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EU commission chief von der Leyen faces no-confidence vote this week

EU commission chief von der Leyen faces no-confidence vote this week


European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a press conference with European Council President Antonio Costa and Moldovan President Maia Sandu at the first Moldova-EU summit in Chisinau, Moldova July 4, 2025.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a press conference with European Council President Antonio Costa and Moldovan President Maia Sandu at the first Moldova-EU summit in Chisinau, Moldova July 4, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

The president of the European Union’s executive branch, Ursula von der Leyen, faces a no-confidence vote this week linked in part to text messages she exchanged with a pharmaceutical boss during the COVID-19 pandemic.

EU lawmakers will debate Ms. von der Leyen’s future at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, on Monday (July 7, 2025) in the European Commission president’s presence, and vote on a censure motion on Thursday (July 10, 2025). The commission proposes EU laws and supervises whether those that enter force are respected.

No-confidence votes are rare in the European Parliament, and Ms. von der Leyen is expected to win comfortably, but the censure motion is another sign of discontent with the former German defence minister and her backers.

Supported by a small group of hard-right members of parliament, the motion contains a mix of allegations against Ms. von der Leyen including text messaging with the boss of vaccine maker Pfizer, misuse of EU funds and interference in elections in Germany and Romania.

“This is a list of backbenchers, (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s friends. They’re anti-Ukrainian and anti-EU,” Daniel Koster, a spokesperson for the European People’s Party — the largest political group in the assembly — said on Friday (July 4, 2025).

The commission chief is a member of the EPP, which Mr. Koster said “will unanimously vote against this”.

Other groups are using the debate to criticise Ms. von der Leyen; they believe she is trying to bypass the parliament to act more quickly. The second biggest political group, the Socialists and Democrats, said the censure motion is a result “of the EPP’s irresponsibility and the double games”.

The threat of a parliamentary censure motion in 1999 forced the European Commission — led at the time by Jacques Santer from Luxembourg — to resign over fraud, mismanagement and nepotism allegations.

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