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Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe

Parliamentary assembly


Parliamentary assembly

FieldValue
nameParliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
logo_picPACE logo 75ppi.png
logo_captionLogo
foundation
leader1_typePresident
leader1Theodoros Roussopoulos
leader2_typeSecretary General
leader2Despina Chatzivassiliou-Tsovilis
members306
session_roomPACE_Hemicycle_in_2024.jpg
meeting_placePalace of Europe, Strasbourg, France
website

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) is the parliamentary arm of the Council of Europe, a 46-nation international organisation dedicated to upholding human rights, democracy and the rule of law.

The Assembly is made up of 306 members drawn from the national parliaments of the Council of Europe's member states, and meets four times a year for week-long plenary sessions in Strasbourg.

It is one of the two statutory bodies of the Council of Europe, along with the Committee of Ministers, the executive body representing governments, with which it holds an ongoing dialogue. However, it is the Assembly which is usually regarded as the "motor" of the organisation, holding governments to account on human rights issues, pressing states to maintain democratic standards, proposing fresh ideas and generating the momentum for reform.

The Assembly held its first session in Strasbourg on 10 August 1949, embodying at that time the hopes of many Europeans who, in the aftermath of World War II, saw European unity as the best way of preventing a return to the devastation of war, a "safety net" to prevent gross human rights violations such as the horrors of the Holocaust, and a democratic bulwark against tyranny.

Among the Assembly's main achievements are:

  • ending the death penalty in Europe amongst signatories by requiring new member states to stop all executions;
  • making possible, and providing a blueprint for, the European Convention on Human Rights;
  • high-profile reports exposing violations of human rights in Council of Europe member states;
  • assisting former Soviet countries to embrace democracy after 1989;
  • inspiring and helping to shape many progressive new national laws;
  • helping member states to overcome conflict or reach consensus on divisive political or social issues; and
  • adopting the Flag of Europe and the Anthem of Europe, both later taken up by the European Union.

Powers

Unlike the European Parliament (an institution of the European Union), the Assembly does not have the power to create binding laws. However, it speaks on behalf of 700 million Europeans and has the power to:

  • demand action from the 46 Council of Europe governments, who – acting through the organisation's executive body – must jointly reply
  • probe human rights violations in any of the member states
  • question Prime Ministers and Heads of State on any subject
  • send parliamentarians to observe elections and mediate over crises
  • set the terms on which states may join the Council of Europe, through its power of veto
  • inspire, propose and help to shape new national laws
  • request legal evaluations of the laws and constitutions of member states
  • sanction a member state by recommending its exclusion or suspension Important statutory functions of PACE are the election of the judges of the European Court of Human Rights, from a list of three candidates submitted by governments, as well as the leading officials of the Council of Europe.

In general the Assembly meets four times per year in Strasbourg at the Palace of Europe for week-long plenary sessions. The nine permanent committees of the Assembly meet all year long to prepare reports and draft resolutions in their respective fields of expertise.

The Assembly sets its own agenda, but its debates and reports are primarily focused on the Council of Europe's three core statutory aims, defending human rights, promoting democracy and upholding the rule of law.

Election of judges to the European Court of Human Rights

Judges of the European Court of Human Rights are elected by PACE from a list of three candidates nominated by each member state which has ratified the European Convention on Human Rights. A 20-member committee made up of parliamentarians with legal experience – meeting in camera – interviews all candidates for judge on the Court and assesses their CVs before making recommendations to the full Assembly, which elects one judge from each shortlist in a secret vote. Judges are elected for a period of nine years and may not be re-elected.

Although the European Convention does not, in itself, require member states to present a multi-sex shortlist of potential appointees, in a 2004 resolution PACE decided that it "will not consider lists of candidates where the list does not include at least one candidate of each sex" unless there are exceptional circumstances. As a result, around one-third of the current bench of 46 judges are women, making the Court a leader among international courts on gender balance.

