accepted as Bulgaria's first EU commissioner

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  • Kuneva accepted as Bulgaria's first EU commissioner

    Associated Press Worldstream
    October 26, 2006 Thursday 4:03 PM GMT

    Kuneva accepted as Bulgaria's first EU commissioner; Romania
    nominates liberal senator

    By PAUL AMES, Associated Press Writer

    The European Commission welcomed Bulgaria's Meglena Kuneva as her
    country's first member of the EU's executive body Thursday, clearing
    her to assume the post in charge of consumer affairs on Jan. 1 if she
    is approved by the European Parliament.

    Bulgaria and Romania are due to join the European Union on New Year's
    Day, bringing EU membership to 27 nations.

    The European Commission said in a statement that Kuneva, Bulgaria's
    European affairs minister, was accepted for the post, but
    consultations were continuing on Romania's nomination, Liberal party
    Sen. Varujan Vosganian.

    All EU members have the right to send an official to serve on the
    European Commission, the bloc's executive body. The European
    Parliament is to vote on the appointments in December.

    Kuneva is expected to assume the new post of consumer affairs
    commissioner, taking responsibility for an area that previously fell
    within the portfolio of EU Public Health Commissioner Markos
    Kyprianou.

    "I believe Mrs. Kuneva has all the political, personal and technical
    competencies for this very important job," said European Commission
    President Jose Manuel Barroso.

    Kuneva, 49, a lawyer and a former university teacher and journalist,
    has led Bulgaria's entry talks with the European Commission since
    2001.

    "Meglena Kuneva will be a worthy and efficient representative of
    Bulgaria," Bulgarian Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev told reporters
    in Sofia.

    However, Vosganian's nomination has raised doubts from the Socialist
    faction in the European Parliament.

    "The Bulgarian candidate is well known for her European attitudes and
    political involvement, whereas the Romanian is unknown," said a
    statement from Hannes Swoboda and Jan Marinus Wiersma, vice
    presidents of the Socialist group.

    "What is known is that he has been very much on the right wing of
    politics and on the payroll of big economic tycoons," they added. "It
    is clear that we will have to explore his European profile but also
    his acceptance of European standards and European values."

    Vosganian, 48, chair of the Senate's budget and finance committee, is
    known for supporting free-market policies. He also is a fervent
    backer of his country's flat tax of 16 percent, which Romania
    introduced in 2005 to replace a progressive taxation scheme ranging
    from 18 to 40 percent.

    A mathematician and economist, Vosganian also is a writer and poet.
    An ethnic Armenian, he heads the National Union of (Ethnic) Armenians
    in Romania.

    The European Parliament will grill both candidates at hearings next
    month and is due to vote on their appointments in December.

    Although the vote by the EU assembly is not legally binding, the
    commission has made clear that a negative vote would likely result in
    Barroso asking them to resign.
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