Ursula von der Leyen has survived the motion of no confidence. Not because she refuted anything. Not because she explained anything. And certainly not because she brought any transparency. She survived because the European Parliament, that theatre of pseudo-democracy, prefers to bow to power rather than face the truth.
By Max von Kreyfelt
The reason – secret text messages with Pfizer during the billion-euro vaccine deals – is embarrassing enough. But the spectacle that followed was downright disgraceful. The Commission president admits to having direct contact with the Pfizer CEO. She admits to personally negotiating. But the content? Still classified. Why? No explanation. Just because.
European loyalty: those who stay silent, survive.
The motion came from the “wrong side” and was therefore dismissed in advance. Its content was ignored, the messenger vilified. The Social Democrats threatened to abstain, but eventually voted against – once von der Leyen dangled the Social Fund as bait. Classic EU politics: buy off criticism, call it stability, and sweep the rest under the carpet.
The Greens added their twist. According to them, this wasn’t the time to “give oxygen to the far right.” Because in Brussels, corruption isn’t the real danger – it’s that someone might ask the wrong questions about it.
Power without memory, politics without spine
What remains is a president who lies, a parliament that nods, and a Union that treats its citizens like inconvenient stage props. Von der Leyen’s position may be secure, but her authority is evaporating.
She no longer governs – she is tolerated. Her Commission is a technocratic fortress that strikes billion-euro deals behind closed doors, dodges accountability, and justifies itself with the one argument that still works: “If we fall, worse will come.”
Meanwhile, discontent grows – even in the political centre. After the summer, a new motion of no confidence looms, this time not from the far right, but from parties who finally realise that loyalty to an unaccountable system might be political suicide, not out of principle, but out of fear.
The show goes on.
Von der Leyen stays. But the chair beneath her creaks. She no longer leads – she hangs on. Her Commission is a system of backroom power, public opacity, and moral deflection. It survives not through strength, but through blackmail.
Not through vision, but through fear. And most of all: not through truth, but through the systematic silencing of anyone who dares to demand it.