The
Lisbon Treaty, which entered into force on 1 December 2009, provides that the
European Parliament shall endorse or veto the appointment of the
president of the
European Commission on the basis of a proposal made by the
European Council, taking into account the European elections (article 17, paragraph 7 of the
Treaty on European Union). This provision applied for the first time for the 2014 elections. Nevertheless, senior figures such as
European Council president Herman Van Rompuy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and former Commission president Jacques Delors questioned the aspiration of European political parties to link the presidency of the European Commission with the result of the European elections and insisted that the future Commission president has to suit Member States' expectations first. Based on these new provisions, the following
European political parties designated candidates for Commission president ahead of the 2014 election: the
Party of European Socialists (PES), the
European People's Party (EPP), the
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party (ALDE party), the
European Green Party (EGP), the
Party of European Left (EL) and the
European Democratic Party.
Overview European People's Party On 6 and 7 March 2014, the congress of the European People's Party in Dublin elected
Jean-Claude Juncker as its presidential candidate, who run against
Michel Barnier, and adopted an election
manifesto. Juncker set out the priorities he would have as president: • 1–31 October 2013: nominations. • 6 November 2013: PES Presidency meeting to check the candidacies and publish the official list of candidates. • 1 December 2013 – 31 January 2014: internal selection process within each member Party or organisation. • February 2014: PES Election Congress to ratify the votes on the candidate, adopt the Manifesto, and launch the PES European election campaign. Following the defeat of the Party of European Socialists during the
European elections of June 2009, the PES made the decision that PES would designate its candidate for Commission president in December 2009, which rapidly triggered debates about how to select this candidate. The PES Congress gathering in Brussels in November 2011 made the decision that it would select the PES candidate through internal
primaries in each of its member parties and organisations. Member parties and organisations are free to determine their own voting process, including by opening it to non-members. • Possible candidates:
José Luis Zapatero,
Margot Wallström,
Helle Thorning Schmidt,
Frans Timmermans,
Borut Pahor,
Sergei Stanishev,
Wouter Bos,
José Sócrates,
Werner Faymann,
Pascal Lamy. • Elected candidate:
Martin Schulz Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party The timetable of the Alliance for Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party (ALDE) for designating its candidate for President of the European Commission is: • 28–30 November: Nominations opens & Election Manifesto adopted at London Congress • 19 December: Pre-Summit liberal leaders meeting to discuss nominations received • 20 December: Nominations formally close • 1 February: ALDE Party Candidate to be announced at special Electoral Congress, Brussels In 2012, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party (ALDE) members were said to be "struggling" to find a candidate for Commission president ahead of the 2014 European elections.
Guy Verhofstadt was considered to be the likely nominee, but a meeting of the then-ELDR party held in Dublin from 8 to 10 November 2012 did not agree to formally nominate him yet; concerns voiced included the fact that it was considered unlikely that Verhofstadt would have a chance of getting elected as President of the European Commission, as
Anders Fogh Rasmussen (the incumbent
Secretary General of NATO) was expected to be appointed to the post of
President of the European Council or
High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy after the 2014 election, and two liberal politicians in the EU's top ranks were not expected to be considered acceptable. While a compromise position was reached (to nominate a candidate for Commission President "in time for the 2014 European Parliamentary election campaign"), the corresponding resolution was not passed due to disagreements on other points included in the resolution. The ALDE political party finally decided to discuss candidates at the party's pre-summit meeting at the margins of the 19–20 December European Council. Belgian daily
De Standaard and EU news website
EurActiv reported during the summit that the ALDE party has appointed
Mark Rutte and
Christian Lindner as 'mediators' between Rehn and Verhofstadt to work out who would be the candidate. • Possible candidates:
Anders Fogh Rasmussen,
Guy Verhofstadt,
Olli Rehn • Declared candidates:
Guy Verhofstadt,
Olli Rehn • Elected Candidate:
Guy Verhofstadt European Green Party In July 2013 European Green Party (EGP) announced that it would run an open primary online. Open to all inhabitants in the union over the age of 16 who "support green values", this resulted in
Ska Keller and
José Bové being elected candidates. Other qualified candidates were
Rebecca Harms and
Monica Frassoni.
Party of the European Left Meeting on 19 October 2013 in Madrid, the Council of chairpersons of the
Party of the European Left (EL) decided to designate a common candidate for the president of the European Commission to prevent "the forces responsible for the crisis" from keeping the monopoly during the electoral campaign. The Council reaffirmed however that this new measure "will not hide, as European leaders and the troika hope, their authoritarianism". The Council decided to submit to the decision of the next Congress, 13 to 15 December in Madrid, the candidacy of
Alexis Tsipras, who "would be the voice of resistance and hope against the ultra-liberal policies and facing the threat of the extreme right". As Alexis Tsipras will therefore be the only candidate for the job, the Council has mandated the Presidency of the EL to consult all members and observers parties of the EL and the GUE/NGL group in the European parliament about this application. Tsipras's candidature was confirmed on 15 December.
Alexis Tsipras was elected.
European Democratic Party On 2 December 2013 in Rome, the Council of the European Democratic Party decided to designate a candidate on the occasion of the next meeting in February 2014, The party adopted its manifesto on 28 February and named Guy Verhofstadt as its candidate for the Presidency of the European Commission on 12 March. Guy Verhofstadt was elected.
Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists The
Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists did not present a candidate for the European Commission presidency. They argued that participating in the process would legitimate a federalist vision of a European super-state and that the lack of a European
demos makes the process illegitimate.
European Free Alliance The
European Free Alliance stands for "a Europe of Free Peoples based on the principle of subsidiarity, which believe in solidarity with each other and the peoples of the world." It consists of various national-level political parties in Europe advocating either full political independence (
statehood), or some form of
devolution or
self-governance for their country or region. The alliance has generally limited its membership to progressive parties, and therefore, not all European regionalist parties are members of EFA. The EFA stands on the left of the political spectrum, and in the Brussels declaration it emphasises the protection of human rights, sustainable development and social justice. In 2007 the EFA congress in Bilbao added several progressive principles to the declaration: including a commitment to fight against racism, antisemitism, discrimination, xenophobia and islamophobia and a commitment to get full citizenship for migrants, including voting rights.
European Christian Political Movement The
European Christian Political Movement, abbreviated to ECPM, is a European political party that unites national parties from across Europe that share Christian democratic politics. The member parties are generally more socially conservative and Eurosceptic than the European People's Party, not only at this election allied with the AECR, without any candidate as well.
European Pirate Party The newly founded
European Pirate Party elected MEP
Amelia Andersdotter (who is running for re-election) and
The Pirate Bay co-founder
Peter Sunde (running for election in Finland) as its candidates for the European Commission presidency. The European Pirate Party is not recognised as a
European political party. ==Televised debates==