2019 On 2 July 2019, von der Leyen was proposed by the
European Council as their candidate for the office of
President of the European Commission. She is the first woman to hold the office and the first German since the commission's first president,
Walter Hallstein. When she lived in Brussels, her little sister Benita-Eva died of cancer at the age of eleven and she remembered "the enormous helplessness of my parents" in view of the cancer. This inspired her to make cancer a focus of
her commission. At the press conference announcing her nomination, European Council President Donald Tusk noted von der Leyen's intention to retain Commission First-Vice-President
Frans Timmermans during her administration. Timmermans has previously been one of the "lead candidates" () for the commission's presidency. As a candidate, she published a document entitled "My agenda for Europe", and was fêted for her commitment to "gender equality and gender mainstreaming" by at least one observer who sought to advance the "professional development of women in the field of international peace and security". Following her nomination as a candidate for Commission president, the Commission provided her with a salary, office, and staff in Brussels to facilitate negotiations between the EU institutions as to her election. These arrangements were extended, to enable a smooth transition, during her period as president-elect, until the new College of Commissioners was confirmed by the European Parliament and took office in November. In light of her new role, von der Leyen resigned her seat in the German Bundestag on 31 July 2019. Von der Leyen supported the proposed
European Union–Mercosur free trade agreement, which would form one of the world's largest free trade areas. The fear is that the deal could lead to more
deforestation of the Amazon rainforest as it expands market access to Brazilian beef. Von der Leyen unveiled the new proposed EU Commission's structure (whom she deemed to be a "geopolitical" one) a vice-presidency responsible for the coordination of migration, security, employment and education policies. The later portfolio's name drew heavy criticism, as it was considered to carry a xenophobic message linking the protection of the "European Way of Life" to migration policies. The proposed structure for the college also saw the "unexpected" promotion of EPP's
Valdis Dombrovskis to a role of executive vice-president, up to a number of three executive vice-presidencies, equalling the roles entrusted to Timmermans and
Margrethe Vestager. As part of her efforts to be elected President of the EU Commission, von der Leyen made remarks in favour of EU parliamentarians being given the right to initiate legislation, but reversed course shortly after assuming office.
Controversy and investigation over award of contracts by German defence ministry At the time of von der Leyen's nomination as president of the Commission, an investigative committee of the
German parliament was investigating how, during her time as minister of defence of Germany, lucrative contracts from her ministry were awarded to outside consultants without proper oversight, and whether a network of informal personal connections facilitated those deals. In December 2019, German parliamentarians accused the
German Defence Ministry of torpedoing the investigation into alleged wrongdoing in its consultant contracts by deleting data from the official phone of von der Leyen from the time she was Minister of Defence after it was declared evidence in the investigation, and by arguing that the deletion of the phone data was "for security reasons".
2020 address on 16 September 2020 In March 2020, von der Leyen's Commission turned down the idea of suspending the
Schengen Agreement in order to introduce border controls around Italy, at that time the centre of the
COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. The decision drew criticism from some European politicians. After some EU member states announced closure of their national borders to foreign nationals due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, she said: "Certain controls may be justified, but general travel bans are not seen as being the most effective by the World Health Organization. Moreover, they have a strong social and economic impact, they disrupt people's lives and business across the borders." She condemned the U.S. decision to restrict travel from the coronavirus-affected Europe to the United States. Von der Leyen supported the EU's imposition of
sanctions against Belarus after the security services violently cracked down
on street protests in Minsk and elsewhere against the 26-year authoritarian rule under President
Alexander Lukashenko. The protests took place after a
disputed presidential election, which was contested by the opposition and designated by the EU as not
free and fair. Sanctions were imposed after the Belarusian government
diverted a civilian aircraft in order to seize an opposition figure,
Roman Protasevich.