Achievements

Birthplace of the European Convention on Human Rights

At its very first meeting, in the summer of 1949, the Parliamentary Assembly adopted the essential blueprint of what became the European Convention on Human Rights, selecting which rights should be protected and defining the outline of the judicial mechanism to enforce them. Its detailed proposal, with some changes, was eventually adopted by the Council of Europe's ministerial body, and entered into force in 1953. Today, seventy years later, the European Court of Human Rights – given shape and form during the Assembly's historic post-war debates – is regarded as a global standard-bearer for justice, protecting the rights of citizens in 46 European nations and beyond, and paving the way for the gradual convergence of human rights laws and practice across the continent. The Assembly continues to elect the judges of the Court.

Originator of the European flag and anthem

The Assembly was at the origin of both the Flag of Europe, the twelve yellow stars on a blue background, and the Anthem of Europe, an arrangement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Ode to Joy. Having been proposed by the Assembly, both were adopted firstly by the Council of Europe, and - several years later - by the European Union. Both are now known worldwide as symbols of Europe.

''Flag of Europe''

Various proposals for a flag were submitted to the Council of Europe in the early 1950s and on 25 September 1953 the Assembly officially adopted a version with fifteen stars, which represented the number of Council of Europe member states at the time. However "a difficulty arose" in the Council of Europe's ministerial body over the number of stars after West Germany objected that one was for the Saarland region, which was then under French control and did not rejoin Germany until 1957. It would have agreed to fourteen stars, but this was in turn unacceptable to France. Two years later, after further consultations, the twelve-star version was unanimously approved by both bodies of the Council of Europe, with twelve being regarded as a symbol of perfection, and no longer related to the number of states in the organisation. The institutions of the European Union began using the flag in 1986.

''Anthem of Europe''

Propositions for an anthem for Europe began almost as soon as the Council of Europe was created in 1949. "Ode to Joy" had been suggested in the 1920s by the great pioneer of European unity, Count Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi, and in a 1955 letter to the Council of Europe he proposed it again. However it was not until the early 1970s that the question was taken up by the Assembly's Committee on Regional Planning and Local Authorities. The parliamentarians saw an anthem as the next logical step, after the creation of the European flag in 1955 and Europe Day in 1964, to "spread the European idea" and - after initial discussion of a possible Europe-wide competition - the committee decided that a piece of music without words would overcome the problem of multiple languages in Europe. The committee agreed Beethoven was "justly regarded as one of the great European geniuses", and that his tune "had universal value". In a resolution adopted on 8 July 1971, the Assembly formally proposed "Ode to Joy" as the European anthem. The proposal found favour with the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers, which formally adopted the anthem in 1972. It was subsequently taken up by the EU in 1985.

Ending the death penalty in Europe

In 1973 Swedish PACE member Astrid Bergegren first put forward a motion inviting member states to abolish the death penalty. Momentum built in the following years, and by 1980 the Assembly was calling on Europe's parliaments to abolish it, and insisting that the "right to life" included in the European Convention on Human Rights implied a ban on state killing. In 1989 the Assembly took the decision to make ending executions a condition of Council of Europe membership - just before a wave of central and eastern European nations joined the organisation. Today, the death penalty has been abolished in law in all 46 member states in peacetime, though some continue to allow it in time of war. Though rare calls are occasionally heard for its reintroduction, abolition continent-wide is now regarded as a major achievement of the Council of Europe as a whole, and it now joins others in pressing for abolition worldwide.

Support for emerging democracies

Over the decades, the Assembly has been at the forefront of supporting democratic change in successive waves of European nations at key moments in their history, negotiating their entry into the Council of Europe "club of democracies" (as the Assembly has a veto on any new member joining the organisation, it has used this power to negotiate with applicant countries the conditions on which they join). In the 1950s it led the way in embracing recently defeated Germany, in the 1960s it took a strong stand during the Greek crisis, and in the 1970s it welcomed post-Franco Spain and Portugal into the democratic fold. Above all, it played a key role after the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, creating a path towards membership for former Communist countries with its "Special Guest status", paving the way for the historic reconciliation of European nations under one roof.

