European Council
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Template:Politics of the European Union The European Council, sometimes informally called the European Summit, is a meeting of the heads of state or government of the European Union, and the President of the European Commission (not to be confused with the Council of the European Union, or the Council of Europe). Estabilished in 1974, two meetings were held annually, now on average four European Councils are held every year in which discussion is held on the matters of key issues and direction of the EU.
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Summits
Traditionally the summits of the European Councils have been held in the country currently holding the Presidency of the Council of the European Union. However, in late 2000 it was agreed at the Nice European Council that in the future half the European Councils would be held in Brussels and eventually all would be held there.
Two factors prompted this decision. Firstly, with the impending enlargement of the European Union to 25 or more members, rotating the site of the Council meeting between member states was going to become more difficult. Secondly, Belgium was threatening to hold up the Treaty of Nice, unhappy with the way larger states were going to hold more power in European institutions. Holding the summits in Brussels was meant to encourage Belgium to accept the deal.
The decision was further justified by the increasing violence at European Council meetings, which culminated in the shooting of a protester at the Gothenburg European Council in Sweden in June 2001. It was felt that the Belgian government had more experience at dealing with anti-EU protests, and that putting them in one location would enable increased security.
The proposal has since been strongly criticised by many European Union member states, principally the smaller states and those furthest from Brussels, who have argued that it would in practice be impossible for their leaders to fulfil all the functions of the presidency in Brussels and govern effectively in their own states, the suspicion being that the idea was designed to reduce the practical control exercised by the state nominally holding the presidency, with the day-to-day running of the presidency resting permanently in Brussels among Eurocrats. New members of the EU were particularly opposed and were seeking to overturn the Nice decision.
As the proposed new Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe now proposes to switch the rotating presidency to a 2½-year chair (see below) and all member states' governments have supported the draft, this issue now seems to be off the political agenda.
List of summits
- 1985
- 1986
- 1987
- Brussels, June 1987
- 1988
- Brussels, February 1988
- Hannover, June 1988
- Rhodes, December 1988
- 1989
- 1990
- Dublin, June 1990
- Rome, October 1990
- Rome, December 1990
- 1991
- 1992
- 1993
- Copenhagen, June 1993. See Copenhagen criteria.
- Brussels, October 1993
- Brussels, December 1993
- 1994
- Corfu, June 1994. Signing of the Treaty of the 1995 Accession of Austria, Finland and Sweden (and Norway which later fails to ratify and stays out of the EU).
- Essen, December 1994
- 1995
- 1996
- Turin, March 1996
- Florence, 21-22 June 1996
- Dublin, 13-14 December 1996
- 1997
- Amsterdam, June 1997. See Treaty of Amsterdam.
- Luxembourg, 20-21 November 1997 Special summit on Employment
- Luxembourg, December 1997
- 1998
- 1999
- 2000
- Lisbon, March 2000 See Lisbon Strategy
- Santa Maria da Feira, June 2000
- Biarritz, October 2000
- Nice, December 2000. See Treaty of Nice.
- 2001
- Stockholm, 23-24 March 2001.
- Gothenburg, 15-16 June 2001
- Brussels, 21 September 2001 (Emergency Summit - Terrorism)
- Ghent, 19 October 2001 (Informal Summit)
- Laeken, 14-15 December 2001. See Laeken European Council.
- 2002
- Barcelona, 15-16 March 2002
- Seville, 21-22 June 2002
- Brussels, 24-25 October 2002
- Copenhagen, 12-13 December 2002.
- 2003
- Brussels, 17 February 2003 (Extraordinary Council - Iraq)
- Brussels, 20-21 March 2003
- Athens, 16-17 April 2003 (Informal Council). Signing of the Treaty of Accession 2003.
- Thessaloniki, 20 June 2003
- Rome, 4 October 2003 (Extraordinary Summit to begin IGC on EU Consitution)
- Brussels, 16-17 October 2003
- Brussels, 12-13 December 2003
- 2004
- Brussels, 25-26 March 2004
- Brussels, 17-18 June 2004
- Brussels, 4-5 November 2004
- Brussles, 16-17 December 2004
- 2005
- Brussels, 22-23 March 2005
- Brussels, 16-17 June 2005
President
The role of President of the assembled European Council is performed by the head of government or head of state of the member state currently holding the Presidency of Council the European Union. The role as president is in no sense equivalent to a head of stateship, merely a primus inter pares (first among equals) role with other European heads of government. The President is primarily responsible for preparing and chairing Council meetings, and has no executive powers.
Under the provisions contained in the proposed Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, which has yet to be ratified by all member states, the rotating Presidency will be replaced by a permanent 2½-year chair, chosen by the heads of government themselves. The role and responsibilities of the President will be the same as at present, i.e. administrative and non-executive.
List of presidents
- Charles Haughey, Ireland (Jan-Jun 1990)
- Giulio Andreotti, Italy (Jul-Dec 1990)
- Jacques Santer, Luxembourg (Jan-Jun 1991)
- Ruud Lubbers, Netherlands (Jul-Dec 1991)
- Aníbal Cavaco Silva, Portugal (Jan-Jun 1992)
- John Major United Kingdom (Jul-Dec 1992)
- Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, Denmark (Jan-Jun 1993)
- Jean-Luc Dehaene, Belgium (Jul-Dec 1993)
- Andreas Papandreou, Greece (Jan-Jun 1994)
- Helmut Kohl, Germany (Jul-Dec 1994)
- François Mitterrand, France (Jan-May 1995)
- Jacques Chirac, France (May-Jun 1995)
- Felipe González, Spain (Jul-Dec 1995)
- Lamberto Dini, Italy (Jan-? 1996)
- Romano Prodi, Italy (May-Jun 1996)
- John Bruton Ireland (Jul-Dec 1996)
- Wim Kok, Netherlands (Jan-Jun 1997)
- Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg (Jul-Dec 1997)
- Tony Blair, United Kingdom (Jan-Jun 1998)
- Viktor Klima, Austria (Jul-Dec 1998)
- Gerhard Schröder, Germany (Jan-Jun 1999)
- Paavo Lipponen, Finland (Jul-Dec 1999)
- António Guterres, Portugal (Jan-Jun 2000)
- Jacques Chirac (2nd time), France (Jul-Dec 2000)
- Göran Persson, Sweden (Jan-Jun 2001)
- Guy Verhofstadt, Belgium (Jul-Dec 2001)
- José María Aznar López, Spain (Jan-Jun 2002)
- Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Denmark (Jul-Dec 2002)
- Costas Simitis, Greece (Jan-Jun 2003)
- Silvio Berlusconi, Italy (Jul-Dec 2003)
- Bertie Ahern, Ireland (Jan-Jun 2004)
- Jan Peter Balkenende, Netherlands (Jul-Dec 2004)
- Jean-Claude Juncker (2nd time), Luxembourg (Jan-Jun 2005)
Future Council Presidents
- Tony Blair, United Kingdom (2nd time) (Jul-Dec 2005)
- Wolfgang Schüssel, Austria (Jan-Jun 2006)
See also
- Presidency of the Council of the European Union
- Institutions of the European Union
- Model European Council
External Links and References
- European Council (http://www.eu.int/european_council/index_en.htm)
- List of summits since 1985 (http://www.europarl.eu.int/summits/index.htm)de:Europäischer Rat
eo:Eŭropa Konsilio it:Consiglio Europeo lb:Europäesche Conseil lt:Europos VirÅ¡Å«nių Taryba nl:Europese Raad no:Det europeiske råd pl:Rada Europejska pt:Conselho da União Europeia sl:Evropski svet