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Klaus Welle
German politician

Klaus Welle

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
German politician
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Beelen, Warendorf, Münster Government Region, North Rhine-Westphalia
Age
60 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Klaus Welle became the Secretary General of the European Parliament on 15 March 2009. He was previously Head of the Office (chef de cabinet) of the President of the European Parliament, Hans-Gert Poettering MEP, from January 2007. He succeeded Harald Rømer, a Danish career civil servant, who had reached retirement age.

Born in Beelen, Germany in July 1964, Welle studied economics at the Witten/Herdecke University and worked in banking, before becoming Head of Foreign and European Affairs for the CDU party in Bonn (1991–94). A stromg admirer of Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Welle made his political reputation by masterminding an unexpectedly strong CDU performance in the June 1994 European elections. He then served as Secretary General of the European People's Party (EPP) - the transnational, centre-right, European political party - before becoming Secretary General of the EPP Group, then known as the EPP-ED Group, in the European Parliament. He was subsequently appointed as the first Director General for EU Internal Policies (DG IPOL) within the general secretariat of the European Parliament, the administrative department which services the 17 parliamentary committees dealing with domestic EU issues.

During his time with both the EPP transnational party and EPP Group in the EP, Welle is credited with the strategy of opening the formerly Christian Democrat alliance to a broader range of conservative and liberal political forces, so consolidating most of the mainstream European centre-right under an EPP umbrella. This approach culminated in the EPP Group becoming the largest political group in the European Parliament in June 1999, a position that it has enjoyed ever since. Since 2004, the EPP has also been the strongest political force in the main EU institutions as a whole, with Welle still perceived as an important behind-the-scenes influence at senior level within EPP politics. In the run-up to the 2014 European elections, for example, he played a particularly important role in advocating the fielding of lead candidates or 'Spitzenkandidaten'by the various European political parties.

In 1991-95, Welle cut his political teeth as Chair of the Democrat Youth Community of Europe.,, which brought together Christian Democrat and Conservative students from across Europe. As Secretary General of the EPP party and EPP Group, Welle played a key part in keeping the British Conservative MEPs in the group - especially during the period from 1997, when the party moved into Opposition at Westminster - by negotiating or suggesting compromise solutions designed to allow them a high degree of autonomy.

As Secretary General of the European Parliament since 2009, Welle has interpreted his role in a more proactive way than most of his predecessors, strongly emphasising the Parliament's role as a law-making body, especially given the significant boost in powers the institution received under the Lisbon Treaty. He promoted a long-run shift in the use of resources towards policy work, and away from back-office administration and traditional overheads, such as translation and interpretation (which still consume over a third of the Parliament's budget). He has strengthened the staff servicing parliamentary committees, has emphasised the importance of ex-ante and ex-post evaluation, so that the Parliament can insert itself in the whole policy cycle, and has established a new parliamentary research service (DG EPRS) to support such work. He has used his position to strengthen the Parliament's position in inter-institutional relations, not only with the European Commission, but also the EU Council of Ministers. He also boosted links with the US Congress by opening an EP representative office in Washington DC.

On 23 May 2010, the British newspaper, the Sunday Times, citing an anonymous source, claimed that Welle intended to provide an Apple iPad to each of the 736 MEPs. The article implied that earmarking money for iPads was not the best example of austerity, at a time when EU member states were suffering severe budget deficits. However, a parliament spokesperson interviewed for the article was reportedly not aware of any such initiative. Welle, however, has promoted moves to a 'paperless' Parliament, developing, for example, an 'eCommittee' facility, whereby Members can table amendments and undertake some other aspects of committee work electronically.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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