Exposing torture in [[CIA black sites]] in Europe

In two reports for the Assembly in 2006 and 2007, Swiss Senator and former Prosecutor Dick Marty revealed convincing evidence that terror suspects were being transported to, held and tortured in CIA-run "secret prisons" on European soil. The evidence in his first report in 2006 – gathered with the help of investigative journalists and plane-spotters among others – suggested that a number of Council of Europe member states had permitted CIA "rendition flights" across their airspace, enabling the secret transfer of terror suspects without any legal rights. In a second report in 2007, Marty showed how two member states – Poland and Romania – had allowed "secret prisons" to be established on their territory, where torture took place. His main conclusions – subsequently confirmed in a series of rulings by the European Court of Human Rights, as well as a comprehensive US Senate report – threw the first real light on a dark chapter in US and European history in the aftermath of the 11 September attacks, kicked off a series of national probes, and helped to make torture on European soil less likely.

Sanctions against the Russian delegation

In April 2014, after the Russian parliament's backing for the annexation of Crimea and Russo-Ukrainian War, the Assembly decided to suspend the Russian delegation's voting rights as well as the right of Russian members to be represented in the Assembly's leading bodies and to participate in election observation missions. However, the Russian delegation remained members of the Assembly. The sanction applied throughout the remainder of the 2014 session and was renewed for a full year in January 2015, lapsing in January 2016. The sanction applied only to Russian parliamentarians in PACE, the Council of Europe's parliamentary body, and Russia continued to be a full member of the organisation as a whole.

In response, the Russian parliamentary delegation suspended its co-operation with PACE in June 2014, and in January 2016 – despite the lapsing of the sanctions – the Russian parliament decided not to submit its delegation's credentials for ratification, effectively leaving its seats empty. It did so again in January 2017, January 2018 and January 2019.

On 25 June 2019, after an eight-hour debate which ended in the small hours, the Assembly voted to change its rules, to make clear that its members should always have the right "to vote, to speak and to be represented", acceding to a key Russian demand and paving the way for the return of a Russian parliamentary delegation. Within hours the Russian parliament had presented the credentials of a new delegation, which – despite being challenged – were approved without any sanction by a vote of 116 in favour, 62 against and 15 abstentions. As a result, the Russian delegation which included Pyotr Olegovich Tolstoy as its head, returned to PACE with its full rights after a gap of five years. In response, the Ukrainian delegation protested before the Assembly, and announced Ukraine would leave the institution. Ukraine returned to PACE in January 2020.

Expulsion of Russia from the Council of Europe

On 25 February 2022 - the day after Russia's invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 - Russia's membership in the Council of Europe was suspended by the Council of Europe's ministerial body, having consulted the Assembly earlier on the same day. Suspension does not have the same legal status as full expulsion.

On 15 March, following an all-day debate at an Extraordinary Session, the Parliamentary Assembly adopted a resolution calling on the Council of Europe's ministerial body to go further and to "immediately" expel Russia from the Council because of its aggression against Ukraine. It is the first time in its history that the Assembly has made such a call.

As the debate was drawing to a close, the Russian authorities submitted a formal letter announcing that it was withdrawing from the Council; however, as the expulsion procedure had already begun, this was no longer legally possible. The Assembly's debate continued and - in a unanimous vote of 216 in favour, 0 against and 3 abstentions - the Assembly called for Russia's full expulsion. The following day, 16 March, at an extraordinary meeting, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe acceded to the Assembly's request, and decided that Russia should cease to be a member from that same day, after 26 years as a member state.

In the months since, the Assembly has on several occasions debated the consequences of Russia's aggression against Ukraine, including the legal consequences, and the practical support it can give to Ukraine. In October 2022, for example, it adopted a resolution declaring the Russian regime a "terrorist" one, while in January 2023 it unanimously demanded the setting up of an international criminal tribunal in The Hague to prosecute Russian and Belarusian political and military leaders who "planned, prepared, initiated or executed" the war. In June 2023, as the International Olympic Committee signalled it was considering allowing Russian and Belarusian athletes to take part in the Paris 2024 Olympics as "neutral individuals", the Assembly urged the continuation of a total ban.

Controversies

Corruption scandals

The European Parliament has had criticism over its prodigality and for being too complacent with conflicts of interest. Its refusal to become full member of the GRECO like all its member states is also a matter of criticism. In 2013, The New York Times reported that "some council members, notably Central Asian states and Russia, have tried to influence the organisation's parliamentary assembly with lavish gifts and trips". According to the report, said member states also hire lobbyists to fend off criticism of their human rights records.

