Everything about Leonard Orban totally explained
Leonard Orban (born
June 28,
1961) is a
Romanian independent
technocrat who currently serves as the
Commissioner for Multilingualism in the
European Commission, the executive body of the
European Union (EU). He is responsible for the
EU language policy and is the first
Romanian Commissioner and the first
member of the Commission whose
portfolio is exclusively
multilingualism. His term of office began on
January 1,
2007 and will end on
October 31,
2009. With a background in
engineering and
economics, Orban has taken up various posts working for the
accession of Romania to the European Union, most prominently as Deputy and later as Chief Negotiator for his country at the time of final negotiations with the European Union.
Steering the multilingualism
language policy of the EU, Orban focuses on promoting
foreign language learning through EU programmes such as the
Lifelong Learning Programme 2007-2013. In addition, his remit also includes the effective functioning of the EU's extensive
interpretation,
translation and
publication services in the
23 official languages. To support the remit of his portfolio, Orban oversees a staff of 3,400 in total (approximately 15 per cent of the Brussels executive's workforce) and approximately 1 per cent of the
EU budget.
Though unaffiliated to any political party, Orban adheres to
liberalism. He supports Romania's closer
European integration and a strong European Union, as well as the relaunch of the frozen
Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe without modifications to the original text.
Early years and personal life
Orban was born in
Braşov, central
Romania, to a father of
Hungarian origin and a
Romanian mother. His brother,
Ludovic Orban, a prominent politician of Romania's
National Liberal Party, is currently Romania's
Transport Minister. He is married and has a daughter, and his personal interests range across
foreign policy,
classical music,
reading and
cinema.
Orban gained a
bachelor's degree (
1981-
1986) in
engineering at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering,
Transylvania University of Braşov, and a bachelor's degree (
1987-
1992) in
economics at the Faculty of Management,
Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies. Alongside
Romanian, he's also fluent in
English and
French and has passive knowledge of
Italian. On
April 25,
2005, together with the Romanian president
Traian Băsescu, the Romanian prime minister
Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu and the Romanian foreign minister
Mihai Răzvan Ungureanu, Orban was one of the signatories for Romania on the country's Treaty of Accession in
Luxembourg. After the signing of the Treaty, when Romania received the status of the observer in the
Council of the European Union and in the Commission's committees, Orban was responsible for coordinating Romania's policies and positions in EU affairs. From
January 1,
2007, Orban became European Commissioner for Multilingualism for Romania in the
Barroso commission. He has written numerous newspaper articles and analyses and has given numerous speeches on European affairs.
Portfolio as European Commissioner
As
European Commissioner for Multilingualism in the Barroso Commission, Orban is responsible for the
language policy of the European Union, for example promoting
multilingualism for the citizens and the institutions of the
European Union. He is the first to hold this
portfolio. Multilingualism was previously a responsibility of the
European Commissioner for Education, Training, Culture and Multilingualism,
Ján Figeľ, the first Commissioner whose portfolio explicitly included multilingualism.
Politically, the portfolio is focused on promoting
foreign languages learning, specifically, an individual's mother tongue plus two other languages, as means for the
worker’s mobility and business
competitiveness. Though awareness for
linguistic diversity is a policy target, the
language rights of speakers of
regional,
minority, lesser-used and migrant languages are not legally protected. In the European Union,
language policy is the responsibility of member states and European Union doesn't have a "common language policy." Based on the "principle of
subsidiarity", European Union institutions play a supporting role in this field, promoting cooperation between the member states and promoting the European dimension in their language policies, particularly through the teaching and dissemination of their languages. The content of educational systems is the responsibility of individual member states and the European Union has very limited influence in this area. However, a number of European Union funded programmes actively promote
language learning, most prominently under the much wider
Lifelong learning Programme 2007-2013. Though regional and minority languages can benefit from European Union programmes, protection of linguistic rights is a matter for the member states. Orban is also responsible for the effective functioning of the European Union's extensive
interpretation,
translation and
publication services in the 23 official languages of the Union. Language policy affects the overall European Union strategy of communication with its citizens and the effort to establish a European identity. In many of these issues, responsibility is shared with other Commissioners, namely the European Commissioner for Education, Training and Culture, Ján Figeľ. Orban is also responsible, alongside the
President of the Commission,
Barroso, and Figeľ to work on "intercultural dialogue", including the 2008
European Year of Intercultural Dialogue.
Administratively, Orban is in charge of the
Directorate-General (DG) for Translation, the
DG for Interpretation and the
Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, as well as the Multilingualism policy unit (EAC-C-5) in the
DG for Education and Culture. In total, Orban is responsbile for overseeing 3,400 staff (approximately 15 per cent of the Brussels executive's workforce) and approximately 1 per cent of the
EU budget. Orban's salary is €18,233.38 (approx. US$ 23,631, c.2007) a month plus housing allowance.
Orban and the International Language Esperanto
Orban set up a weblog called "Multilingualism - Have your say..."
(http://forums.ec.europa.eu/multilingualism/en/).
