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Federal Council (Switzerland)

The Federal Council[1] is the federal cabinet of the Swiss Confederation. Its seven members also serve as the collective head of state and government of Switzerland. Since after World War II, the Federal Council is by convention a permanent grand coalition government composed of representatives of the country's major parties and language regions.

Federal Council
  • Bundesrat (German)
  • Conseil fédéral (French)
  • Consiglio federale (Italian)
  • Cussegl federal (Romansh)
StyleHis/Her Excellency
StatusHead of state
Head of government
AppointerFederal Assembly
Term lengthFour years, no term limit
Inaugural holder
Formation1848; 176 years ago (1848)
Websiteadmin.ch

While the entire Federal Council is responsible for leading the federal administration of Switzerland, each Councillor heads one of the seven federal executive departments. The President of the Swiss Confederation chairs the council, but exercises no particular authority; rather, the position is one of a first among equals and rotates among the seven Councillors annually.

The Federal Council is elected as a body by the 246 members of the Federal Assembly of Switzerland for a term of four years after each federal parliamentary election, without the possibility of recall or a vote of no confidence. Incumbents are not term-limited and are by convention almost always re-elected; most serve around 8 to 12 years in office.

Members edit

As of 2024, the members of the Federal Council are, in order of seniority:

Member Portrait Joined Party Canton Function
Guy Parmelin   1 January 2016 Swiss People's Party   Vaud Head of the Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research
Ignazio Cassis   1 November 2017 The Liberals   Ticino Head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs
Viola Amherd   1 January 2019 The Centre   Valais President for 2024
Head of the Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport
Karin Keller-Sutter   1 January 2019 The Liberals   St. Gallen Vice President for 2024
Head of the Federal Department of Finance
Albert Rösti   1 January 2023 Swiss People's Party   Bern Head of the Federal Department of Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications
Élisabeth Baume-Schneider   1 January 2023 Social Democratic Party   Jura Head of the Federal Department of Home Affairs
Beat Jans   1 January 2024 Social Democratic Party   Basel-Stadt Head of the Federal Department of Justice and Police

Origins and history of the Federal Council edit

Origins of the institution edit

The Federal Council was instituted by the 1848 Federal Constitution as the "supreme executive and directorial authority of the Confederation".[2]

When the Constitution was written, constitutional democracy was still in its infancy, and the founding fathers of Switzerland had little in the way of examples. While they drew heavily on the United States Constitution for the organisation of the federal state as a whole, they opted for the collegial rather than the presidential system for the executive branch of government (directorial system). This accommodated the long tradition of the rule of collective bodies in Switzerland. Under the Ancien Régime, the cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy had been governed by councils of pre-eminent citizens since time immemorial, and the later Helvetic Republic (with its equivalent Directorate)[3] as well as the cantons that had given themselves liberal constitutions since the 1830s had also had good experiences with that mode of governance.[4]

Today, only three other states, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Andorra and San Marino, have collective rather than unitary heads of state. However the collegial system of government has found widespread adoption in modern democracies in the form of cabinet government with collective responsibility.

Changes in composition edit

 
Composition of the Federal Council by political party, 1919 to 2017

The 1848 constitutional provision providing for the Federal Council – and indeed the institution of the Council itself – has remained unchanged to this day, even though Swiss society has changed profoundly since.

Party representation edit

Free Democratic hegemony, 1848–1891 edit

The 1848 Constitution was one of the few successes of the Europe-wide democratic revolutions of 1848. In Switzerland, the democratic movement was led – and the new federal state decisively shaped – by the Radicals (presently the Free Democratic Party, FDP). After winning the Sonderbund War (the Swiss civil war) against the Catholic cantons, the Radicals at first used their majority in the Federal Assembly to fill all the seats on the Federal Council. This made their former war opponents, the Catholic-Conservatives (presently the Christian Democratic People's Party, CVP), the opposition party. Only after Emil Welti's resignation in 1891 after a failed referendum on railway nationalisation did the Radicals decide to co-opt the Conservatives by supporting the election of Josef Zemp.

Emerging coalition government, 1891–1959 edit

The process of involving all major political movements of Switzerland into the responsibility of government continued during the first half of the 20th century. It was hastened by the FDP's and CVP's gradually diminishing voter shares, complemented by the rise of new parties of lesser power at the ends of the political spectrum. These were the Social Democratic Party (SP) on the Left and the Party of Farmers, Traders and Independents (BGB; presently the People's Party, SVP) on the Right. In due course, the CVP received its second seat in 1919 with Jean-Marie Musy, while the BGB joined the Council in 1929 with Rudolf Minger. In 1943, during World War II, the Social Democrats were also temporarily included with Ernst Nobs.

