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Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker arrives for a meeting of the European council last month. BERNAL REVERT/Belga/PA Images

Luxembourg PM Juncker resigns in spy scandal

A fixture on the European scene during the financial crisis, Juncker recently faced Luxembourg’s first confidence vote in 150 years.

LUXEMBOUR PRIME MINISTER Jean-Claude Juncker, Europe’s longest-serving leader, has stepped down in the midst of a spy scandal.

Juncker tendered his resignation to colleagues this morning and will ask the Grand Duke to hold an election, expected in October.

The decision followers the loss of support from coalition colleagues after a scandal involving the tiny nation’s secret services, which is alleged to have indulged in misconduct on his watch.

Juncker said he would likely run for a new political mandate but did not say whether he would try for a new term as head of government in elections.

Though aged only 58, Juncker has been in office for 18 years and in government for 30. He is best known in Europe for his recent tumultuous eight-year stint as head of the eurozone finance ministers group, which ended in January.

In a rare political drama in tiny uneventful Luxembourg, the parliament examined a report alleging that the country’s SREL secret service, which the premier is supposed to oversee, had indulged in a series of misdemeanours from 2003 to 2009 that included illegal phone-taps, corruption, and even a dodgy car dealership.

“The intelligence service was not my top priority,” Juncker told parliament earlier Wednesday. “Moreover I hope Luxembourg will never have a prime minister who sees SREL as (his or her) priority.”

Leader of his Socialist junior partner Alex Bodry said the prime minister “must assume his responsibilities, not because he was dishonest or incompetent but because he made the wrong choices.” “There were serious dysfunctions. The prime minister’s responsibility is at stake.”

The report was put together by a parliamentary committee after a Luxembourg weekly last year published verbatim a secretly taped conversation in 2007 between Juncker and the then head of SREL, Marco Mille.

In the recorded conversation, Mille revealed that his staff had secretly taped a conversation with Luxembourg’s Grand Duke and that the sovereign was in regular contact with Britain’s MI6. But the parliamentary inquiry set up in the furore that ensued uncovered more dirt: the existence of 13,000 secret files on people and businesses, illegal wire-taps on business leaders, a counter-terror operation that in fact was a front to help a Russian oligarch pay 10 million dollars to a Spanish spy, and even a murky private dealership in luxury cars.

“The commission of inquiry concludes that the prime minister, as head of the intelligence service, not only had no control over his service but also too often omitted to inform the parliamentary control committee or the judiciary of its irregularities, aberrations and illegalities,” the report said.

Addressing the chamber, Juncker hit back, saying the committee had failed to exercise its supervisory powers over the secret service. “It could’ve controlled it … It did not.”

Juncker last month survived the duchy’s first confidence vote in 150 years over a separate scandal. The last confidence motion in Luxembourg was in 1848 and led to the fall of the government.

A fixture on the European scene and a passionate defender of the euro and the European dream, Juncker steered a tricky path during the financial crisis between the bloc’s top two economies, France and Germany, who often held sharply differing views. “When I want to speak in French, I think in German; when I want to speak in German, I think in French, with the result that I am totally incomprehensible,” he joked typically at one stage.

Throughout his career, he was never afraid to speak out. He has “two fatal flaws — he has an opinion and he is not afraid to share it”, said one European official.

© AFP

-Additional reporting by Rónán Duffy

Read: European Parliament approves epic €960 billion budget after months of squabbling >

Read: Portugal’s PM declares: ‘I’m not resigning. I’m not abandoning the country’ >

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    Mute Paul Gorry
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    Jan 24th 2022, 9:38 PM

    That’s me hair transplant on weds fluck ed now ah well!.

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    Mute Gerard McConnell
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    Jan 24th 2022, 9:52 PM

    It’s the Russians, had to be.

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    Mute Tomás Barrett
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    Jan 24th 2022, 9:37 PM

    Waiting for the “this disproves global warming/ climate change” comments.

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Jan 24th 2022, 10:07 PM

    @Tomás Barrett: Yes, scientists believe the increasingly meandering nature of the northern polar jetstream is linked to climate change, it’s allowing cold polar vortex to move south and warmer air to move north more frequently, a similar event was responsible for record-breaking cold in Texas in Feb 2021:

    https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/understanding-arctic-polar-vortex

    As a result, northern Scandinavia was warmer than Turkey around 5pm today:

    https://earth.nullschool.net/#2022/01/23/1700Z/wind/surface/level/overlay=temp/orthographic=38.28,47.93,1051

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    Mute Thunder Snowman
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    Jan 24th 2022, 11:25 PM

    @David Jordan: But man made climate change is what’s affecting the change in jet stream.

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    Mute ed w
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    Jan 24th 2022, 10:41 PM

    sub zero temperatures and gale force winds last hit Athens in feb 2021. so last winter then

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    Mute Ted Logan
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    Jan 24th 2022, 10:30 PM

    Istanbul was Constantinople
    Now it’s Istanbul, not Constantinople
    Been a long time gone, Constantinople
    Now it’s Turkish delight on a moonlit night

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    Mute Breda Kelly
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    Jan 25th 2022, 12:04 AM

    @Ted Logan: why did Constantinople get the works,
    that’s nobody’s business but the Turks.

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