PRESIDENT OF THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION
The 'President of the European Commission' is the head of the executive body of the European Union. The President leads a college of 27 Commissioners, one from each Union member-state, who hold specific portfolios. The President is also a member of the European Council, the body which appoints him/her, with the approval of the European Parliament, serving for five year terms.
| Contents |
| Duties and responsibilities |
| Selection procedure |
| History |
| Appointment |
| List of Presidents |
| See also |
| External links |
Duties and responsibilities
The duties and responsibilities of the President are regulated by Article 217 of the EC Treaty according to which "The Commission shall work under the political guidance of its President, who shall decide on its internal organisation in order to ensure that it acts consistently, efficiently and on the basis of collegiality".
Essentially, the President controls the internal organisation of the Commission. He appoints Commissioners with the agreement of member-states and allocates portfolios, such as External Relations or Competition. He also appoints the Vice-Presidents of the Commission.
Generally the President lays down the basic work and guidelines of the Commission, particularly with a college of 27 members he co-ordinates the legislation and work of the body as well as representing the body to other institutions such as the European Council, of which he is also a member, and in the world with the President attends G8 meetings.
Selection procedure
Current President, José Manuel Barroso
The President of the Commission is selected by a Qualified majority vote among members of the European Council and must subsequently be approved by the European Parliament, along with the remainder of the Commission. Thereafter, the President is accountable to Parliament, who may dismiss the Commission with a vote of no confidence.
As the head of the European Commission, effectively the executive branch of the European Union, it is sometimes argued that it would be appropriate for the President to be elected by the European Parliament, or directly elected by citizens, rather than being chosen by national governments. However, no such change is envisaged.
Under the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, agreed but not yet ratified by all member states, the Council will be obliged to take into account the results of the most recent elections to the European Parliament when nominating the President of the Commission. The council voluntarily did this when appointing President Barroso, a member of the European People's Party after came out as the largest party after the 2004 election. Furthermore, under the constitution future candidates for the President of the Commission will be put forward by the European Council and approved by the European Parliament, who will have the final say. This differs from the present procedure in that Parliament will acquire the power to reject the President-designate specifically, rather than simply rejecting the entire Commission.
History
The Berlaymont has been the home of the Commission since 1967, with the President's office on the 13th floor.
:''See also: History of the European Commission and History of the European Union''
The present Commission has its roots in the Commission of the European Economic Community, with the Hallstein Commission. However there were three Commissions of the European Atomic Energy Community and the European Coal and Steel Community had five "High Authorities", similar to the Commission. The First President of the Authority in 1952 was Jean Monnet (Monnet Authority), who was a key architect of European integration.
Since Hallstein in 1958 there have been 11 Commission Presidents (not including President Marín, who was an interim President after the mass resignation of the Santer Commission following allegations of corruption. Historically, President Delors' Commission is held to have been the most successful, and has held a record three terms. It completed the internal market, began work that led to the creation of the euro and oversaw numerous enlargements.
Appointment
| 'Member' | 'Presidents' | 'Dates' |
|---|---|---|
| two | 1985 to 1995 and 1973 to 1977 | |
| two | 1981 to 1985 and 1995 to 1999 | |
| two | 1970 to 1972 and 1999 to 2004 | |
| one | 1958 to 1967 | |
| one | 2004 to ''2009'' | |
| one | 1977 to 1981 | |
| one | 1967 to 1970 | |
| one | 1972 to 1973 | |
| one(interim) | 1999 |
In the first Commissions, Presidents were mainly originated from national ministries with backgrounds in economics or foreign affairs. Recently however this has changed with the Commission becoming more high-profile. The last two Presidents were former heads of government from member states; Romano Prodi was Prime Minister of Italy and José Manuel Barroso was Prime Minister of Portugal.
The national origin of Presidents has so far been mainly from older member-states. Each of the original six has had at least one President with only the UK and Portugal having their citizens becoming Presidents (One each. Spain had an interim Commissioner in 1999). When appointing the new president in 2004, national origin was taken into account with a desire for the President to come from a small eurozone state (with Bertie Ahern, Jean-Claude Juncker and Guy Verhofstadt all being considered).
List of Presidents
| 'No.' | 'President' | 'Commission' | 'Took office' | 'Left office' | 'Member state' | 'Party affiliation' | 'Photo' |
| 1 | Walter Hallstein | Hallstein Commission | 1958 | 1967 | Germany | CDU (CD) | |
| 2 | Jean Rey | Rey Commission | 1967 | 1970 | Belgium | PRL (LDR) | |
| 3 | Franco Maria Malfatti | Malfatti Commission | 1970 | 1972 | Italy | DC (CD) | |
| 4 | Sicco L. Mansholt | Mansholt Commission | 1972 | 1973 | Netherlands | PvdA (SOC) | |
| 5 | François-Xavier Ortoli | Ortoli Commission | 1973 | 1977 | France | RPR (CD) | |
| 6 | Roy Jenkins | Jenkins Commission | 1977 | 1981 | United Kingdom | Lab (SOC) | |
| 7 | Gaston Edmont Thorn | Thorn Commission | 1981 | 1985 | Luxembourg | DP (LDR) | |
| 8 | Jacques Delors | Delors Commission | 1985 | 1995 | France | PS (PES) | |
| 9 | Jacques Santer | Santer Commission | 1995 | 1999 | Luxembourg | CSV (EPP) | |
| Manuel Marín (interim) | Marín Commission | 3/1999 | 9/1999 | Spain | PSOE (PES) | ||
| 10 | Romano Prodi | Prodi Commission | 1999 | 2004 | Italy | Dem (PES) | |
| 11 | José Manuel Barroso | Barroso Commission | 2004 | ''incumbent'' | Portugal | PSD (EPP) |
'Legend:' [ ] left leaning (e.g. PES) - [ ] liberal (e.g. ELDR) - [ ] right leaning (e.g. EPP)
See also
★ Vice-President of the European Commission
★ Presidents of the European Union
★
★ President of the European Parliament
★
★ President-in-Office of the European Council
★
★ Presidency of the Council of the European Union
External links
★ Commission President (official website)
★ Terms of office
★ Organisation of the European Commission European NAvigator
★ Barroso is favourite as deadline is set for EU leadership deal independent.co.uk
★ Europe finally agrees on a new President independent.co.uk
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