PARIS — Former European Commissioner Pierre Moscovici told colleagues on
Wednesday that he will leave his post as the first president of France’s Court
of Auditors before his term is meant to conclude at the end of 2026, according
to four financial magistrates.
Moscovici is expected to leave the job by the end of this year and could be
headed to Luxembourg to sit on the European Court of Auditors, replacing French
member François-Roger Cazala, according to the magistrates, who were granted
anonymity to speak candidly. Libération was the first to report the 68-year-old
was considering leaving his post early.
Reached for comment, Moscovici said, “I never comment on rumors.”
French President Emmanuel Macron named Moscovici first president of the Court of
Auditors in 2020.
While there is no set term for the French Court of Auditors, Moscovici has
reached the age limit for civil servants, which is 68.
This summer, Moscovici, who has a young child, was granted an extension under a
civil service rule that allows parents of “dependent” children to postpone
retirement by one year.
This is adapted from an article first published by POLITICO in French.
Tag - Home Affairs
Dutch Foreign Minister Caspar Veldkamp resigned late Friday amid political
deadlock over what he saw as the need for tougher measures against Israel,
weakening the country’s already fragile caretaker administration.
Veldkamp’s colleagues from the centrist New Social Contract (NSC) party followed
him out of the caretaker government in a blow to the stability of the EU’s
fifth-biggest economy.
The Netherlands’ next general election is set to take place on Oct. 29.
The Dutch government collapsed on June 3 — and then went into caretaker mode —
after Geert Wilders’ far-right Party For Freedom (PVV) left over a dispute on
migration policy.
After hours of fruitless debate in parliament on Friday on the humanitarian
crisis in Gaza, Veldkamp — who had pushed for tougher sanctions against Israel
over its renewed assault on Gaza City — said in the evening he had “insufficient
confidence” he would have “the space in the coming weeks, months, or even a year
to chart the course I deem necessary.”
NSC leader Nicolien van Vroonhoven said the party had sent a message that “the
situation has to improve.”
“It didn’t,” she said simply. “So now steps are being taken.”
That sentiment was echoed by Deputy Prime Minister Eddy van Hijum, also from the
NSC. “In short, we’re done with it … Veldkamp felt the need for additional
measures against the Israeli government very strongly, but the brakes were
constantly applied,” he said.
Prime Minister Dick Schoof voiced his “regret” about the withdrawal of NSC from
the Cabinet in a late-night address to parliament.
“We must respect these decisions, but we deeply regret them — especially in
light of the responsibility the cabinet bears in this caretaker phase,” he said.
The populist Farmer-Citizen Movement (BBB) party, one of the coalition’s two
remaining partners along with the liberal People’s Party for Freedom and
Democracy (VVD), fumed over the NSC’s departure, saying it left the Netherlands
“rudderless.”
“While the talks were still ongoing, they walked away, leaving chaos in their
wake,” the BBB party said in a statement.
Veldkamp, a former ambassador to Israel, resigned the same day a United
Nations-backed food security body declared that there is a famine in Gaza and
amid Israel’s renewed military offensive in the besieged coastal strip.
The health ministry in Gaza, which is under the Hamas-run government, estimates
more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed since Israel launched its assault
on Gaza immediately following Hamas’ attack on Israel Oct. 7, 2023. U.N.
agencies and independent experts consider the ministry’s casualty records as
generally reliable.