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Before the vote, Mr Prodi had promised "very, very severe" measures against any Commissioners implicated in criminal activity.
The approval brings to an end six months of stagnation following a corruption scandal in which the entire Commission resigned, badly shaking confidence in European institutions.
"I am determined to transform the Commission into a modern, efficient administration which has learnt the lessons of recent experience and puts it house in order," Mr Prodi told MEPs on Tuesday. "It is time for some glasnost here."
Fair trial
This is the first time Parliament has been able to exercise new powers to vote on the appointment of a new Commission. Deputies can vote to accept or reject the Commission as a whole, or grant it a probationary period until January.
Only the UK Conservatives and some German Christian Democrats, who form part of the 233-member European People's Party, the Parliament's largest voting block, said they would vote to reject Mr Prodi's team.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/445000/images/_447910_busquin150.jpg)
The right-wingers have questioned the nomination as research commissioner of Philippe Busquin, whose Belgian Socialist Party was accused of accepting illegal funds before he became party leader.
But Mr Prodi warned MEPs against hasty actions based on incomplete evidence.
"We should not forget the presumption of innocence and the right to a fair trial," he said in reference to last-minute attacks Mr Busquin.
An internal vote in the EPP came out in favour of backing Mr Prodi's commissioners by a margin of 3-1.
Challenges
The second-largest bloc, the Socialists, agreed to back him, pending the result of a Spanish parliamentary investigation into a farm subsidy fraud when the Commission's vice-president-designate, Loyola de Palacio, was Spanish farm minister.
The Liberals, the third largest group, also said they would vote in favour of the Commission.
Analysts say Mr Prodi's new team, whose job is to propose and enforce European Union laws, faces challenges on many fronts.
He must try to reform the Commission and win back the confidence of European voters who stayed away in large numbers from recent European Parliamentary elections.
Tory MEPs to vote against EC
(14 Sep 99 | UK Politics)
Prodi calls for enlargement deadline
(14 Sep 99 | Europe)
Quakes prompt EU-Turkey talks
(13 Sep 99 | Europe)
Patten: Moral dimension to enlargement
(12 Jul 99 | UK Politics)
Who's who in the new European Commission
(10 Jul 99 | Europe)
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The Prodi European Commission
European Union: Enlargement
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