European soccer’s top dog: I asked Sepp Blatter to step down

Latest developments:

• “I know many people hold me ultimately responsible for the actions … of the global football community, whether it’s the destination of the hosting of the World Cup or a corruption scandal. We, or I, cannot monitor everyone all of the time,” FIFA President Sepp Blatter said at the opening of FIFA’s 65th Congress on Thursday in Zurich, Switzerland. “If people want to do wrong, they will also try to hide it. But it must fall to me to (have responsibility) for the reputation and well-being of our organization and to find a way forward to fix things.”

• Blatter said that he will “not allow the actions of a few” to destroy the reputation of all those who work hard for world football. “I must stress that those who are corrupt in football are in a minority. … They might be caught.”

• “We will cooperate with all authorities” to make sure that everyone involved in wrongdoing “is discovered and punished,” Blatter said. “There can be no place for corruption of any kind.” Blatter spoke one day after U.S. authorities announced an indictment against 14 individuals in a corruption scandal and Swiss authorities announced their own probe into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids.

• “We cannot allow the reputation of football and FIFA to be dragged through the mud any longer. It has to stop here and now,” Blatter said.

• “You will agree with me these are unprecedented and difficult times for FIFA,” Blatter said. “The events of yesterday have cast a long shadow over football and over this week’s congress. Actions of individuals, if proven, bring shame and humiliation on football and demand action and change from us all.”

[Original story published at 10:52 a.m. ET]

Sepp Blatter must go.

It’s a growing chorus among pundits, world leaders and, now, European soccer’s most important official on the eve of the FIFA World Congress vote that could put the embattled leader of soccer’s scandal-ridden governing body into power for a fifth term.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, much as expected, announced he will be supporting Jordan’s Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein, the candidate put forth by England’s Football Association to challenge Blatter’s 17-year reign over world soccer

“I fully support the Football Association’s position that significant and wide-ranging reforms are urgently needed at the very top of FIFA, including a change in its leadership,” he said, according to a statement.

Cameron spoke ahead of a meeting that is expected to be like no other. Embroiled in an unprecedented crisis that has led to the arrest of some its leading officials on corruption charges, FIFA will open its 65th Congress on Thursday in Zurich. FIFA will vote for a new president on Friday.

But while a British Prime Minister’s call for ouster may sound like it carries a lot of weight, we’re talking about FIFA, an autonomous body that has survived numerous corruption scandals and defiantly stood firm in the face of widespread criticism of its decisions to hand Russia and Qatar the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

Thus, the words of Michel Platini, president of UEFA, European soccer’s governing body, likely carry a great deal more gravity, especially when you consider that Platini has sway over votes that could threaten Blatter’s grip on power.

Platini, who has been one of Blatter’s critics, met with other UEFA officials in Zurich on Thursday to decide how best to navigate the growing scandal.

Following that meeting, the former French national player told reporters that he had asked Blatter to leave, and Blatter was “very sensitive on that,” but told Platini it was “too late,” given that the vote is set for Friday.

“I know what is his strategy,” Platini said. “His strategy is to bring all the congresses, to have some speakers in the room, to convince … the most to vote for him, and then at the end he will say, ‘Look at the democracy. Democracy of the most numbers, they will say that I have to stay. And I will stay. ‘ “

Platini said he spoke to Blatter as a friend — “He always says that he was an uncle for me” — and pressed on why he asked Blatter to step down, he replied, “I think he’s a friend who has a problem and he’s not good for the rest. It is my duty to tell that.”

As for the prospect that Prince Ali could unseat Blatter, Europe could bring as many as 54 votes for the contender — and a minimum or 45 or 46, “if I trust everybody,” Platini said with a chuckle.

Each of FIFA’s 209 member associations has a vote. A candidate needs 105 to be president, if all members vote. Blatter secured his 2011 re-election with 186 votes out of 203 in his favor.

If Blatter is re-elected, Platini said, the European nations could take action of their own.

“Many people, they don’t want to stay with this FIFA, and if Sepp is still the president, UEFA has to take its responsibility,” he said.

Thursday, Blatter held an emergency meeting with representatives of its six confederations before the opening of the congress.

Already, there have have been calls for the FIFA presidential ballot to be postponed.

UEFA said Wednesday its member associations should consider whether to attend the upcoming FIFA World Congress, which it said should be postponed. UEFA further called for “new FIFA presidential elections to be organized within the next six months.”

Blatter is expected to speak at the opening of the congress, a FIFA representative said.

Nine FIFA officials, as well as five sports media and marketing executives, were charged by U.S. prosecutors Wednesday over alleged kickbacks of more than $150 million dating back over 20 years.

As a result of the U.S. investigation, seven arrests were made in a dawn raid of a Zurich hotel where the officials had gathered for the annual congress.

In a separate development, Swiss authorities announced an investigation into the award of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.

Blatter has not been named as a suspect in either investigation, but doubts about his leadership of world soccer have again resurfaced, not least because key FIFA sponsors Visa and Coca-Cola have put out statements expressing their concerns about its handling of persistent allegations of corruption.

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