Vice-President of the European Parliament

There are fourteen vice-presidents of the European Parliament who sit in for the president in presiding over the plenary of the European Parliament.

Role

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Vice-presidents are members of the Bureau and chair the plenary when the president is not in the chair. The president may also delegate any duty, task or power to one of the vice-presidents. Three vice-presidents, designated by the Conference of Presidents, traditionally have more power than the others; the right to be on the conciliation committee.[1]

The vice-presidents are elected following the election of the president, which takes place every two and a half years or when necessary if positions become vacant.[2]

6th parliament

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Vice-presidents elected by country in 2004
  Three
  Two
  One
  None
30 July 2004 to 16 January 2007

Elected (unopposed) in order of precedence;

Members Group State
1 Alejo Vidal-Quadras Roca EPP-ED   Spain
2 Antonios Trakatellis EPP-ED   Greece
3 Dagmar Roth-Behrendt PES   Germany
4 Edward McMillan-Scott EPP-ED   United Kingdom
5 Ingo Friedrich EPP-ED   Germany
6 Mario Mauro EPP-ED   Italy
7 António Costa PES   Portugal
8 Luigi Cocilovo ALDE   Italy
9 Jacek Saryusz-Wolski EPP-ED   Poland
10 Pierre Moscovici PES   France
11 Miroslav Ouzký EPP-ED   Czech Republic
12 Janusz Onyszkiewicz ALDE   Poland
13 Gérard Onesta Greens/EFA   France
14 Sylvia-Yvonne Kaufmann EUL/NGL   Germany
 
Vice-presidents elected by country in 2007
  Three
  Two
  One
  None
16 January 2007 to 14 July 2009

Elected (unopposed) in order of precedence:[3]

Members Group State Votes
1 Rodi Kratsa-Tsagaropoulou EPP-ED   Greece 322
2 Alejo Vidal-Quadras EPP-ED   Spain 300
3 Gérard Onesta Greens/EFA   France 285
4 Edward McMillan-Scott EPP-ED   United Kingdom 274
5 Mario Mauro EPP-ED   Italy 262
6 Miguel Angel Martínez Martínez PES   Spain 260
7 Luigi Cocilovo ALDE   Italy 234
8 Mechtild Rothe PES   Germany 217
10 Pierre Moscovici PES   France 207
11 Manuel António Dos Santos PES   Portugal 193
12 Diana Wallis ALDE   United Kingdom 192
13 Marek Siwiec PES   Poland 180
14 Adam Bielan UEN   Poland 128

7th parliament

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Vice-presidents elected by country in 2009
  Three
  Two
  One
  None
14 July 2009 to 17 January 2012

Elected in order of precedence:[4]

Members Group State Votes
1 Giovanni Pittella S&D   Italy 360
2 Rodi Kratsa-Tsagaropoulou EPP   Greece 355
3 Stavros Lambrinidis S&D   Greece 346
4 Miguel Angel Martínez Martínez S&D   Spain 327
5 Alejo Vidal-Quadras EPP   Spain 308
6 Dagmar Roth-Behrendt S&D   Germany 287
7 Libor Rouček S&D   Czech Republic 278
8 Isabelle Durant Greens/EFA   Belgium 276
9 Roberta Angelilli EPP   Italy 274
10 Diana Wallis ALDE   United Kingdom 272
11 Pál Schmitt EPP   Hungary 257
12 Edward McMillan-Scott Non-attached[5]   United Kingdom 244
13 Rainer Wieland EPP   Germany 237
14 Silvana Koch-Mehrin ALDE   Germany 186
Changes since election
Departed member Group State Date Reason Replacement Elected Group State
Pál Schmitt EPP   Hungary 14 May 2010 Resigned due to becoming president of Hungary László Tőkés[6] May 2010 EPP   Romania
Silvana Koch-Mehrin ALDE   Germany 11 May 2011 Resigned due to doctorate plagiarism scandal Giles Chichester 6 July 2011 ECR   UK
17 January 2012 to 1 July 2014

Elected in order of precedence:[7]

Members Group State Votes
1 Gianni Pittella S&D   Italy 319
2 Miguel Angel Martínez Martínez S&D   Spain 295
3 Anni Podimata S&D   Greece 281
4 Alejo Vidal-Quadras EPP   Spain 269
5 Georgios Papastamkos EPP   Greece 248
6 Roberta Angelilli EPP   Italy 246
7 Othmar Karas EPP   Austria 244
8 Edward McMillan-Scott ALDE   United Kingdom 239
9 Isabelle Durant Greens/EFA   Belgium 238
10 Alexander Alvaro ALDE   Germany 235
11 Rainer Wieland EPP   Germany 230
12 Oldřich Vlasák ECR   Czech Republic 223
13 Jacek Protasiewicz EPP   Poland 206
14 László Surján EPP   Hungary 188

8th parliament

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1 July 2014 to 18 January 2017

Elected in order of precedence:[8]