2021 and von der Leyen meeting in
Helsinki on 4 October 2021 , 2021 G20 summit in
Rome, 31 October 2021
French-U.S. and
French-Australia relations suffered a period of tension in September 2021 due to fallout from the
AUKUS defence pact between the U.S., the United Kingdom, and Australia. The security pact is directed at countering
Chinese power in the
Indo-Pacific region. As part of the agreement, the U.S. agreed to provide
nuclear-powered submarines to Australia. After entering into AUKUS, the Australian government cancelled an agreement that it had made with France for the
provision of French conventionally powered submarines. Von der Leyen called the way France was treated "unacceptable" and demanded an explanation. The EU also demanded an apology from Australia. in Glasgow Due to a combination of unfavourable conditions, which involved soaring demand of natural gas, its diminished supply from Russia and Norway to the European markets, and less power generation by
renewable energy sources such as wind, water and solar energy, Europe faced steep
increases in energy prices in 2021. Some critics blamed a record-breaking surge in energy prices on the European Commission's
Green Deal, which aims to make the EU
climate neutral by 2050. She said: "Europe today is too reliant on gas and too dependent on gas imports. The answer has to do with diversifying our suppliers ... and, crucially, with speeding up the transition to clean energy." During the
2021 Israel–Palestine crisis, von der Leyen condemned "arbitrary attacks by
Hamas against Israel" adding that "civilians on both sides must be protected". In December 2021 von der Leyen expressed concern that one-third of the European population were not vaccinated: "EU nations should open a debate around making COVID-19 vaccinations mandatory because too many people still refuse to get shots voluntarily."
COVID-19 vaccine deal During the COVID-19 pandemic when European countries were scrambling for vaccines,
Pfizer was able to close a deal worth €35 billion to provide 900 million doses of the
Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine with an additional 900 million doses available for purchase. The deal was initially well-received, although a later low-range estimate according to
Politico suggested that over 100 million doses worth approximately €4 billion were discarded, raising concerns about
vaccine equity. In April 2021,
The New York Times reported that von der Leyen had exchanged electronic correspondence with Pfizer CEO
Albert Bourla negotiating terms of sale of the COVID-19 vaccine to the European Union.
Emily O'Reilly, the
European Ombudsman, accused von der Leyen of "maladministration" for failure to disclose that correspondence upon a FOI request, and for claiming that the messages had disappeared, and for further claiming that the vaccine line item of the EU's budget was confidential. in 2021 Von der Leyen was first reported to have taken a personal role in negotiating the vaccine deal. Health Commissioner
Stella Kyriakides later informed the
European Parliament that von der Leyen played no (formal) role and "was not involved in the negotiations on the Covid vaccine contract". The last COVID-19 vaccines will according to the contract with Pfizer be delivered in 2027. The incident has been reported as "Pfizergate". In 2024 the
European Public Prosecutor's Office (EPPO) took over the investigation from Belgian authorities. The original complaint, from a Belgian lobbyist, cited "interference in public functions, destruction of SMS, corruption and conflict of interest". In early May 2024, a few days before the hearing in Liège was supposed to take place, Baldan's lawyer, Diane Protat, visited the EPPO's offices in Brussels and Luxembourg to request a copy of its case file, but she was told that there was no such file and security was called on her. A few days later, it was reported that Hungary and Poland had joined the lawsuit. By the end of the month, the plaintiff asked "the
European People's Party to withdraw the candidacy of Ms von der Leyen for the post of President of the European Commission" as well as "prohibiting anyone from presenting the candidature of Mrs von der Leyen to the post of President of the European Commission or any other post within the European institutions as long as she is the subject of criminal proceedings".