PACE members have been implicated in corruption scandals relating to the Qatari and Azerbaijani governments. Qatargate is an ongoing scandal, involving allegations that PACE officials, lobbyists and their families have been influenced by the governments of Qatar, Morocco and Mauritania, engaging in corruption, money laundering, and organized crime.

Multiple PACE officials have been implicated in a money-laundering scheme organized by the Azerbaijani government. In exchange for (A) whiteashing Azerbaijan's poor human rights record and (B) lobbying for Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, European politicians were paid off and received lavish gifts and paid trips. In 2018, an independent investigation found "strong suspicions of corruptive conduct involving members of the Assembly" and named a multiple members as having breached the Assembly's Code of Conduct. Following a series of hearings, it sanctioned many of the members or former members mentioned in the Investigative Body's report, either by depriving them of certain rights, or by excluding them from the Assembly's premises for life. Following the flight of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians in 2023, PACE adopted a motion which stated that "it regrets the fact that Members of the European Parliament have accepted and failed to declare trips to Azerbaijan, visits to the Nagorno-Karabakh region and luxury hotel stays that were organised and paid for by Azerbaijani officials."

Resolution on children's right to physical integrity

In October 2013, following a motion by the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development a year prior, the Assembly passed a resolution and an accompanying recommendation on children's right to physical integrity. These documents argued that while PACE had addressed forms of child abuse such as sexual violence and domestic violence, it was also necessary to address what they called "non-medically justified violations of children's physical integrity which may have a long-lasting impact on their lives". They called for a ban on the most harmful practices, such as female genital mutilation, while also calling for increased dialogue on other procedures they viewed as harmful, such as infant male circumcision, intersex medical interventions, and body piercings.

While none of the above documents called for an outright ban on male circumcision, they did call for the procedure to be regulated and debated, and an accompanying report referred to the practice as a "human rights violation". This condemnation received criticism from religious groups and figures, such as Shimon Peres, the president of Israel at the time, as well as the Anti-Defamation League, which argued that circumcision was an accepted medical procedure and that the resolution interfered with religious freedom and was anti-Semitic. In response to these criticisms, Liliane Maury Pasquier of the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post arguing that medical evidence against circumcision was presented in the Assembly's hearings and that the child's right to physical integrity overrode the parents' right to religious freedom. This op-ed was further criticized by the Anti-Defamation League.

In 2015, PACE passed a resolution on religious freedom and tolerance that referenced its previous resolution on circumcision and reiterated its view that the procedure should only be performed under appropriate medical conditions. Though some outlets reported that PACE had retracted its anti-circumcision stance, PACE clarified that it had neither cancelled nor replaced the old resolution and that they had never called for infant circumcision to be banned in the first place.

Cultural divisions

Although the Council of Europe is a human rights watchdog and a guardian against discrimination, it is widely regarded as becoming increasingly divided on moral issues because its membership includes mainly Muslim countries (Turkey and Azerbaijan) as well as Eastern European countries, among them Russia, where social conservatism is strong. In 2007, this became evident when the Parliamentary Assembly voted on a report compiled by Anne Brasseur of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party on the rise of Christian creationism, bolstered by right-wing and populist parties in Eastern Europe.

Historic speeches

In 2018, an online archive of all speeches made to the Parliamentary Assembly by heads of state or government since its creation in 1949 appeared on the Assembly's website, the fruit of the two-year project entitled "Voices of Europe". At the time of its launch, the archive comprised 263 speeches delivered over a 70-year period by some 216 Presidents, Prime Ministers, monarchs and religious leaders from 45 countries, but it continues to expand, as new speeches are added every few months.

Some very early speeches by individuals considered to be "founding figures" of the European institutions, even if they were not heads of state or government at the time, are also included (such as those by Winston Churchill and Robert Schuman). Addresses by eight monarchs appear in the list (such as King Juan Carlos I of Spain, King Albert II of Belgium and Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg) as well as the speeches given by religious figures (such as Pope John Paul II) and several leaders from countries in the Middle East and North Africa (such as Shimon Peres, Yasser Arafat, Hosni Mubarak, Léopold Sédar Senghor or King Hussein of Jordan).

The full text of the speeches is given in both English and French, regardless of the original language used. The archive is searchable by country, by name, and chronologically.

