No no no. He has a bad back!
Everyone who's had a bad back stumbles about in odd shoes stinking of red wine and brandy.
I wonder if anyone in here voted for him? Apparently the EU is completely democratic.....
Surely someone must have?
As usual you haven't a clue as to how the man was elected and can't be bothered to look it up.
I'll give you a clue he was elected and voted in in a fashion and according to a set of rules that our Prime Minister helped write the procedure on, then apparently forgot he had
"I'm a bit worried that the European parliament seems to be getting all these new powers," he said. The year was 2009, the EU's Lisbon Treaty was just about to come into force. The prime minister's admission was surprising because it was his and the other governments of the EU that had written the treaty, not the parliament or any other EU institution.
"We know that the parliament gets more powers, but why did your governments do that? Didn't you read the treaty?" the prime minister was asked. He gave no answer.
from 1989 to 2009 he was also
Minister for Finances.for Luxembourg
By the time he left office, he was the longest-serving head of any national government in the EU, and one of the longest-serving democratically elected leaders in the world, his tenure encompassing the height of the
European financial and sovereign debt crisis. From 2005 to 2013, Juncker served as the first permanent President of the
Eurogroup.
In 2014, the
European People's Party (EPP) had Juncker as its lead candidate, or
Spitzenkandidat, for the Presidency of the Commission in the
2014 elections. This marked the first time that the
Spitzenkandidat process was employed. Juncker is the first President that prior to the election has campaigned as a candidate for the position, a process introduced with the
Treaty of Lisbon. The EPP won 220 out of 751 seats in the
Parliament. On 27 June 2014, the
European Council officially nominated Juncker for the position, and on 15 July 2014, the
European Parliament elected him with a majority of 422 votes from a total of 729 cast.He succeeded
José Manuel Barroso as President on 1 November 2014. Juncker stated that his priorities would be the creation of a digital
single market, the development of an EU
Energy Union, the negotiation of the
Transatlantic Trade Agreement, the continued reform of the
Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union—with the social dimension in mind—and a "targeted fiscal capacity" for the
Eurozone, as well as to negotiate a new deal with Britain. During his leadership, the UK
voted to leave the European Union in 2016.
As usual you hadn't the slightest idea of what you were talking about, had you? and let me ask you this as the logic is the same.
How many people voted Theresa May into the position of Prime Minister?