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Commissioner for Digital Economy 
and Society
Brussels, 10 September 2014
Gnther Oettinger    
Dear Gnther,
You  are  becoming  a  Member  of  the  new  European  Commission  at  a  particularly  challenging 
time  for  the  European  Union.  With  the  start  of  the  new  Commission,  we  have  an  exceptional 
opportunity, but also an obligation, to make a fresh start, to address the difcult geo-political 
situation, to strengthen economic recovery and to build a Europe that delivers jobs and growth 
for its citizens.
I want the new Commission to be a strong and political team. And I want you, with your political 
skills and experience, to fully play your part in this team. 
We will have a lot to do in the years to come and we will have to show a united and clear sense 
of  purpose  from  our  very  frst  day  in  ofce.  In  the  Political  Guidelines  for  the  new  European 
Commission  that  I  presented  to  the  European  Parliament  on  15  July,  I  set  out  a  new  Agenda 
for  Jobs,  Growth,  Fairness  and  Democratic  Change,  focused  on  ten  priorities.  I  had  discussed 
and  developed  this  Agenda  in  detail  in  meetings  with  all  the  political  groups  in  the  European 
Parliament.  The  Political  Guidelines  are,  therefore,  somewhat  akin  to  a  political  contract  that 
I  concluded  with  the  European  Parliament  to  mark  the  beginning  of  a  new  mandate  and  to 
prioritise the work of the new Commission. I will be looking for your support, creativity and action 
to help deliver concrete results.
Following our recent discussions, I would like you to be the Commissioner for Digital Economy 
and Society. In this mission letter, I set out what I expect from you as a Member of the Commission 
as well as specifc goals for which you will be responsible for reaching during our mandate.
A new way of working
Delivering the priorities of the Political Guidelines will require a reform of the way the Commission has 
operated up until now. Reform means change. I want us all to show that we are open to change and ready 
to adapt to it. 
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Mission letter
Jean-Claude Juncker, 
President-elect of the European Commission
I  want  the  Commission  as  a  whole  to  be  more  than  the  sum  of  its  parts.  I  therefore  want  us  to  work 
together as a strong team, cooperating across portfolios to produce integrated, well-grounded and well-
explained initiatives that lead to clear results. I want us to overcome silo mentalities by working jointly 
on those areas where we can really make a diference. We cannot and should not do everything: I want 
the European Commission to be bigger and more ambitious on big things, and smaller and more modest 
on small things. I also want us to focus our energy and eforts on ensuring efective implementation and 
follow-up on the ground. I count on you to play your part in this new collaborative way of working.
To  facilitate  this,  I  have  decided  to  organise  the  new  Commission  diferently  from  its  predecessors.  I 
will  entrust  a  number  of  well-defned  priority  projects  to  the  Vice-Presidents  and  ask  them  to  steer 
and coordinate work across the Commission in the key areas of the Political Guidelines. This will allow 
for  a  better  focus  and  a  much  stronger  cooperation  amongst  Members  of  the  College,  with  several 
Commissioners working closely together as a team, led by the Vice-Presidents, in compositions that may 
change according to need and as new projects develop over time.  
To empower them to deliver on their priority projects, the Vice-Presidents will act on my behalf and will 
help exercise my rights and prerogatives in their area of responsibility. In particular, the Vice-Presidents 
will be in charge of:
   Steering and coordinating work in their area of responsibility. This will involve bringing together 
several  Commissioners  and  diferent  parts  of  the  Commission  to  shape  coherent  policies  and 
deliver results.
   Assessing how and whether proposed new initiatives ft with the focus of the Political Guidelines. 
As a general rule, I will not include a new initiative in the Commission Work Programme or place it 
on the agenda of the College unless this is recommended to me by one of the Vice-Presidents on 
the basis of sound arguments and a clear narrative that is coherent with the priority projects of 
the Political Guidelines. 
   Managing and organising the representation of the Commission in their area of responsibility in 
the European Parliament, the Council, national Parliaments and other institutional settings as well 
as at international level. 
   Promoting  a  proactive  and  coordinated  approach  to  the  follow-up,  implementation,  and 
communication of our priority policies across the Union and internationally.
