There are three political institutions which hold the executive and legislative power of the union. The Council of the European Union represents governments, the parliament represents citizens and the commission represents the European interest. The commission's duty is to ensure it is implemented by dealing with the day-to-day running of the Union and taking others to Court if they fail to comply.
members are elected every five years by
universal suffrage and sit according to
political allegiance. They represent nearly 500 million
citizens (the world's second largest democratic electorate) and form the only directly elected body in the Union. Despite forming one of the
two legislative chambers of the Union, it has weaker powers than the Council in some sensitive areas, and does not have
legislative initiative. It does, however, have powers over the Commission which the Council does not. It has been said that its democratic nature and growing powers have made it one of the most powerful legislatures in the world. The Parliament's
President (its speaker) is
Roberta Metsola (
European People's Party), who was elected from the Parliament's members in 2022.
European Council The
European Council is the group of
heads of state or
government of the EU
member states. It meets four times a year to define the Union's policy agenda and give impetus to integration. The
President of the European Council is the person responsible for chairing and driving forward the work of the institution, which has been described as the highest political body of the
European Union. The current president is
António Costa (since 1 December 2024).
Council of the European Union The
Council of the European Union (informally known as the
Council of Ministers or just the
Council) is a body holding legislative and some limited executive powers and is thus the main decision-making body of the Union. Its
Presidency rotates between the
states every six months, but every three Presidencies now cooperate on a common programme. This body is separate from the
European Council, which is a similar body, but is composed of national leaders. The council is composed of twenty-seven national
ministers (one per state). However the Council meets in various forms depending upon the topic. For example, if agriculture is being discussed, the council will be composed of each national minister for agriculture. They represent their governments and are accountable to their national political systems. Votes are taken either by majority or unanimity with votes allocated according to population. In these various forms they share the legislative and budgetary power of the Parliament, and also lead the
Common Foreign and Security Policy.
European Commission The
European Commission (EC) is the executive arm of the Union. It is a body composed of one appointee from each state, currently twenty-seven, but is designed to be independent of national interests. The body is responsible for drafting all
law of the European Union and has the ability to
propose new laws (bills). It also deals with the day-to-day running of the Union and has the duty of upholding the law and
treaties (in this role it is known as the "Guardian of the Treaties"). The commission is led by a
President who is nominated by the council (in practice the
European Council) and approved by Parliament. The remaining 26 Commissioners are nominated by member states, in consultation with the President, and have their portfolios assigned by the President. The Council then adopts this list of nominee-Commissioners. The council's adoption of the commission is not an area which requires the decision to be unanimous; their acceptance is arrived at according to the rules for
qualified majority voting. The European Parliament then interviews and casts its vote upon the Commissioners. The interviews of individual nominees are conducted separately, in contrast to Parliament's vote of approval which must be cast on the commission as a whole without the ability to accept or reject individual Commissioners. Once approval has been obtained from the Parliament, the Commissioners can take office. The current President is
Ursula von der Leyen (
EPP);
her commission was elected in 2019.
Court of Justice of the European Union The
Court of Justice of the European Union (
CJEU) ( or "
CJUE";
Latin:
Curia) is the
judicial branch of the
European Union (EU) and is responsible for interpreting EU law and treaties. The CJUE consists of two separate courts: the
Court of Justice and the
General Court. From 2005 to 2016 it also consisted of the
Civil Service Tribunal. The CJEU is located in
Luxembourg.
European Central Bank headquarters in Frankfurt The
European Central Bank (ECB) is the only one among the 7 institutions that is also an international entity with treaty capability in its own right. It is at the centre of the
European System of Central Banks which comprises all EU national banks. The bank is governed by a board of national bank governors and a president. It is also the
central bank for the
eurozone (the states which have adopted the euro) and thus controls
monetary policy in that area with an agenda to maintain
price stability. The ECB is located in Frankfurt. The current president is
Christine Lagarde.
European Court of Auditors The
European Court of Auditors (ECA), despite its name, has no judicial powers. It ensures that
taxpayer funds from the
budget of the European Union have been correctly spent. The court provides an
audit report for each financial year to the Council and Parliament. The Parliament uses this to decide whether to approve the commission's handling of the budget. The Court also gives opinions and proposals on financial legislation and anti-fraud actions. The Court of Auditors was set up in 1975. It was created as an independent institution due to the sensitivity of the issue of fraud in the Union (the anti-fraud agency,
OLAF, is also built on its independence). It is composed of one member from each state appointed by the Council every six years. Every three years one of them is elected as the president of the court, who is currently
Tony Murphy. ==Acts and procedures==