Grand coalition, 1959–2003 edit

The 1959 elections, following the resignation of four Councillors, finally established the Zauberformel, the "magical formula" that determined the Council's composition during the rest of the 20th century and established the long-standing nature of the Council as a permanent, voluntary grand coalition.[5] In approximate relation to the parties' respective strength in the Federal Assembly, the seats were distributed as follows:

During that time, the FDP/PRD and CVP/PDC very slowly but steadily kept losing voter share to the SVP/UDC and SP/PS, respectively, which overtook the older parties in popularity during the 1990s.

End of the grand coalition, 2008 edit

The governmental balance was changed after the 2003 elections, when the SVP/UDC was granted a Council seat for their leader Christoph Blocher that had formerly belonged to the CVP/PDC's Ruth Metzler. Due to controversies surrounding his conduct in office, a narrow Assembly majority did not reelect Blocher in 2007 and chose instead Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, a more moderate SVP/UDC politician, against party policy. This led to a split of the SVP/UDC in 2008. After liberal regional SVP/UDC groups including Federal Councillors Widmer-Schlumpf and Samuel Schmid founded a new Conservative Democratic Party, the SVP/UDC was left in opposition for the first time since 1929, but returned into the Council with the election of Ueli Maurer on 10 December 2008, who regained the seat previously held by Schmid, who had resigned. The SVP/UDC regained its second seat on the Council in 2015, when Widmer-Schlumpf decided to resign after the SVP/UDC's large election gains in the 2015 election, being replaced by Guy Parmelin.[6][7]

Women on the council edit

Women gained suffrage on the federal level in 1971. They remained unrepresented in the Federal Council for three further legislatures, until the 1984 election of Elisabeth Kopp. In 1983, the failed election of the first official female candidate, Lilian Uchtenhagen and again in 1993 the failed election of Christiane Brunner (both SP/PS), was controversial and the Social Democrats each time considered withdrawing from the council altogether.[5]

There were two female councillors serving simultaneously for the first time in 1999, and three out of seven councillors were women from 2007 till 2010, when Simonetta Sommaruga was elected as the fourth woman in government in place of Moritz Leuenberger, putting men in minority for the first time in history. Also remarkable is the fact that the eighth non-voting member of government, the chancellor, who sets the government agenda, was also a woman.

In total, there have been ten female councillors in the period 1989 to present:[8]

  • The first woman councillor was Elisabeth Kopp (FDP/PRD), elected 1984, resigned in 1989.
  • Ruth Dreifuss (SP/PS), served from 1993 to 2002, was the first woman to become President of the Confederation in 1999. Since her election there has always been at least one woman on the council.
  • Ruth Metzler (Metzler-Arnold at the time) (CVP/PDC), served from 1999 to 2003 and was not re-elected to a second term (see above). Upon her election two women served on the council simultaneously for the first time.
  • Micheline Calmy-Rey (SP/PS) was elected in 2003 and served until 2011.
  • Doris Leuthard (CVP/PDC) was elected in 2006 and served until 2018.
  • Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf was elected in December 2007 and served until December 2015.
  • Simonetta Sommaruga was elected in September 2010. Together with Micheline Calmy-Rey, Doris Leuthard and Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, women were in the majority in the Federal Council for the first time, until January 2012, when Alain Berset replaced Micheline Calmy-Rey.[9]
  • Karin Keller-Sutter and Viola Amherd were elected on 5 December 2018 and are currently on the council.
  • Élisabeth Baume-Schneider was elected on 7 December 2022 and is the most recent woman to be elected to the council.

Regional balancing acts edit

Until 1999, the Constitution mandated that no canton could have multiple representatives on the Federal Council at the same time. For most of Swiss history, the canton of any given councillor was determined by their place of origin, but starting in 1987 this was changed to the canton from which they were elected (for former members of the Federal Assembly or cantonal legislative or executive bodies) or place of residence.[10] Nothing prevented candidates from moving to politically expedient cantons; this was one of the motivators for abolishing the rule. At the 1999 Swiss referendums, the Constitution was changed to require an equitable distribution of seats among the cantons and language groups of the country, without setting concrete quotas.