Languages

The official languages of the Council of Europe are English and French, but the Assembly also uses German and Italian as working languages. Each parliamentarian has separate earphones and a desk on which they are able to select the language which they would like to listen to. When foreign guests wish to address the Assembly in languages other than its working languages, they are invited to bring their own interpreters.

Participants

The Assembly has a total of 612 members in total – 306 principal members and 306 substitutes – who are appointed or elected by the parliaments of each member state. Delegations must reflect the balance in the national parliament, so contain members of both ruling parties and oppositions. The population of each country determines its number of representatives and number of votes. This is in contrast to the Committee of Ministers, the Council of Europe's executive body, where each country has one vote. While not full members, the parliaments of Kyrgyzstan, Jordan, Morocco and Palestine hold "Partner for Democracy" status with the Assembly – which allows their delegations to take part in the Assembly's work, but without the right to vote – and there are also observer delegates from the Canadian, Israeli and Mexican parliaments.

The costs of participation in the Assembly – mainly travel and accommodation expenses – are borne by the national parliament of the delegation concerned. The few members who are appointed as rapporteurs, when they are carrying out work for the Assembly, have their costs covered by the Council of Europe.

Some notable former members of PACE include:

  • former heads of state or government such as Britain's wartime leader Sir Winston Churchill, former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, former Turkish President Abdullah Gül, former Cypriot President Glafcos Clerides, former Finnish President Tarja Halonen, former Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, former Albanian President Sali Berisha, and many others.
  • Dick Marty (Switzerland), appointed in late 2005 as rapporteur to investigate the CIA extraordinary renditions scandal and organ theft in Kosovo by the Kosovo Liberation Army from the Kosovo war, in 1998–2001
  • A number of leading British political personalities, including former Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, former Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy, former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, and former Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond.
  • Marcello Dell'Utri (Italy), convicted for complicity in conspiracy with the Mafia (), a crime for which he was found guilty on appeal and sentenced to 7 years in 2010.
  • the Scottish soldier, adventurer, writer and MP Sir Fitzroy Maclean (United Kingdom), author of the autobiographical memoir and travelogue Eastern Approaches, who was a member of PACE on two separate occasions, in 1951–1952 and 1972–1973.

Composition by parliamentary delegation

DelegationSeatsAccession
Albania Albania41995
Andorra Andorra21994
Armenia Armenia42001
Austria Austria61956
Azerbaijan Azerbaijan62001
Belgium Belgium71949
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina52002
Bulgaria Bulgaria61992
Croatia Croatia51996
Cyprus Cyprus31961–1964, 1984
Czech Republic Czech Republic71991
Denmark Denmark51949
Estonia Estonia31993
Finland Finland51989
France France181949
Germany Germany181951
Greece Greece71949–1969, 1974
Hungary Hungary71990
Iceland Iceland31959
Ireland Ireland41949
Italy Italy181949
Latvia Latvia31995
Liechtenstein Liechtenstein21978
Lithuania Lithuania41993
Luxembourg Luxembourg31949
Malta Malta31965
Moldova Moldova51995
Monaco Monaco22004
Montenegro Montenegro32007
Netherlands Netherlands71949
North Macedonia North Macedonia31995
Norway Norway51949
Poland Poland121991
Portugal Portugal71976
Romania Romania101993
San Marino San Marino21988
Serbia Serbia72003
Slovakia Slovakia51993
Slovenia Slovenia31993
Spain Spain121977
Sweden Sweden61949
Switzerland Switzerland61963
Turkey Turkey181949
Ukraine Ukraine121995
United Kingdom United Kingdom181949

Notes

The special guest status of the National Assembly of Belarus was suspended on 13 January 1997.

The Russian Federation ceased to be a member of the Council of Europe on 16 March 2022.

In January 2024, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe resolved to not ratify the credentials of the Azerbaijani delegation, thereby preventing the Azerbaijani delegates from participating in the work of the Assembly.

On 30 January 2025, Georgia’s delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has announced the immediate cessation of its participation in the assembly, after the plenary voted to impose strict conditions for the ratification of the delegation’s credentials.

