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The fight to host major EU regulatory agencies leaving London after Brexit reaches its climax Monday when ministers vote to choose new host cities in a perplexing process compared to the Eurovision song contest. The 27 EU affairs ministers meeting in Brussels will decide on how to resolve one of the collateral effects of the UK divorce: finding new locations for the European Medicines Agency and the European Banking Authority, both currently located in London's high-rise Canary Wharf district.
There is "hot bargaining" behind the scenes, a diplomatic source told AFP, as hopeful EU governments jostle to secure the backing of other countries for agencies that promise both prestige and prosperity. The EU has given no indication of the top candidates, but British bookmaker Ladbrokes makes Bratislava, Milan and Amsterdam favourites to host the EMA, while Frankfurt, Vienna and Dublin lead the running for the EBA.
In total there are 19 candidates to be the new home of the EMA, one of the world's most powerful drugs watchdogs, which employs 900 pharmaceutical experts, biologists and doctors from every corner of Europe. There is a smaller batch of eight bidders for the EBA, the banking overseer with 159 staff. The EBA is perhaps best known for its regular stress tests on the EU's financial sector in the wake of the global financial crisis. Member states brought out all the stops to extol the merits of their candidate cities, producing glossy brochures and videos and offering a host of perks.
The Irish government has said it is willing to contribute 78 million euros over 10 years to cover costs, while Vienna promised a children's nursery, and Milan threw in access to a gym. Italy was even forced to deny press reports that it would increase its military contingents to the Baltic countries as a bargaining chip to promote Milan's candidacy.
In an unusually complex procedure - even for the EU - each member state will have a set amount of points to distribute in a secret ballot to determine the candidate cities. EU diplomats have compared the process to the annual Eurovision Song Contest, whose nail-biting televised voting sequence is one of the most watched TV moments in Europe, known for its come from behind surprises and mixture of backscratching and backstabbing.
The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, delivered an evaluation of the applications in September based on a range of criteria from transport links, to job prospects for spouses and schools. But the commission was careful not to formulate a preference, and member states are under no obligation to take that assessment into account in Monday's vote.
"The criteria will not only be about the intrinsic qualities of a particular candidacy," said France's EU Affairs Minister Nathalie Loiseau in an interview with the French daily La Croix. But the staff of the agencies in question, already being forced to up sticks from London, are reportedly nervous about any surprise victories.
The drugs agency was warned in an internal report that the choice of certain cities would result in "a retention rate of personnel well below 30 percent". No cities were named, but according to leaks in the press, Bratislava, Warsaw, Bucharest and Sofia stood out as the least popular. The complicated process makes any prediction of the outcome hazardous. In the first round, each country will have six points for each agency, including three to give to their first choice, two to their second and one to their third. If necessary, the process can go as long as three rounds, each with different rules and scheduled breaks during which ministers can consult their capitals. "Of course, many countries will vote tactically", a diplomatic source told AFP, adding that his country had resorted to studying "game theory" to be ready.

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