MEP calls EU president 'a damp rag'

A British eurosceptic legislator has branded the new president of the European Council a "damp rag" from a non-country today …

A British eurosceptic legislator has branded the new president of the European Council a "damp rag" from a non-country today in a personal attack that shocked the normally consensual European Parliament.

To gasps from other members of the EU legislature, Nigel Farage of the United Kingdom Independence Party (Ukip), launched a tirade against Herman Van Rompuy, the Belgian chosen by the 27 EU leaders to chair their regular summits.

Mr Farage said that when the EU appointed its first president last November, it was hoped he would be "a giant global figure" and a "political leader for 500 million people" who deserved a higher salary than President Barack Obama.

"But I'm afraid all we got was you," said Mr Farage, looking directly at Mr Van Rompuy (62), a former Belgian prime minister with thinning grey hair and spectacles.

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"I don't want to be rude but you know, really, you have the charisma of a damp rag and the appearance . . . of a bank clerk," shouted Mr Farage, to heckles from other parliamentarians.

Such verbal abuse is a feature of Britain's adversarial politics but very rare in the EU chamber, where debate is muted partly due to a pro-European consensus but also because it is conducted in 23 languages through interpreters and headphones.

"Is this European democracy?" Mr Farage asked. "You appear to have a loathing of the very concept of the existence of nation states. Perhaps that's because you come from Belgium, which of course is pretty much a non-country."

Mr Van Rompuy, who was little known in Europe before he emerged as a compromise candidate, has faced media criticism for his lack of charisma but won some praise as a consensus builder.

Some lawmakers urged parliament president Jerzy Buzek to cut Mr Farage off, but the speaker waited until he had finished before saying: "You said at the outset you did not want to be rude. I would ask you to stick to that."

Mr Van Rompuy sat listening via a translation headset, his face calm but his brow furrowed.

Ukip won the second-largest share of the vote on a low turnout in European Parliament elections in Britain last June, ahead of the ruling Labour Party but behind the opposition Conservatives, who are also sceptical towards the EU.

Reuters