Respect for the principles of subsidiarity, proportionality and better regulation will be at the core of the 
work of the new Commission. We will concentrate our eforts on those areas where only joint action at 
European level can deliver the desired results. When we act, we will always look for the most efcient and 
least burdensome approach. Beyond these areas, we should leave action to the Member States where 
they are more legitimate and better equipped to give efective policy responses at national, regional or 
local level. 
I  will  therefore  pay  particular  attention  to  the  opinion  of  the  frst  Vice-President,  in  charge  of  Better 
Regulation, Inter-Institutional Relations, the Rule of Law and the Charter of Fundamental Rights, before 
including  any  new  initiative  in  the  Commission  Work  Programme  or  putting  it  on  the  agenda  of  the 
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College. This Vice-President will also be entrusted with the regular monitoring of procedures linked to the 
preparation of delegated and implementing acts to ensure full political ownership.
I will also pay particular attention to the opinion of the Vice-President for Budget and Human Resources 
as regards the impact of our activities on the fnancial resources and staf of the European Commission. 
We will have the privilege of being supported by an excellent, highly motivated European civil service and 
a professionally well-run administration, but its resources are limited and have to be used to best efect. 
This is also why I will want resources to be allocated to our priorities and to make sure that every action 
we take delivers maximum performance and value added. I also want all Commissioners to ensure sound 
fnancial  management  of  the  programmes  under  their  responsibility,  taking  all  necessary  measures  to 
protect the EU budget from fraud. 
Under my supervision, Vice-Presidents will be supported by the Secretariat General in their tasks but will 
primarily rely on close cooperation with the relevant Commissioners and the services that report to them. 
In addition, Vice-Presidents will be able to draw on any service in the Commission whose work is relevant 
for their area of responsibility, in consultation with the relevant Commissioner.  
With regard to the Unions external action, I have launched a pragmatic partnership with the new High 
Representative  of  the  Union  for  Foreign  Afairs  and  Security  Policy,  who,  according  to  the  Treaties,  is 
one of the Vice-Presidents of the Commission. The new High Representative and I have agreed that she 
will play her role as a Commission Vice-President to the full.  She will notably steer and coordinate the 
work of all Commissioners with regard to external relations through a Commissioners Group on External 
Action to develop a joint approach. This Group will meet at least once a month in varying thematic and/
or geographic formats, according to the needs identifed by the High Representative/Vice-President or by 
me. The High Representative/Vice-President will regularly report back to me and the whole College about 
geopolitical developments. To liaise more efectively with the other Members of the College, we agreed 
that she will have her Headquarters in the Berlaymont, and that the Commission will put a Cabinet of an 
appropriate size at her disposal, about half of which will be Commission ofcials. We also agreed that, 
whenever she sees the necessity to do so, she will ask the Commissioner for European Neighbourhood 
Policy and Enlargement Negotiations and other Commissioners to deputise in areas related to Commission 
competence.
Working together in this new way across the Commission should help ensure that the fnal decisions we 
take as a College are well-prepared and focused on what is important and that we are all equipped to 
explain and defend them. We will have to show a team spirit to make the new system work. Our success 
will  depend  on  each  and  every  one  of  you:  on  the  team  leadership  of  the  Vice-Presidents  and  on  the 
readiness of Commissioners to be strong team players. I would ask you all to work together to ensure 
that this new system works well.
The Digital Economy and Society portfolio 
You will be the Commissioner for Digital Economy and Society. You will, in particular, contribute to projects 
steered and coordinated by the Vice-President for the Digital Single Market and the Vice-President for Jobs, 
Growth, Investment and Competitiveness. For other initiatives requiring a decision from the Commission, 
you will, as a rule, liaise closely with the Vice-President for the Digital Single Market. 