Since the rule against Federal Councillors being from the same canton was abolished, there have been a few examples of it happening. The first time was from 2003 to 2007, when both Moritz Leuenberger and Christoph Blocher from the canton of Zürich were in office. It happened again between 2010 and 2018, starting when Simonetta Sommaruga and Johann Schneider-Ammann from the canton of Bern were elected in 2010.[9] As of 2023, four cantons have never been represented on the Federal Council: Nidwalden, Schaffhausen, Schwyz, Uri. The canton of Jura is the most recent canton to be represented. It is currently being represented by Elisabeth Baume-Schneider since 1 January 2023.

With the Council's constitution in 2023, the constitutional requirement that languages and regions be appropriately balanced is under increased strain. "Latin speakers" – people who either speak French, Italian or Romansh – form a majority on the Council, despite more than seventy percent of the Swiss citizens speaking German as a first language. Likewise, all Federal Councillors (as of 2023) did not grow up in an urban area (with the exception of Karin Keller-Sutter, who spent some school years in Neuchâtel NE).

Whenever a member resigns, they are generally replaced by someone who is not only from the same party, but also the same language group. In 2006, however, Joseph Deiss, a French-speaker, resigned and was succeeded by Doris Leuthard, a German-speaker. In 2016, Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, a German-speaker, was succeeded by Guy Parmelin, a French-speaker and most recently in 2023 German-speaking Simmonetta Sommaruga was replaced by French-speaking Elisabeth Baume-Schneider. Historically, at least two Council seats have been held by French- or Italian-speakers. The language makeup of the Council as of 2022 is four German-speakers, two French-speakers and one Italian-speaker. In November 2017, Ignazio Cassis became the first Italian speaker to serve on the Council since 1999. For elections to the Federal Council, candidates are usually helped by a high degree of fluency in German, French and Italian.

Operation of the Federal Council edit

Presidency edit

 
The interior of the west wing of the Federal Palace in Berne, where the Council meetings are held.
 
Meeting of the Federal Council in 2006

Each year, one of the seven Councillors is elected by the United Federal Assembly as President of the Confederation.[11] The Federal Assembly also elects a Vice President of Switzerland. By convention, the positions of President and Vice President rotate annually, each Councillor thus becoming Vice President and then President every seven years while in office.

According to the Swiss order of precedence, the President of the Confederation is the highest-ranking Swiss official. They preside over Council meetings and carry out certain representative functions that, in other countries, are the business of a head of state.[12] In urgent situations where a Council decision cannot be made in time, they are empowered to act on behalf of the whole Council. Apart from that, though, they are primus inter pares, having no power above and beyond the other six Councillors.[11]

The President is not the Swiss head of state; this function is carried out by the Council in corpore, that is, in its entirety. However, in recent practice the President acts and is recognised as head of state while conducting official visits abroad, as the Council (also by convention) does not leave the country in corpore. More often, though, official visits abroad are carried out by the head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. Visiting heads of state are received by the Federal Council in corpore.

Council meetings edit

 
Before a meeting, 1987

The Federal Council operates mainly through weekly meetings, which are held each Wednesday at the Federal Palace in Bern,[12] the seat of the Swiss federal government.

Apart from the seven Councillors, the following officials also attend the meetings:

During the meetings, the Councillors address each other formally (e.g. Mrs. Sommaruga, Mr. Berset), even though they are on first name terms with each other. This is done to separate the items on the agenda from the person promoting them.

After the meetings, the Councillors take lunch together. The Council also meets regularly in conclave to discuss important topics at length; it annually conducts what is colloquially referred to as its "field trip", a day trip to some attractions in the President's home canton. In that and other respects, the Council operates like a board of directors of a major corporation.[citation needed]

Decisions and responsibilities edit

Each Federal Councillor heads a government department, much like the ministers in the governments of other countries.[13] Colloquially and by the press (especially outside Switzerland), they are often referred to as ministers even though no such post formally exists. For example, the head of the Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports is often called "the Swiss defence minister", even though no such post officially exists. However, as Council members, they are not only responsible for their own department, but also for the business of their colleagues' departments, as well as for the conduct of the government and the federal administration as a whole.

Decisions to be taken by the Council are always prepared by the responsible department.[12] Accordingly, a change in the salaries of federal employees would be proposed to the Council by the head of the Federal Department of Finance, to whose department the Federal Office of Personnel belongs. Before a vote is taken at a Council meeting, though, all proposals are circulated in writing to the heads of departments, who commission the senior career officials of their department – the heads of the Federal Offices – to prepare a written response to offer criticism and suggestions. This is called the co-report procedure (Mitberichtsverfahren/procédure de co-rapport), designed to build a wide consensus ahead of a Council meeting.[14]

To prepare for important decisions, an additional public consultation is sometimes conducted, to which the cantons, the political parties and major interest groups are invited, and in which all members of the public can participate. If a change in a federal statute is to be proposed to the Federal Assembly, this step is mandated by law. In such cases, the consultation procedure also serves to identify political concerns that could later be the focus of a popular referendum to stop passage of the bill at issue.