On September 24, 2007 he put his views on "Importance of learning languages" and till 27 March 2008 received 582 comments mostly in favor of the international language
Esperanto. The main points in these comments are: Esperanto is the ideal solution for the language problems in the
EU, as it's a neutral, logical, easy-to-learn and rich language. If Esperanto works as the common language in the EU, each text or speech will need to be translated only once - instead of 23 times!
In response to such comments for Esperanto, in the introduction of his second post (dated February 6, 2008) called "Do you experience problems in your everyday life that are due to language difficulties?" Orban wrote: for two reasons Esperanto can not be used in the EU (1) it isn't an official language in any EU-countries (2) it lacks the needed terminology. In response to these, till 27 March 2008, he received 96 comments. Most of these comments are again for Esperanto, and delivering numerous arguments to show the suitability and rich terminology of Esperanto as the common language for Europe - and the whole world.
The debate is on-going, and Orban will probably set a sub-commission to study the case carefully.
In the early 1920s a similar debate happened in the
League of Nations, the first form of the
United Nations, and Esperanto was studied in details in order to see if it's a capable language to function as the world common language, and specifically in the League of Nations. The Study report, an official document produced in the League of Nations, clearly showed the suitability of Esperanto in every respect.
Appointment procedure
According to Article 45 of the protocol to the Accession Treaty of Bulgaria and Romania, the new members of the Commission representing the acceding member states are appointed by the Council of the European Union in common accord with the President of the Commission and after consultation with the
European Parliament. Compared to
former enlargements of the European Union, the Accession Treaty for Bulgaria and Romania, for the first time, contains an explicit acknowledgement of the Parliament’s role and constitutes the formal legal basis for the new Commissioners’ appointment procedure.
In
October 30,
2006, in agreement with the President of the Commission, Barroso, the Romanian government nominated Leonard Orban as Commissioner designate for Romania. Barroso assigned him the portfolio of multilingualism. Before Orban,
Varujan Vosganian, the current Romanian
National Liberal Party Minister of Economy and Commerce, had been nominated, but withdrew his candidature due to allegations concerning his past involvement with the secret police under
Ceauşescu and party financing by a tycoon. National Liberal Party foreign minister
Mihai Răzvan Ungureanu refused a nomination.
The assignment of the multilingualism portfolio to the Romanian Commissioner by Barroso was highly controversial. Barroso was severely criticized for creating a new Commissioner portfolio so that the accessing countries in 2007 could hold a post. The portfolio was criticized for being too "light" for such a high-rank official, that there would be an overlap of responsibilities with other Commissioners and the good functioning of the Commission would be endangered. The portfolio was considered insubstantial for a Commissioner due to the limited jurisdiction of the EU in affecting language policy and the more administrative (rather than political character) of the post. In addition, it appeared that the portfolio had been created to complete a 27-strong Commission; Romania's appointment of a technocrat rather than a politician, given the country's deficits in interior and justice policies, especially in terms of corruption, would result in the Romanian Commissioner taking a degraded portfolio. This criticism came from the
Social Democratic Party (PSD), Romania's main opposition party,, the
Socialist Group (PES) in the European Parliament and the liberal
Financial Times newspaper. Socialist Group leader,
Martin Schulz, suggested a portfolio for the protection of
ethnic minorities instead. Barroso turned down the PES proposal and defended the post. He stated that Ján Figeľ, the Commissioner for Education, Training and Culture, "will remain responsible for the management of actions to directly promote the inter-cultural dialogue".
After a public hearing in Brussels at the
Committee on Culture and Education (CULT) of the European Parliament in participation with the
Committee on Constitutional Affairs (AFCO) on
November 27,
2006, the Committee gave a positive assessment. The Socialist Group voted for Orban, laying the blame for the portfolio's mandate on the President of the Commission rather than the Commissioner designate. Orban holds the position of European Commissioner until
31 October,
2009, when the remaining term of office for the Barroso Commission ends.
Views on multilingualism
In his hearing at the European Parliament, Leonard Orban focused on defending the importance of his post in presenting the EU language policy, emphasising
foreign language learning and describing the concrete initiatives he intended to implement.
Orban said that he intended to spearhead the Commission's work on a portfolio that has become more important with every
enlargement and assured the
Members of the European Parliament that his portfolio was a substantial one, covering a range of important political and managerial responsibilities. He also described how his portforlio would contribute to economic
competitiveness, the social dimension of the EU and the intercultural dialogue and stated that it would provide a forum for European political dialogue. and stressing the importance of a post-accession strategy for his country.
On the "future of Europe", Orban believes in a strong, cohesive European Union capable of being a major actor on the global scene. In addition, he stresses the need to increase the pace of the implementation of the
Lisbon Strategy, a ten-year strategy designed to make the European Union the world's most competitive economy by 2010. Institutionally, he supports the
Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, voted down in referendums in France and Netherlands in 2005, believing that it should be ratified by the member states without further negotiations or without excluding some of its provisions.
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