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We  must  make  much  better  use  of  the  opportunities  ofered  by  digital  technologies  which  know  no 
borders. To do so, we will need to break down national silos in telecoms regulation, in copyright and data 
protection legislation, in the management of radio waves and in the application of competition law. The 
more markets are regulated transnationally, the more competition rules can become transversal or even 
continental. You should set clear long-term strategic goals to ofer legal certainty to the sector and create 
the right regulatory environment to foster investment and innovative businesses. You should also ensure 
that users are at the centre of your action. They should be able to use their mobile phones across Europe 
without  having  to  pay  roaming  charges.  They  should  be  ofered  access  to  services,  music,  movies  and 
sports events on their electronic devices wherever they are in Europe and regardless of borders. You will 
also need to ensure that the right conditions are set, including through copyright law, to support cultural 
and creative industries and exploit their potential for the economy. During our mandate, I would like you 
to focus on the following:
   Preparing, as part of the project team steered and coordinated by the Vice-President for the Digital 
Single Market, ambitious legislative steps towards a connected Digital Single Market. You should be 
ready to present these within the frst six months, and they should be based on a clear assessment 
of  the  main  obstacles  still  to  be  removed  through  EU  action,  either  by  implementing  existing 
policies  or  proposing  new  measures.  More  ambition  should  be  added  to  the  ongoing  reform  of 
our telecoms rules. A harmonised approach to radio spectrum between Member States should be 
developed. Copyright rules should be modernised, during the frst part of this mandate, in the light 
of the digital revolution, new consumer behaviour and Europes cultural diversity. 
   Contributing, as part of the project team steered and coordinated by the Vice-President for Jobs, 
Growth,  Investment  and  Competitiveness,  to  the  jobs,  growth  and  investment  package  to  be 
presented  within  the  frst  three  months  of  our  mandate.  I  would  like  you  to  be  very  hands-on 
in terms of working with Member States to bring about the conditions necessary for investment 
decisions and ensure that the EU can be a catalyst for public and private investment. You should 
focus on supporting the deployment of a high-quality, digital network infrastructure, underpinning 
all sectors of the economy across borders, progressively on a continental scale. 
   Supporting the development of creative industries and of a successful European media and content 
industry able to reach out to new audiences, adapt to the digital era and thrive in the connected 
Digital Single Market.
   Supporting,  in  close  cooperation  with  the  frst  Vice-President,  in  charge  of  Better  Regulation, 
Inter-Institutional  Relations,  the  Rule  of  Law  and  the  Charter  of  Fundamental  Rights,  freedom 
of expression, freedom of information, freedom and pluralism of the media, the openness of the 
internet and cultural and linguistic diversity.
   Contributing  to  activities  that  turn  digital  research  into  successful  European  innovation  stories, 
encouraging  entrepreneurship  and  providing  a  framework  that  drives  start-ups,  the  take-up  of 
new businesses and job-creation. The Commission needs to play its role in ensuring that promising 
new developments such as the cloud, the Internet of Things and big data can thrive in Europe and 
that citizens, innovative web entrepreneurs and other businesses can take full advantage of their 
potential.
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   Supporting  the  work  of  the  Vice-President  for  Budget  and  Human  Resources  to  modernise 
administration in the European Commission, and promoting the use of eGovernment solutions at 
all levels. You will also work closely with the Commissioner for Employment, Social Afairs, Skills 
and Labour Mobility, for Education, Culture, Youth and Citizenship and for Justice, Consumers and 
Gender Equality to reinforce digital skills and learning across society, with a view to empowering 
Europes workforce and consumers for the digital era.
   Developing and implementing measures to make Europe more trusted and secure online, so that 
citizens and business can fully reap the benefts of the digital economy. I would like you to work 
with the Vice-President for the Digital Single Market on a plan to make the EU a leader in cyber 
security preparedness and trustworthy ICT, and to increase the confdentiality of communications.
   Supporting  the  Vice-President  for  the  Digital  Single  Market  and  the  Commissioner  for  Justice, 
Consumers  and  Gender  Equality  in  fnalising  the  negotiations  on  an  ambitious  Data  Protection 
Regulation in 2015. On the basis of the outcome of this legislative process, you should prepare 
a reform of the e-Privacy Directive, liaising closely with the Vice-President for the Digital Single 
Market, with the support of the Commissioner for Justice, Consumers and Gender Equality.