Parliaments with Partner for Democracy status

Parliaments with Partner for Democracy status, pledge to work towards certain basic values of the Council of Europe, and agree to occasional assessments of their progress. In return, they are able to send delegations to take part in the work of the Assembly and its committees, but without the right to vote.

DelegationSeatsPopulationPopulation
per memberYear Partner for Democracy status granted
Jordan Jordan310,954,2002016
Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan36,586,6002014
Morocco Morocco636,261,7002011
Palestine Palestine35,227,1932011

Parliaments with observer status

DelegationSeatsPopulationPopulation
per memberYear observer status granted
Canada Canada635,151,7281996
Israel Israel39,350,5801957
Mexico Mexico6126,014,0241999

Other delegations

The Assembly of Kosovo has been invited to designate a delegation to take part in the work of the Assembly and its committees as observers without the right to vote. On 24 April 2023, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe approved Kosovo's application for membership, allowing the application to progress to the Parliamentary Assembly. On 16 April 2024, the Parliamentary Assembly voted in favour of Kosovo's membership, with 131 votes in favour, 29 against, and 11 abstentions.

DelegationSeatsPopulationPopulation
per memberYear invited
Kosovo Kosovo31,806,279602,0932016

Invited representatives

Two representatives of the Turkish Cypriot community have been invited to participate in the deliberations of the assembly as observers without the right to vote.

ParticipantsSeatsPopulationPopulation
per memberYear invited
TRNC Turkish Cypriot Community2382,836191,4182004

Composition by political group

The Assembly has six political groups.

GroupChairmanSeats
Socialists, Democrats and Greens Group (SOC)Frank Schwabe (Germany)
Group of the European People's Party (EPP/CD)Pablo Hispán (Spain)
European Conservatives, Patriots & Affiliates (ECPA)Zsolt Németh (Hungary)
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE)Iulian Bulai (Romania)
Group of the Unified European Left (UEL)Laura Castel (Spain)
Andrej Hunko (Germany)
Members not belonging to a Political Group (NR)

Presidents

The Presidents of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe have been:

PeriodNameCountryPolitical affiliation
1949Édouard Herriot (interim)FranceRadical Party
1949–1951Paul-Henri SpaakBelgiumSocialist Party
1952–1954François de MenthonFrancePopular Republican Movement
1954–1956Guy MolletFranceSocialist Party
1956–1959Fernand DehousseBelgiumSocialist Party
1959John EdwardsUnited KingdomLabour Party
1960–1963Per FederspielDenmarkVenstre
1963–1966Pierre PflimlinFrancePopular Republican Movement
1966–1969Geoffrey de FreitasUnited KingdomLabour Party
1969–1972SwitzerlandLiberal Party
1972–1975Giuseppe VedovatoItalyChristian Democracy
1975–1978AustriaSocial Democratic Party
1978–1981Hans de KosterNetherlandsPeople's Party for Freedom and Democracy
1981–1982José María de AreilzaSpainUnion of the Democratic Centre
1983–1986Karl AhrensGermanySocial Democratic Party
1986–1989Louis JungFranceGroup of the European People's Party
1989–1992Anders BjörckSwedenEuropean Democratic Group
1992Geoffrey FinsbergUnited KingdomEuropean Democratic Group
1992–1995Miguel Ángel Martínez MartínezSpainSocialist Group
1996–1999Leni FischerGermanyGroup of the European People's Party
1999–2002Russell JohnstonUnited KingdomAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
2002–2004Peter SchiederAustriaSocialist Group
2005–2008René van der LindenNetherlandsGroup of the European People's Party
2008–2010SpainSocialist Group
2010–2012Mevlüt ÇavuşoğluTurkeyEuropean Democratic Group
2012–2014Jean-Claude MignonFranceGroup of the European People's Party
2014–2016Anne BrasseurLuxembourgAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
2016–2017Pedro AgramuntSpainGroup of the European People's Party
2017–2018Stella KyriakidesCyprusGroup of the European People's Party
2018Michele NicolettiItalySocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
2018–2020Liliane Maury PasquierSwitzerlandSocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
2020–2022Rik DaemsBelgiumAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
2022–2024Tiny KoxNetherlandsGroup of the Unified European Left
2024–presentTheodoros RoussopoulosGreeceGroup of the European People's Party

Vice-Presidents

Nineteen vice-presidents are elected annually at the beginning of an ordinary session and remain in office until the next session.