The decisions themselves are formally taken by voice vote by a majority of the Councillors present at a meeting. However, the great majority of decisions are arrived at by consensus; even though lately there is said to be a trend towards more contentious discussions and close votes.[by whom?]

Secrecy edit

The meetings of the Federal Council and the result of the votes taken are not open to the public, and the records remain sealed for 50 years. This has lately been the subject of some criticism. In particular, the parties at the ends of the political spectrum argue that this secrecy is contrary to the principle of transparency. However, the Council has always maintained that secrecy is necessary to arrive at consensus and to preserve the collegiality and political independence of the individual Councillors.

Constitutional conventions edit

Due to the Federal Council's unique nature as a voluntary grand coalition of political opponents, its operation is subject to numerous constitutional conventions. Most notable is the principle of collegiality; that is, the Councillors are not supposed to publicly criticise one another, even though they are often political opponents. In effect, they are expected to publicly support all decisions of the Council, even against their own personal opinion or that of their political party.[12] In the eye of many observers, this convention has become rather strained after the 2003 elections (see below).

Travels abroad edit

Due to the fact that technically no sole federal councillor but rather the entire council in corpore is the Swiss head of state,[15] Federal Councillors did for a long time not travel abroad in official business. In other countries, Switzerland was nearly exclusively represented by diplomats.[16]

After the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the Federal Councillors convened an urgent meeting, where they discussed sending a Councillor to Kennedy's funeral. Given that the absence of the Swiss government would not be understood by the population, they decided to send Friedrich Traugott Wahlen. On his travel to the U.S. capital, Wahlen also met with Secretary of State Dean Rusk to discuss tariffs. Despite the opening of Switzerland due to the Kennedy assassination, foreign travels of Federal Councillors were only normalized after the dissolution of the USSR.[17]

Election and composition edit

The most recent federal council elections were held on 13 December 2023. Federal Council Alain Berset and Federal Chancellor Walter Turnherr had both announced that they would not be seeking reelection. The other Federal Councillors were all reelected, the FDP councillors seats were unsuccessfully attacked by the green party. The following councillors were reelected:

Following the resignation of Alain Berset as of 31 December 2023, replacement elections were held:

  • Beat Jans (SP/BS), elected in the third round of voting with 134 out of 245 votes cast.

In addition, Viktor Rossi (GLP) was newly elected as Federal Chancellor with 135 out of 245 votes cast in the second round of voting. Additionally Viola Amherd was elected President of the Swiss confederation for the year 2024 and Karin Keller-Sutter was elected Vice president of the Federal Council for the year 2024. Following the elections there was a departmental reshuffle. Élisabeth Baume-Schneider took over the Federal Department of Home Affairs vacated by Alain Berset and newly elected Beat Jans took over Baume-Schneiders Justice and Police Department.

Election mode edit

 
2006 election of the Federal Council in the Federal Assembly

The members of the Federal Council are elected for a term of four years by both chambers of the Federal Assembly sitting together as the United Federal Assembly. Each Federal Council seat is up for (re-)election in the order of seniority, beginning with the Councillor who had the longest term of office. The office holders are then elected individually by secret ballot by an absolute majority of the valid votes. Every adult Swiss citizen is eligible (and could even be elected against his own will), but in practice, only members of Parliament or more rarely, members of cantonal governments, are nominated by the political parties and receive a substantial number of votes. The voting is conducted in several rounds, under a form of exhaustive ballot.[18]

  • In the two first rounds, any adult Swiss citizen with voting right is eligible.
  • At the issue of the second round, eligible for the third round is anybody who has received at least ten votes.
  • At the issue of the third and later rounds (if necessary), the candidates with less than ten votes are excluded, or the candidate with the lowest vote count is excluded. No such exclusion takes place when two or more candidates share a lowest vote count at least equalling 10.

After the election is concluded, the winner holds a short speech and accepts or refuses the office of Federal Councillor. The oath of office is then taken, even then the regular term of office only begins a few weeks later, on 1st January.