Members Group State Votes
1 Antonio Tajani EPP   Italy 452, Round 1
2 Mairead McGuinness EPP   Ireland 441, Round 1
3 Rainer Wieland EPP   Germany 437, Round 1
4 Ramón Luis Valcárcel EPP   Spain 406, Round 1
5 Ildikó Pelczné Gáll EPP   Hungary 400, Round 1
6 Adina Vălean EPP   Romania 394, Round 1
7 Corina Crețu S&D   Romania 406, Round 2
8 Sylvie Guillaume S&D   France 406, Round 2
9 David Sassoli S&D   Italy 394, Round 2
10 Olli Rehn ALDE   Finland 377, Round 3
11 Alexander Graf Lambsdorff ALDE   Germany 365, Round 3
12 Ulrike Lunacek Greens/EFA   Austria 319, Round 3
13 Dimitrios Papadimoulis GUE/NGL   Greece 302, Round 3
14 Ryszard Czarnecki ECR   Poland 284, Round 3
Changes since election
Departed member Group State Date Reason Replacement Elected Group State
Corina Crețu S&D   Romania October 2014 Resigned due to becoming European Commissioner Ioan Mircea Pașcu November 2014 S&D   Romania
Olli Rehn ALDE   Finland May 2015 Resigned due to becoming Minister of Economic Affairs of Finland Anneli Jäätteenmäki May 2015 ALDE   Finland
18 January 2017 to 3 July 2019

Elected in order of precedence;

Members Group State Votes
1 Mairead McGuinness EPP   Ireland 466, Round 1
2 Bogusław Liberadzki S&D   Poland 378, Round 1
3 David Sassoli S&D   Italy 377, Round 1
4 Rainer Wieland EPP   Germany 336, Round 1
5 Sylvie Guillaume S&D   France 335, Round 1
6 Ryszard Czarnecki ECR   Poland 328, Round 1
7 Ramón Luis Valcárcel EPP   Spain 323, Round 1
8 Evelyne Gebhardt S&D   Germany 315, Round 1
9 Pavel Telička ALDE   Czech Republic 313, Round 1
10 Ildikó Pelczné Gáll EPP   Hungary 310, Round 1
11 Ioan Mircea Pașcu S&D   Romania 517, Round 2
12 Dimitrios Papadimoulis GUE/NGL   Greece 469, Round 2
13 Ulrike Lunacek Greens/EFA   Austria 441, Round 2
14 Alexander Graf Lambsdorff ALDE   Germany 393, Round 2
Changes since election
Departed member Group State Date Reason Replacement Elected Group State
Ildikó Pelczné Gáll EPP   Hungary 1 September 2017 Resigned due to joining the European Court of Auditors Lívia Járóka 15 November 2017[9] EPP   Hungary
Ulrike Lunacek Greens/EFA   Austria 23 October 2017 Resigned from politics after a defeat in national elections Heidi Hautala 26 October 2017[10] Greens/EFA   Finland
Alexander Graf Lambsdorff ALDE   Germany 23 October 2017 Resigned due to becoming member of the Bundestag Fabio Massimo Castaldo 15 November 2017[9] EFDD   Italy
Ryszard Czarnecki ECR   Poland 7 February 2018 Removed from office due to serious misconduct[11] Zdzisław Krasnodębski 1 March 2018[12] ECR   Poland

9th Parliament

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3 July 2019 to 18 January 2022

Elected in order of precedence:[13]

Members Group State Votes
1 Mairead McGuinness EPP   Ireland 618, Round 1
2 Pedro Silva Pereira S&D   Portugal 556, Round 1
3 Rainer Wieland EPP   Germany 516, Round 1
4 Katarina Barley S&D   Germany 516, Round 1
5 Othmar Karas EPP   Austria 477, Round 1
6 Ewa Kopacz EPP   Poland 461, Round 1
7 Klára Dobrev S&D   Hungary 402, Round 1
8 Dita Charanzová RE   Czech Republic 395, Round 1
9 Nicola Beer RE   Germany 363, Round 1
10 Lívia Járóka EPP   Hungary 349, Round 1
11 Heidi Hautala Greens/EFA   Finland 336, Round 1
12 Marcel Kolaja Greens/EFA   Czech Republic 426, Round 2
13 Dimitrios Papadimoulis GUE/NGL   Greece 401, Round 2
14 Fabio Massimo Castaldo NI   Italy 285, Round 3
Changes since election
Departed member Group State Date Reason Replacement Elected Group State
Mairead McGuinness EPP   Ireland October 2020 Resigned due to becoming European Commissioner Roberta Metsola November 2020 EPP   Malta
18 January 2022 to 16 July 2024

Elected in order of precedence:[14]

