No you didn't, of course, because you can't vote for him or anybody else likely to have any influence in the EU.
I’m afraid, Gromit, that your notion that the EU is somehow “democratic” because (those of us who can be bothered) elect MEPs falls a little short of the mark. There is a huge democratic deficit in the workings of the EU. I gave quite a bit of detail on why I believe this to be so in a question a couple of months ago. I cannot find it at the present so I’ll do what I can to repeat it..
Firstly, there is quite a difference between how the EU works and how the UK government works. Despite your explanation, MEPs cannot propose legislation to the Parliament, they can only vote on measures proposed by the commission. Your comparison with Ministers in the UK Parliament is not appropriate. Ministers are MPs elected by voters and chosen for their jobs by the Prime Minister. Commissioners are not elected. Quite simply the two are not comparable.
Furthermore opposition MPs in Parliament usually make up around 40% to 45% of the House (currently it’s 49.2%). This means (despite the party Whips) comparatively few dissenters from the Government side have to be found for a vote to go against the government. In the EU Parliament UK MEPs amount to only 9.7%. This makes it virtually impossible for a measure with which the UK does not agree from being turned down by the EU. This is confirmed by the results of EU Parliamentary votes:
Between 2009 and 2014, 1936 votes were held in the European Parliament, and 576 of them were opposed by a majority of the UK’s 73 elected representatives. But of those, 485 were still passed – meaning the view of Britain being outvoted in 86 per cent of cases. This rises to 98 per cent in votes that cover budgets, and 92 per cent on constitutional and inter-institutional affairs. Measures that UK MEPs have been powerless to stop include the Financial Transaction Tax on share dealings and rules on short-selling. These have very little impact of the vast majority of the 28 nations but have a profound effect on the City of London. They should be matters for the UK Parliament and not influenced by representations from Romania, Bulgaria and other nations where financial transactions are comparatively minimal.
Then you need to consider representation. Britain has around ten per cent of the seats in Brussels, and is one of the most underrepresented by head of population, under a system designed to increase the clout of small nations. There is one MEP for every 880,000 British voters, compared to one for every 70,900 Maltese. The EU average is one MEP for 486,000 voters.
As the EU assumes more powers and its Parliament votes on an ever increasing range of topics this democratic deficit will become more profound. Quite simply, the EU is far too big and, more importantly, too diverse for a single piece of legislation to fit and suit 500m inhabitants. Couple this with the fact that most countries (except the UK) simply ignore any legislation that does not suit them and that most of the important policy is determined by Germany, it’s quite simply (as Mr Grayling suggests) a disaster for the UK.