PeriodNameCountryPolitical affiliation
2025–present
Don TouhigUnited KingdomSocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
Miroslava NěmcováCzech RepublicEuropean Conservatives, Patriots & Affiliates
Yıldırım Tuğrul TürkeşTurkeyMember not belonging to a Political Group
Elisabetta GardiniItalyEuropean Conservatives, Patriots & Affiliates
Armin LaschetGermanyGroup of the European People's Party
Antonio Gutiérrez LimonesSpainSocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
Andries GryffroyBelgiumAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
Mogens JensenDenmarkSocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
Bernadeta ComaAndorraAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
Bertrand BouyxFranceAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
Miapetra Kumpula-NatriFinlandSocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
Marko PavićCroatiaGroup of the European People's Party
Agnieszka PomaskaPolandGroup of the European People's Party
Blerina GjylametiAlbaniaSocialists, Democrats and Greens Group
Arusyak JulhakyanArmeniaGroup of the European People's Party
Nicos TornaritisCyprusGroup of the European People's Party
Denitsa SachevaBulgariaGroup of the European People's Party
Knut AbrahamGermanyGroup of the European People's Party
vacantBosnia and Herzegovina

Secretary General

In January 2021, the Assembly elected Despina Chatzivassiliou-Tsovilis as Secretary General of the Assembly, serving a five-year term beginning in March 2021.

She heads an 80-strong multi-national secretariat based in Strasbourg, and is the first woman to hold the post since the Assembly's creation in 1949, as well as the first person of Greek nationality.

References

References

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  2. (1 March 2021). "Despina Chatzivassiliou-Tsovilis, first woman elected Secretary General of the Parliamentary Assembly".
  3. [https://assembly.coe.int/LifeRay/APCE/pdf/Communication/2021/20210126-ElectionPaceSG-BIL.pdf Official result of the election, website of the Parliamentary Assembly]
  4. [http://www.assembly.coe.int/nw/xml/News/News-View-EN.asp?newsid=5106&lang=2&cat=8 PACE creates a special committee for the election of judges to the European Court of Human Rights], 2014-06-24.
  5. Adelaide Remiche (2012-08-12), [http://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/election-of-the-new-belgian-judge-to-the-ecthr-an-all-male-short-list-demonstrates-questionable-commitment-to-gender-equality/ Election of the new Belgian Judge to the ECtHR: An all-male shortlist demonstrates a questionable commitment to gender equality] Oxford Human Rights Hub, [[University of Oxford]].
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  7. (1953). "Choice of an emblem for the Council of Europe".
  8. (22 October 1955). "Choice of a Europe emblem".
  9. "The European flag".
  10. "European Anthem".
  11. "PACE - Resolution 492 (1971) - European anthem".
  12. (18 January 2022). "Happy birthday to the #EuropeanAnthem, created #OnThisDay 50 years ago! The prelude to Beethoven's "Ode to Joy"…".
  13. (16 May 1973). "Abolition of capital punishment".
  14. (1980). "Abolition of capital punishment".
  15. (1980). "European Convention on Human Rights - Abolition of capital punishment".
  16. King, Jordan. (2022-06-26). "Turkey may bring death penalty back for people who start forest fires".
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  18. Dick, Marty. (12 June 2006). "Alleged secret detentions and unlawful inter-state transfers of detainees involving Council of Europe member states".
  19. Marty, Dick. (11 June 2007). "Secret detentions and illegal transfers of detainees involving Council of Europe member states: second report".
  20. (25 June 2019). "PACE affirms its members' rights 'to vote, to speak and to be represented in the Assembly and its bodies'". Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
  21. (25 June 2019). "Examination of credentials of representatives and substitutes".
  22. (25 June 2021). "Vote on Resolution". Parliamentary Assembly of the Condom of Europe.
  23. (26 June 2019). "PACE ratifies Russian delegation's credentials". Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
  24. (16 January 2020). "Рада повернула Україну в ПАРЄ Четвер, 16 січня 2020". [[Ukrayinska Pravda]].
  25. (2022-03-15). "Russia quits Council of Europe rights watchdog". Reuters.
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