2022 and other G7 leaders at the
2022 NATO Brussels summit , Slovak prime minister
Eduard Heger, Ukrainian prime minister
Denys Shmyhal and Mayor
Anatoliy Fedoruk in
Bucha on 8 April 2022 After the start of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said that Ukraine should become a
member of the European Union, the
Ukrainian people belong to the
European family, but there is a long way to go and the
war must end. On 8 April 2022, in the midst of the Russian invasion, von der Leyen travelled to
Kyiv (which had seen open hostilities only days earlier) to lend her support to the beleaguered
Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his countrymen. She visited the site of the
Bucha massacre, tweeted: "Those responsible for the atrocities will be brought to justice. Your fight is our fight." and vowed she would work toward that country's accession to the EU. "Our goal is to present Ukraine's application to the council this summer." She was accompanied by
Josep Borrell, who expressed "confidence that EU states would soon agree to his proposal to provide Ukraine with an additional €500 million to support the armed forces in their fight against the Russian army". On 4 May 2022, she announced the European Union would seek to ban all
imports of Russian crude oil and petroleum products. She stated: "We must become independent from Russian oil, coal and gas." and other G7 leaders at the
48th G7 summit in Germany, 26 June 2022 At a 2022
Europe Day event to celebrate the conclusion of the
Conference on the Future of Europe, von der Leyen stated her agreement with the report prepared by panels of randomly selected EU citizens, that the Union needed to move away from unanimous voting in the Council when it comes to foreign policy decisions. In a June
Politico interview, she expressed that her views had been shaped by the slow pace of the Union in adopting sanctions against Belarus and Russia due to unanimity requirements. She has said the Union should not completely move away from unanimity. In August 2022, she proclaimed the necessity of the
EU emission trading system to reduce
CO2 emissions. , in
Brussels, 3 November 2022
Controversy over gas deliveries from Azerbaijan , 18 July 2022 On 18 July 2022 von der Leyen called
Azerbaijan a reliable partner for energy supply, later signing an agreement with Azerbaijan government intended to diversify gas supplies in the context of the ongoing
Russian-Ukraine war 2022. This sparked controversy when
Azerbaijan attacked its neighbour Armenia just a few months later, and Azeri soldiers committed various documented atrocities including rapes and the murder of prisoners of war. Human rights activists claim that an EU president cannot condemn one dictator while embracing another, which was also expressed in the EU parliament by
Martin Sonneborn. The deal will double Azerbaijan's natural gas exports through the
Southern Gas Corridor by 2027.
2023 , 2023 NATO summit in
Vilnius, 12 July 2023 , in
Brussels, 17 July 2023 and other leaders at the
International Conference on Development and Migration in
Rome, 23 July 2023 , 2 November 2023 , in
Cairo, 18 November 2023 , in Brussels, 15 December 2023 In February 2023, von der Leyen offered condolences to those who lost their lives in the
Turkey-Syria earthquakes and wished a speedy recovery to the injured. Leyen also emphasized that the EU stood in solidarity with the Turkish and Syrian people. In April von der Leyen issued a video statement celebrating
Israel's
75th Independence Day, noting that "the Jewish People could finally build a home in the Promised Land", adding that "You have literally made the desert bloom". In July 2023, she visited the
Philippines and praised the improvement in
human rights in the Philippines while meeting with Philippine president
Bongbong Marcos. In October 2023, von der Leyen condemned "the
military operation by Azerbaijan against the Armenian population of
Nagorno-Karabakh and reaffirmed the need to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Armenia". During the
Gaza war, von der Leyen condemned the
Hamas attack on Israel, calling it "terrorism in its most despicable form" and saying "Israel has the right to defend itself against such heinous attacks". She announced that humanitarian aid to
Gaza would be tripled. In December 2023, she visited
Egypt and discussed the "strategic partnership" between the EU and Egypt with Egyptian president
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.
Remarks at the Beyond Growth conference In May 2023 at the Beyond Growth conference in the European Parliament, von der Leyen criticised the current economic model's excessive focus on
GDP figures, saying "a growth model centred on fossil fuels is simply obsolete" and "economic growth is not an end in itself". About an hour later, the European Commission presented its economic forecast which talked about GDP and inflation without presenting any other parameters. Her remarks were part of a debate in the European Union on the possibility of not exceeding
planetary boundaries in a GDP-based economy.
Migrant crisis in Italy In 2022, the European Union recorded the highest number of unauthorised migrant arrivals since 2016. Von der Leyen tried to strike a deal with
Tunisia's authoritarian president
Kais Saied, with a focus on stopping illegal migration from Tunisia to Italy. In September 2023, more than 120 boats carrying around 7,000 migrants from Africa arrived on the Italian island of
Lampedusa within 24 hours. Italian prime minister
Giorgia Meloni declared that she wrote to von der Leyen "to ask her to come with me to Lampedusa to personally realize the gravity of the situation we face, and to immediately accelerate the implementation of the agreement with Tunisia by transferring the agreed resources".
