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Strasbourg, FRANCE – A serene and smiling Ursula von der Leyen won't be sweating about the motion of censure that aims to torpedo her European Commission on Thursday.

By casting the motion as a frenzied far-right push from pro-Putin MEPs during a brief debate on Monday, she successfully reframed the debate as one of good against evil and democracy against illiberalism.

If that wasn't enough, she diverted attention further away from the motion's contents by underlining the need for the EU to show unity in the midst of geopolitical hurricanes.

In that she was helped not only by her own European People’s Party ally Manfred Weber, but by all of the European Parliament's centrist groups: the Socialists, the liberals and the Greens. All have now said they won't back the motion because of the toxic far-right fingerprints it carries. It will fail on Thursday and soon be forgotten.

Von der Leyen did address some of the issues raised by the motion head on, including a recent court ruling that dinged the Commission for failing to disclose text messages she exchanged with Pfizer's CEO amid Covid vaccine contract negotiations. "The implication that these contacts were somehow inappropriate or against the European interest is – by any measure – simply wrong," she told MEPs.

But pressing questions about her centralised governance of the Commission, and the impression that she is leading Europe in a high-handed, top down manner away from press scrutiny, remain largely unaddressed.

“Von der Leyen could not have wished for a better way out of the whole Pfizergate [scandal] than having the radical right hijacking the issue,” said Ben Crum, a political scientist at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. “The centre left has happily played along,” he added.

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kitchen 📍
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