Usually, the party which has a seat to fill presents two candidates with mainstream viewpoints to the United Federal Assembly, which then chooses one. This was not so, however, during the 2003 election, which was the most controversial in recent memory. Until the end of the 19th century, it was informally required of Federal Councillors to be elected to the National Council in their canton of origin every four years to put their popularity to a test. This practice was known under the French term of élection de compliment. The first Councillor who failed to be reelected (Ulrich Ochsenbein) lost his election to the National Council in 1854.

Once elected, Councillors remain members of their political parties, but hold no leading office with them. In fact, they usually maintain a certain political distance from the party leadership, because under the rules of collegiality, they will often have to publicly promote a Council decision which does not match the political conviction of their party (or of themselves).

Resignation edit

Once elected for a four-year-term, Federal Councillors can neither be voted out of office by a motion of no confidence nor can they be impeached. Reelection is possible for an indefinite number of terms; it has historically been extremely rare for Parliament not to reelect a sitting Councillor. This has only happened four times – to Ulrich Ochsenbein in 1854, to Jean-Jacques Challet-Venel in 1872, to Ruth Metzler in 2003 and to Christoph Blocher in 2007.[19] In practice, therefore, Councillors serve until they decide to resign and retire to private life, usually after three to five terms of office.

Status of Federal Councillors edit

Councillors' lives edit

 
Faces in the Crowd: In keeping with the spirit of Swiss direct democracy, the 2008 official photograph of the Federal Council depicted them as everymen.
 
Federal Councillor Ignazio Cassis speaks in 2019 accompanied by a Bundesweibel

Unlike most senior members of government in other countries, the Federal Councillors are not entitled to an official residence (however, the Federal Palace houses living apartments for both the Federal Chancellor and President of the Confederation). Mostly, they have chosen to rent apartments or hotel suites in Bern (at their own expense). However, they are entitled to use the Federal Council's country estate, Lohn, for holidays; this estate is also used to host official guests of the Swiss Confederation.

While Councillors can draw on an Army security detail if they need personal protection (in particular during official events), it is more usual to encounter them without any escort at all in the streets, restaurants and tramways of Bern,[20] and Ueli Maurer was known to use the bicycle on most days from his apartment in Münsingen to the Federal Palace in Bern.[21] Councillors are also entitled to a personal bailiff (huissier or Bundesweibel) who accompanies them, in a red and white ceremonial uniform, to official events.

The spouses of Councillors do not play an official part in the business of government, apart from accompanying the Councillors to official receptions.

Councillors' salary edit

Federal councillors receive an annual salary of CHF 456,854 (about EUR 471,000 / USD 529,000), plus another CHF 30,000 annually for expenses.[22] The councillors pay tax on this income.[23]

Former councillors with at least four years of service receive a pension equivalent to half the salary of Federal Council members in office.[23] If a councillor leaves office for health reasons, they may receive this pension even if their length of service was less than three years.[23] Councillors who leave their offices after less than four years may also receive a partial pension.[23] After leaving office, "former federal councillors frequently pursue some other lucrative activity," but "their earnings, when added to the pension they receive as an ex-federal councillor, may not exceed the salary of a federal councillor in office, otherwise their pension is reduced accordingly."[23]

Serving federal councillors "enjoy a certain number of special benefits, from free telephone contracts to a chauffeur-driven car for official business, a courtesy car for personal use or the use of federal planes and helicopters for official business trips. Each member of the Federal Council also has the right to a first-class SBB GA travelcard (also in retirement). They are also given personal security, which is often very discreet."[23]

 
First Federal Council with a majority of women (2010).

Immunity edit

Federal Councillors, like members of parliament, enjoy absolute legal immunity for all statements made in their official capacity.[24]

Prosecution for crimes and misdemeanors that relate to the Councillors' official capacity requires the assent of the immunity commissions of the Federal Assembly. In such cases, Parliament can also suspend the Councillor in office (but not actually remove them).[25]

According to statements to the media by a Federal Chancellory official,[26] in none of the few cases of accusations against a Federal Councillor has the permission to prosecute ever been granted. Such cases usually involved statements considered offensive by members of the public. However, one unnamed Councillor involved in a traffic accident immediately prior to his date of resignation was reported to have voluntarily waived his immunity, and Councillor Elisabeth Kopp decided to resign upon facing an inquiry over allegations of secrecy violations.