Members Group State Votes
1 Othmar Karas EPP   Austria 536, Round 1
2 Pina Picierno S&D   Italy 527, Round 1
3 Pedro Silva Pereira S&D   Portugal 517, Round 1
4 Ewa Kopacz EPP   Poland 467, Round 1
5 Eva Kaili S&D   Greece 454, Round 1
6 Evelyn Regner S&D   Austria 434, Round 1
7 Rainer Wieland EPP   Germany 432, Round 1
8 Katarina Barley S&D   Germany 426, Round 1
9 Dita Charanzová RE   Czech Republic 406, Round 1
10 Michal Šimečka RE   Slovakia 494, Round 2
11 Nicola Beer RE   Germany 410, Round 2
12 Roberts Zīle ECR   Latvia 403, Round 2
13 Dimitrios Papadimoulis GUE/NGL   Greece 492, Round 3
14 Heidi Hautala Greens/EFA   Finland 304, Round 3
Changes since election[15][16][17][18][19][20]
Member Group State Date Reason Replacement Elected Group State
Eva Kaili S&D   Greece December 2022 Expelled following her arrest amid Qatar corruption scandal investigation Marc Angel January 2023 S&D   Luxembourg
Michal Šimečka RE   Slovakia October 2023 Gave up his EP mandate to lead the domestic opposition following the 2023 Slovak parliamentary election Martin Hojsík October 2023 RE   Slovakia
Nicola Beer RE   Germany December 2023 Gave up her EP mandate on appointment as European Investment Bank vice-president Jan-Christoph Oetjen January 2024 RE   Germany

10th Parliament

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16 July 2024 to present

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Elected in order of precedence:[21]

Members Group State Votes
1 Sabine Verheyen EPP   Germany 604, Round 1
2 Ewa Kopacz EPP   Poland 572, Round 1
3 Esteban González Pons EPP   Spain 478, Round 1
4 Katarina Barley S&D   Germany 450, Round 1
5 Pina Picierno S&D   Italy 405, Round 1
6 Victor Negrescu S&D   Romania 394, Round 1
7 Martin Hojsík Renew   Slovakia 393, Round 1
8 Christel Schaldemose S&D   Denmark 378, Round 1
9 Javi López Fernandez S&D   Spain 377, Round 1
10 Sophie Wilmès Renew   Belgium 371, Round 1
11 Nicolae Ştefănuță Greens/EFA   Romania 347, Round 1
12 Antonella Sberna ECR   Italy 314, Round 2
13 Roberts Zīle ECR   Latvia 490, Round 2
14 Younous Omarjee The Left   France 311, Round 2

References

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  1. ^ New European Conservatives group in disarray over renegade MEP, ANDREW WILLIS 14 July 2009
  2. ^ "European Organisation - European Parliamentary Yearbook". Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  3. ^ "European Parliament Press Release on election (2007)". europa.eu. Archived from the original on 3 July 2007. Retrieved 28 June 2008.
  4. ^ "European Parliament Press Release on election (2009)". europa.eu. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  5. ^ Was elected with the British Conservatives and sat with ECR. However successfully stood against ECR's official candidate and was expelled. Although he joined the Liberal Democrats in the UK, he sits as a Non-attached Member in the European Parliament.
  6. ^ "European Parliament elects László Tőkés as Vice-President » WireUpdate Local | Local Breaking News | Local Breaking Wire -". Archived from the original on 6 November 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
  7. ^ "European Parliament Press Release on election (2012)". europa.eu. Archived from the original on 12 May 2013. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
  8. ^ "Fourteen Vice-Presidents of the European Parliament elected – News – European Parliament". europa.eu. 7 January 2014.
  9. ^ a b "Livia Járóka and Fabio Massimo Castaldo elected Vice-Presidents of the EP – News – European Parliament". europa.eu. 15 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Heidi Hautala elected Vice-President of the European Parliament – News – European Parliament". europa.eu. 26 October 2017.
  11. ^ "Ryszard Czarnecki no longer Vice-President of Parliament – News – European Parliament". europa.eu. 2 July 2018.
  12. ^ "Zdzisław Krasnodębski elected Vice-President of the European Parliament – News – European Parliament". europa.eu. 3 January 2018.
  13. ^ "The new European Parliament Vice-Presidents". europa.eu. 3 July 2019.
  14. ^ "Parliament's new Vice-Presidents". europa.eu. 18 January 2022.
  15. ^ "Greek MEP stripped of vice president powers over graft probe". Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  16. ^ "Marc Angel elected Vice-President of the European Parliament". European Parliament (in French). 18 January 2023. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  17. ^ "Michal Simecka gives up his job in Brussels to lead the opposition in Slovakia". rtvs.sk. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  18. ^ "Martin Hojsík elected Vice-President and Isabel Wiseler-Lima elected Quaestor". European Parliament. 18 October 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  19. ^ "EIB to welcome Germany's Nicola Beer as Vice-President". European Investment Bank. 15 December 2023. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  20. ^ "Jan-Christoph Oetjen elected Parliament Vice-President". European Parliament. 16 January 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  21. ^ "Parliament's new Vice-Presidents elected | News | European Parliament". www.europarl.europa.eu. 16 July 2024. Retrieved 16 July 2024.
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