2024 and Belgian prime minister
Alexander De Croo in Kyiv, 24 February 2024 in Brussels, 2 October 2024
Second candidacy In March 2024 von der Leyen was once again confirmed as the
EPP's candidate for the Presidency of the European Commission. Opinion polls deemed her re-election as president very likely. In April 2024, she praised the
EU Asylum and Migration Pact as a "huge achievement for Europe". Countries where migrants first arrive will newly be able to relocate a total of up to 30,000 migrants per year to other EU member states. The Pact will institute a "mandatory solidarity mechanism". The Pact has been criticised by some right-wing politicians for not going far enough to prevent illegal immigration, such as missing provisions relating to migrant returns. On 27 June 2024, the
European Council nominated von der Leyen for a second term as
President of the European Commission. On 18 July 2024, she was re-elected for a further five-year term after a secret ballot among MEPs at the
European Parliament, winning 401 votes in favour compared to 284 against with 22 blank or invalid ballot papers. In the fall of 2024, von der Leyen became an advocate for
nuclear power, along with her party, CDU. Promoting the
European Green Deal and the
green transition remained a priority for the second von der Leyen Commission.
2025 in
Canada, 2025. On 26 February 2025, the Commission announced a collection of measures backed by 100 billion euros ($104.94 billion) to support EU-made clean manufacturing, called the
Clean Industrial Deal. On 4 March 2025, von der Leyen announced the EU's €800 billion ($840 billion) defence investment plan "
ReArm Europe". She suggested that the European Union might need to ease its fiscal rules regarding
national debt to facilitate
increased defence spending by member states. In July 2025, Indonesian president
Prabowo Subianto and von der Leyen reached a political agreement on the Indonesia-EU Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA). In July 2025, von der Leyen survived a vote of no confidence, with 360 MEPs against and 175 in favour.
EPP,
S&D,
Renew Europe,
Greens/EFA and parts of
ECR supported her, While
PfE,
ESN,
The Left and parts of ECR opposed her. At the July 2025 EU-China summit in Beijing, Von der Leyen expressed multiple concerns regarding China's role in the deterioration of bilateral relations. She cited the growing trade imbalance—highlighting the EU's €305.8 billion deficit with China—as a result of industrial overcapacity and limited market access for European firms. Von der Leyen also criticised China's export controls and use of its dominant position in
rare earths to undermine global competitors. Additionally, she identified China's ongoing
ties with Russia amid the war in Ukraine as a "determining factor" in the future of EU-China relations and urged Beijing to use its influence to help end the conflict. On 27 July 2025, von der Leyen and US president
Donald Trump announced a new customs agreement between the EU and the United States, with 15%
tariffs on European exports. In November 2025 at
COP 30 the European Commission led by von der Leyen helped launch the
Open Coalition on Compliance Carbon Markets. 18 countries joined. The coalition aims to establish a global carbon market which can speed up emission reduction seven-fold.
2026 On 9 January 2026, during a historic visit to Damascus, von der Leyen met with Syrian president
Ahmed al-Sharaa and announced a substantial financial assistance package of approximately €620 million, to be disbursed in 2026 and 2027. This visit marked a significant shift in EU-Syria relations following the
fall of the Assad regime in late 2024. During her stay, von der Leyen described the ongoing
clashes in Aleppo between the Syrian government and the
Kurdish-led
SDF as "worrying". In January 2026, von der Leyen strongly condemned the
violent crackdown on widespread
anti-government protests in Iran. Responding to reports of escalating casualties, she characterized the situation as "horrifying." Von der Leyen and the leaders of the
Mercosur countries (
Argentina,
Brazil,
Paraguay, and
Uruguay) formally signed the
EU–Mercosur free trade agreement on 17 January 2026, in Asunción, Paraguay. This historic event marked the culmination of over 25 years of negotiations aimed at establishing one of the world's largest
free trade zones. ,
Narendra Modi, and Ursula von der Leyen during the official signing ceremony of the
India–European Union Free Trade Agreement, 27 January 2026 In January 2026, India and the European Union concluded a landmark
India–European Union Free Trade Agreement, aimed at eliminating tariffs on over 90% of goods to strengthen economic and strategic ties. Described by von der Leyen as the "mother off
[sic] all deals," the pact followed 18 years of negotiations and included a separate
mobility and migration agreement. At a nuclear energy summit in Paris on 10 March 2026, von der Leyen described Europe’s
reduction of nuclear power as a 'strategic mistake'. She stated that the subsequent reliance on
imported fossil fuels had left the continent vulnerable to price surges, particularly exacerbated by the ongoing
Iran war. ==Other activities==