List of firsts in the Federal Council edit

 
The first seven members, elected 1848

Popularity edit

As of August 2022, half of the Swiss population was satisfied with the Federal Council.[29]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ (German: Bundesrat; French: Conseil fédéral; Italian: Consiglio federale; Romansh: Cussegl federal)
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 December 2010. Retrieved 17 March 2006.
  3. ^ See: Directorate in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  4. ^ Departments: Development on the Federal Level in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. Collegial System in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  5. ^ a b Zauberformel in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  6. ^ Jaberg, Samuel; Stephens, Thomas (28 October 2015). "Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf to Stand Down". Swissinfo. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  7. ^ Mombelli, Armando (10 December 2015). "People's Party Gains Second Seat in Cabinet". Swissinfo. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  8. ^ Swiss Federal Council (16 June 2023). "Frauen im Bundesrat (women on the Federal Council)".
  9. ^ a b "Elections produce female majority in cabinet". Swissinfo.ch. SRG SSR Idée Suisse. 22 September 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
  10. ^ See Federal Council in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  11. ^ a b Information services of the Federal Chancellery (2008). . p. 42. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  12. ^ a b c d e Information services of the Federal Chancellery (2008). . p. 43. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  13. ^ Information services of the Federal Chancellery (2008). . pp. 44–45. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  14. ^ Information services of the Federal Chancellery (2008). . p. 46. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  15. ^ "Protocol Regulations for the Swiss Confederation" (PDF). www.eda.admin.ch. (PDF) from the original on 20 March 2018. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  16. ^ "Erst eine Leiche hat die Schweizer Aussenpolitik verändert" [Only a dead body has changed Swiss foreign policy] (in German). Tages-Anzeiger. 16 May 2019.
  17. ^ "Das Kennedy-Attentat und der Bundesrat" [The Kennedy Assassination and the Federal Council] (in German). Neue Zürcher Zeitung. 13 November 2013.
  18. ^ Law on the federal parliament, Art. 132 and 133.
  19. ^ Information services of the Federal Chancellery (2008). . p. 13. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  20. ^ Information services of the Federal Chancellery (2008). . p. 41. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  21. ^ "Bundesrat Maurer fährt mit dem Fahrrad zur Arbeit". Pilatus Today. 15 June 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  22. ^ Council, The Federal. "How much does a federal councillor earn?". www.admin.ch. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Federal councillors’ salaries and benefits 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  24. ^ Art. 2 of the Federal Law on the Responsibility of the Confederation and its Members of Authorities and Functionaries
  25. ^ Art. 14 of the Federal Law on the Responsibility of the Confederation and its Members of Authorities and Functionaries
  26. ^ Jürg Sohm (30 May 2006). "Bisher stets immun: Wegen Albisgüetli-Rede steht die Immunität von Christoph Blocher erneut zur Debatte" (in German). Der Bund.
  27. ^ "Klare Sprache und viel Herz: Willi Ritschard würde 100 Jahre alt". SWI swissinfo.ch (in German). 27 September 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  28. ^ "Ritschard, Willi".
  29. ^ "La confiance populaire dans le Conseil fédéral baisse". Le Temps. 29 August 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Federal Council in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  • , edited by the Swiss Federal Chancellery.
  • Resultate der Wahlen des Bundesrats, der Bundeskanzler und des Generals, compiled by the services of the Swiss Parliament.
  • Clive H. Church (2004). The Politics and Government of Switzerland. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-69277-2.
  • Altermatt, Urs (1993). Conseil Fédéral: Dictionnaire biographique des cent premiers conseillers fédéraux. Cabédita, Yens. ISBN 2-88295-104-3

