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European Union leaders fire starting gun for top jobs race

European Union leaders fire starting gun for top jobs race

Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron will lock horns in Brussels on Tuesday asEuropean Unionleadersmeet to begin bargaining over who will take the bloc's top jobs for the next five years.

AnEU-wide election last week returned aEuropean Parliament with a splintered centre and gains by pro-EUliberals and greens as well aseurosceptic nationalists and the far-right.

The centristEuropean People's Party (EPP) and Socialists & Democrats (S&D) can only count on 326 seats in the new, 751-strong chamber. That is short of the 376-seat majority needed to approve a new head for the bloc's executiveEuropean Commission.

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Other big roles up for grabs later this year include the head of theEuropean Parliament and theEuropean Central Bank, the bloc's foreign policy chief and the head of theEuropean Council, which gathersleadersof theEU's 28 member states.

Merkel called on Monday for a swift decision and an official from Macron's office said he too would "ideally" want the process finished in June. But the twoleadershave differing views on how to pick a Commission chief.

TheEUwould risk an institutional logjam if talks are prolonged, leaving it unable to make key policy decisions at a time when it faces a more assertive Russia, China's growing economic might and the unpredictable USpresident.

Leadersof a majority of parties in the newly elected chamber on Monday called on the nationalleadersto nominate a lawmaker to replace Jean-Claude Juncker as Commission chief.

Merkel officially favours the EPP candidate, German conservative Manfred Weber, to take over at the Commission.

But Weber has so far failed to rally the otherEUassembly groups and a dinner he had wanted to host late on Monday with the S&D, the liberal ALDE and the Greens was cancelled.

"The EPP is ready for all the necessary compromises," Weber said on Monday.

HARD TO CALL

Together, those four parties would hold 504 seats in the newEUchamber, according to the latest provisional results, comfortably enough to approve or reject any pick made by the 28 nationalleadersfor the top Brussels posting.

Macron, meanwhile, will on Tuesday push against the "Spitzenkandidat" system whereby a lawmaker selected by theEuropean assembly should get the Commission job.

On Monday night he met Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who is seeking a bigger political role for Madrid at the top of theEU.

A raft of separate face-to-face talks will take place in Brussels on Tuesday before all theleaders-- including outgoing British Prime Minister Theresa May -- meet at 1600 GMT.

Their chairman, ex-Polish premier Donald Tusk, does not expect the package to be agreed on Tuesday but will continue consultations with capitals after the debate amongleaders.

He also wants to have names ready for the newEuropean Parliament's approval in July as otherwise the whole process risks getting delayed until autumn.

Unanimity is not required and current Commission president Juncker got the job despite opposition from London and with Budapest abstaining in 2014.

But it is hard to see a candidate succeeding against the will of more than just a handful ofleaders, as that would risk hurting their cooperation in the future and stalling theEU's decision-making processes.

The obscure and difficult-to-call recruitment process will be a compromise between requirements of geography and political affiliation, as well as the candidates' own profiles.

Other names already in the running include Juncker's current deputy and Dutch social democrat Frans Timmermans, the bloc's Brexit negotiator, Frenchman Michel Barnier, and outgoing Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic, a Slovak.