Delors had a longstanding interest in education. As the initiator of a French law in 1971 (, FPC) requiring firms to set aside part of their profits for educational opportunities for their employees, he also chaired a
UNESCO Commission on Education for the Twenty-first Century from 1993 to 1996, whose final report was published as ''''. This work continues to have a significant influence on discourse on lifelong learning, forming the conceptual foundation for both the Canadian Composite Learning Index as well as the
European Lifelong Learning Indicators (ELLI) project. In 1994, members of the Socialist Party attempted to persuade Delors to run for president. Polls showed that he would have a very good chance of defeating either of the main conservative contenders, Prime Minister
Édouard Balladur and Mayor of Paris
Jacques Chirac. However Delors declined to run and the eventual Socialist nominee,
Lionel Jospin, was defeated in the
1995 presidential election by Jacques Chirac. Delors founded the Paris-based, centre-left
think tank Notre Europe in 1996 and remained one of its presidents for the rest of his life. He was president of the , and an honorary member of both the
Institut Aspen France and the
Club of Rome. In 2010, Delors was the first to be given the Leonardo European Corporate Learning Award. In 2012, Delors stated in the
Handelsblatt newspaper that "If the British cannot support the trend towards more integration in Europe, we can nevertheless remain friends, but on a different basis. I could imagine a form such as a
European economic area or a free-trade agreement." On 25 June 2015,
Donald Tusk announced that Delors would become the third person to have the title of
Honorary Citizen of Europe bestowed upon them, in recognition of "his remarkable contribution to the development of the European project". In March 2024, Delors was posthumously given a "Special Recognition" award at
The Parliament Magazine annual
MEP Awards, in recognition of his contributions towards the European project, to mark the awards' 20th anniversary. ==Personal life and death==