External links edit

federal, council, switzerland, federal, council, federal, cabinet, swiss, confederation, seven, members, also, serve, collective, head, state, government, switzerland, since, after, world, federal, council, convention, permanent, grand, coalition, government, . The Federal Council 1 is the federal cabinet of the Swiss Confederation Its seven members also serve as the collective head of state and government of Switzerland Since after World War II the Federal Council is by convention a permanent grand coalition government composed of representatives of the country s major parties and language regions Federal CouncilBundesrat German Conseil federal French Consiglio federale Italian Cussegl federal Romansh The 2024 Federal Council from left to right Viktor Rossi Federal Chancellor Elisabeth Baume SchneiderIgnazio CassisKarin Keller Sutter Vice President Viola Amherd President Guy ParmelinAlbert RostiBeat JansStyleHis Her ExcellencyStatusHead of stateHead of governmentAppointerFederal AssemblyTerm lengthFour years no term limitInaugural holderUlrich OchsenbeinJonas FurrerMartin J MunzingerHenri DrueyFriedrich Frey HeroseWilhelm Matthias NaeffStefano FransciniFormation1848 176 years ago 1848 Websiteadmin chWhile the entire Federal Council is responsible for leading the federal administration of Switzerland each Councillor heads one of the seven federal executive departments The President of the Swiss Confederation chairs the council but exercises no particular authority rather the position is one of a first among equals and rotates among the seven Councillors annually The Federal Council is elected as a body by the 246 members of the Federal Assembly of Switzerland for a term of four years after each federal parliamentary election without the possibility of recall or a vote of no confidence Incumbents are not term limited and are by convention almost always re elected most serve around 8 to 12 years in office Contents 1 Members 2 Origins and history of the Federal Council 2 1 Origins of the institution 2 2 Changes in composition 2 2 1 Party representation 2 2 1 1 Free Democratic hegemony 1848 1891 2 2 1 2 Emerging coalition government 1891 1959 2 2 1 3 Grand coalition 1959 2003 2 2 1 4 End of the grand coalition 2008 2 2 2 Women on the council 2 2 3 Regional balancing acts 3 Operation of the Federal Council 3 1 Presidency 3 2 Council meetings 3 3 Decisions and responsibilities 3 4 Secrecy 3 5 Constitutional conventions 3 6 Travels abroad 4 Election and composition 4 1 Election mode 4 2 Resignation 5 Status of Federal Councillors 5 1 Councillors lives 5 2 Councillors salary 5 3 Immunity 6 List of firsts in the Federal Council 7 Popularity 8 See also 9 Notes and references 10 Bibliography 11 External linksMembers editAs of 2024 update the members of the Federal Council are in order of seniority Member Portrait Joined Party Canton FunctionGuy Parmelin nbsp 1 January 2016 Swiss People s Party nbsp Vaud Head of the Federal Department of Economic Affairs Education and ResearchIgnazio Cassis nbsp 1 November 2017 The Liberals nbsp Ticino Head of the Federal Department of Foreign AffairsViola Amherd nbsp 1 January 2019 The Centre nbsp Valais President for 2024Head of the Federal Department of Defence Civil Protection and SportKarin Keller Sutter nbsp 1 January 2019 The Liberals nbsp St Gallen Vice President for 2024 Head of the Federal Department of FinanceAlbert Rosti nbsp 1 January 2023 Swiss People s Party nbsp Bern Head of the Federal Department of Environment Transport Energy and CommunicationsElisabeth Baume Schneider nbsp 1 January 2023 Social Democratic Party nbsp Jura Head of the Federal Department of Home AffairsBeat Jans nbsp 1 January 2024 Social Democratic Party nbsp Basel Stadt Head of the Federal Department of Justice and PoliceOrigins and history of the Federal Council editOrigins of the institution edit The Federal Council was instituted by the 1848 Federal Constitution as the supreme executive and directorial authority of the Confederation 2 When the Constitution was written constitutional democracy was still in its infancy and the founding fathers of Switzerland had little in the way of examples While they drew heavily on the United States Constitution for the organisation of the federal state as a whole they opted for the collegial rather than the presidential system for the executive branch of government directorial system This accommodated the long tradition of the rule of collective bodies in Switzerland Under the Ancien Regime the cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy had been governed by councils of pre eminent citizens since time immemorial and the later Helvetic Republic with its equivalent Directorate 3 as well as the cantons that had given themselves liberal constitutions since the 1830s had also had good experiences with that mode of governance 4 Today only three other states Bosnia and Herzegovina Andorra and San Marino have collective rather than unitary heads of state However the collegial system of government has found widespread adoption in modern democracies in the form of cabinet government with collective responsibility Changes in composition edit nbsp Composition of the Federal Council by political party 1919 to 2017The 1848 constitutional provision providing for the Federal Council and indeed the institution of the Council itself has remained unchanged to this day even though Swiss society has changed profoundly since Party representation edit Free Democratic hegemony 1848 1891 edit See also Switzerland as a federal state The 1848 Constitution was one of the few successes of the Europe wide democratic revolutions of 1848 In Switzerland the democratic movement