mike777, on 2016-June-04, 18:06, said:
ok so to answer my question how does the UK fire these guys or are they an equal member of the government and answer to no one but themselves? I understand they are not the only voters in the EU but posters seem to say that not one UK EU controls or even has influence over the EU?
Again pls keep in mind we here in the USA no nothing or less than nothing when it comes to the EU, who it is, what it is or what power they have.
For example here in the USA the government has the power to:
1) Kill you if you commit a bad crime.
2) put you away for life in a horrible prison getting assaulted and raped every horrible day
3) take away your home and land even if you commit no crime, yes this is true and happens. (eminent domain)
4) force you into the army even if you dont want to go.
The EU has none of these powers. It imposes laws, controls various policies that have to be adopted by member countries, spends money as it sees fit - largely on themselves, it seems, or on lost causes. We cannot fire them.
The EU is run by the Commission. It is not elected, but comprises one person from each member state, chosen by the Council (see below). God knows how that person is selected. I don't know who the UK person is. This Commission alone is the body that decides what new laws are going to be proposed, sets spending plans, draws up budgets (hah!) and in theory monitors spending. The Commission alone negotiates internationally (eg trade) with the world on behalf of EU.
Law proposals created by the Commission are then discussed and passed by a parliament that is elected, but has no control.
There is also a "European Council" that is supposed to set political direction, comprising all current heads of state, but this also has no power other than to put forward suggestions for the Commission to consider.
So the EU is run by the Commission, and 25,000 civil servants. Management by committee and management by bureaucracy is the name of the game, and with a committee of 28 people with conflicting interests (though they are supposed to forget their individual nationalities) it does not seem to be able to do much other than self-aggrandise. In practice it seems steered by the Commission President, currently Juncker, and it seems he wants to accept TIPP regardless of the fact that it is not wanted by France and apparently other European states. Here, the parliamentary opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn has at least had the gumption to say that a future Labour government will veto TIPP, but of course he has no power of veto. Even if he does ever get to be prime minister.
That is the problem. Laws are determined opaquely and imposed without a power of national veto.