orathaic,
I believe it is more complex than that. I've found in this thread some mis-interpretation of what I propose, such as:
"BUT these individuals are not directly elected. Why should tye commmission be?"
-Since I never stated it should, I won't delve into it.
"Currently most european democracies do not directly elect their uead of governments. At least to my knowledge - in ireland and the UK the prime minsters are elected by as little as 20,000 people - who can vote against them if they wish, so some fraction of that may actually personally support a PM. And it is the PM who appoints his ministers/secretaries - those who actully hold responcibilities for their offices and the day-to-day operations of the governments."
-I think that's a tradition, but by no means a law right?
This is an important part:
"I'd rather see Merkel and Hollande competing witu other Leaders for what is best. Recall the competition between private companies is leveraged for the 'good' of the general public - why can the competition between states (when it is not via warfare) not also benefit all??"
-To me, and to most Dutch people, that is actually crystal clear: Merkel wins that race. There's not even any serious debate out that. The problem is; she's not a person, she's Germany. And for historic reasons, Germany can't be the leader of the European project. That's sad, because the Germans have many answers to our problems. So it falls to Hollande then, who can't be leader of Europe simply because in countries like Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Finland and the UK the man is a communist who tolerates some French automobile manufacturers.
The feeling I'm getting from the 25 last European summits that were *all* supposedly saving the Euro is that although there is some competition between the different ideas that the different countries represent, due to the complexities of these negotiations there is never one major strand of thought to gain enough momentum. What I believe an election would do is give some kind of an indicator of what general direction Europe wants to move in.
I'm guessing that the left-wing candidate (Schröder in my example) would go for a more closely bonded Europe, with Euro-bonds, a New Deal like scheme, etc. whereas the right-wing candidate would try to find a solution in austerity and getting as much money as possible directly into people's pockets and stimulate demand.
I'm not saying their taking such a stance will solve anything, but possibly it will present the European leaders with an idea to either side with, or fight against. I think that would be more refreshing than just jamming 27 heads together and see what comes out.