   Developing  and  promoting  a  sustainable  business  model  for  Euronews,  including  by  further 
developing its public service remit, by helping to identify new partners and by making better use of 
digital transmission technologies, in full respect of the editorial independence of Euronews.
   Working  with  the  High  Representative  of  the  Union  for  Foreign  Afairs  and  Security  Policy/Vice-
President to develop the relationship with strategic partners in order to build a  global governance 
architecture  for  the  Internet  which  is  legitimate,  transparent,  accountable,  sustainable  and 
inclusive. This includes ensuring the Internet remains open, a driving force for innovation and an 
international resource that benefts the European economy and citizens.
To  help  you  fulfl  your  responsibilities,  the  Directorate-General  for  Communications  Networks,  Content 
and Technology (DG CONNECT), with some adjustments, as indicated in the table annexed to this letter, 
and the Directorate-General for Informatics (DG DIGIT) will report to you.   
Our principles: ethics and transparency
We must abide by the highest possible professional and ethical standards at all times. I want the European 
Commission  to  lead  the  way  as  a  modern,  efcient  and  transparent  public  administration,  open  to  all 
input that helps us deliver work of a consistently high quality, in full independence and impartiality. Our 
conduct must be unimpeachable. You have received the Code of Conduct of the Members of the European 
Commission. I expect all of us to honour both the word and the spirit of the Code. 
You will have seen that the Political Guidelines include a new commitment to transparency. Transparency 
should be a priority for the new Commission and I expect all of us to make public, on our respective web 
pages, all the contacts and meetings we hold with professional organisations or self-employed individuals 
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on any matter relating to EU policy-making and implementation. It is very important to be transparent 
where specifc interests related to the Commissions work on legislative initiatives or fnancial matters are 
discussed with such organisations or individuals.
Working in partnership for Europe
The Commissions partnership with the other EU institutions and the Member States, as defned in the 
Treaties, is fundamental. The Union only succeeds when everyone is pulling in the same direction: this is 
why we should work in the months to come to forge a common understanding between the institutions 
about what we want to achieve and how we will go about it.
The Commissions relationship with the European Parliament is the source of our democratic legitimacy. 
This must, therefore, be a political and not a technocratic partnership. I expect all Commissioners to invest 
in this relationship and to make themselves available for and to take an active part in plenary sessions, 
committee meetings and trilogue negotiations. The meetings with the parliamentary committees over the 
weeks to come will be an opportunity for you to lay the foundations for a productive working relationship, 
to explain how your work will contribute to joint political priorities, and to demonstrate your commitment 
and suitability for your broader role as a Member of the College.
Efective policy-making also requires a deep understanding of every one of the Member States, of their 
common  challenges  and  of  their  diversity.  While  fulflling  your  obligation  to  participate  in  Commission 
meetings and engage with the European institutions, I want you all to be politically active in the Member 
States and in dialogues with citizens, by presenting and communicating our common agenda, listening 
to ideas and engaging with stakeholders. In this context, I want all Commissioners to commit to a new 
partnership with national Parliaments: they deserve particular attention and I want, under the coordination 
of the frst Vice-President, in charge of Better Regulation, Inter-Institutional Relations, the Rule of Law 
and the Charter of Fundamental Rights, important proposals or initiatives to be presented and explained 
in national Parliaments by Members of the Commission. This should also allow us to deepen the country-
specifc  knowledge  within  our  institution  and  to  build  mutual  understanding  and  efective  channels  of 
communication between the national and the European level.
***
The  European  Union  has  come  through  one  of  the  most  testing  periods  in  its  history.  The  efects  of 
the economic and fnancial crisis are still causing great hardship in many parts of Europe. We live in a 
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Union with  a  29th state  of  unemployed  people, many  of  them young  people  who  feel side-lined.  Until 
this  situation  has  changed,  this  29th  state  must  be  our  number  one  concern,  and  we  have  to  be  very 
determined and very responsible in carrying out our work as Members of this Commission. 
I am looking forward to working with you on the new start that our European Union needs now. 
             
                    Jean-Claude JUNCKER   
  
Annex: Table of allocation of portfolios and supporting services
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