was led and the new federal state decisively shaped by the Radicals presently the Free Democratic Party FDP After winning the Sonderbund War the Swiss civil war against the Catholic cantons the Radicals at first used their majority in the Federal Assembly to fill all the seats on the Federal Council This made their former war opponents the Catholic Conservatives presently the Christian Democratic People s Party CVP the opposition party Only after Emil Welti s resignation in 1891 after a failed referendum on railway nationalisation did the Radicals decide to co opt the Conservatives by supporting the election of Josef Zemp Emerging coalition government 1891 1959 edit The process of involving all major political movements of Switzerland into the responsibility of government continued during the first half of the 20th century It was hastened by the FDP s and CVP s gradually diminishing voter shares complemented by the rise of new parties of lesser power at the ends of the political spectrum These were the Social Democratic Party SP on the Left and the Party of Farmers Traders and Independents BGB presently the People s Party SVP on the Right In due course the CVP received its second seat in 1919 with Jean Marie Musy while the BGB joined the Council in 1929 with Rudolf Minger In 1943 during World War II the Social Democrats were also temporarily included with Ernst Nobs Grand coalition 1959 2003 edit Main article Magic formula Swiss politics The 1959 elections following the resignation of four Councillors finally established the Zauberformel the magical formula that determined the Council s composition during the rest of the 20th century and established the long standing nature of the Council as a permanent voluntary grand coalition 5 In approximate relation to the parties respective strength in the Federal Assembly the seats were distributed as follows Free Democratic Party FDP PRD 2 members Christian Democratic People s Party CVP PDC 2 members Social Democratic Party SP PS 2 members Swiss People s Party SVP UDC 1 member During that time the FDP PRD and CVP PDC very slowly but steadily kept losing voter share to the SVP UDC and SP PS respectively which overtook the older parties in popularity during the 1990s End of the grand coalition 2008 edit Main article 2007 Swiss Federal Council electionThe governmental balance was changed after the 2003 elections when the SVP UDC was granted a Council seat for their leader Christoph Blocher that had formerly belonged to the CVP PDC s Ruth Metzler Due to controversies surrounding his conduct in office a narrow Assembly majority did not reelect Blocher in 2007 and chose instead Eveline Widmer Schlumpf a more moderate SVP UDC politician against party policy This led to a split of the SVP UDC in 2008 After liberal regional SVP UDC groups including Federal Councillors Widmer Schlumpf and Samuel Schmid founded a new Conservative Democratic Party the SVP UDC was left in opposition for the first time since 1929 but returned into the Council with the election of Ueli Maurer on 10 December 2008 who regained the seat previously held by Schmid who had resigned The SVP UDC regained its second seat on the Council in 2015 when Widmer Schlumpf decided to resign after the SVP UDC s large election gains in the 2015 election being replaced by Guy Parmelin 6 7 Women on the council edit Women gained suffrage on the federal level in 1971 They remained unrepresented in the Federal Council for three further legislatures until the 1984 election of Elisabeth Kopp In 1983 the failed election of the first official female candidate Lilian Uchtenhagen and again in 1993 the failed election of Christiane Brunner both SP PS was controversial and the Social Democrats each time considered withdrawing from the council altogether 5 There were two female councillors serving simultaneously for the first time in 1999 and three out of seven councillors were women from 2007 till 2010 when Simonetta Sommaruga was elected as the fourth woman in government in place of Moritz Leuenberger putting men in minority for the first time in history Also remarkable is the fact that the eighth non voting member of government the chancellor who sets the government agenda was also a woman In total there have been ten female councillors in the period 1989 to present 8 The first woman councillor was Elisabeth Kopp FDP PRD elected 1984 resigned in 1989 Ruth Dreifuss SP PS served from 1993 to 2002 was the first woman to become President of the Confederation in 1999 Since her election there has always been at least one woman on the council Ruth Metzler Metzler Arnold at the time CVP PDC served from 1999 to 2003 and was not re elected to a second term see above Upon her election two women served on the council simultaneously for the first time Micheline Calmy Rey SP PS was elected in 2003 and served until 2011 Doris Leuthard CVP PDC was elected in 2006 and served until 2018 Eveline Widmer Schlumpf was elected in December 2007 and served until December 2015 Simonetta Sommaruga was elected in September 2010 Together with Micheline Calmy Rey Doris Leuthard and Eveline Widmer Schlumpf women were in the majority in the Federal Council for the first time until January 2012 when Alain Berset replaced Micheline Calmy Rey 9 Karin Keller Sutter and Viola Amherd were elected on 5 December 2018 and are currently on the council Elisabeth Baume Schneider was elected on 7 December 2022 and is the most recent woman to be elected to the council Regional balancing acts edit Until 1999 the Constitution mandated that no canton could have multiple representatives on the Federal Council at the same time For most of Swiss history the canton of any given councillor was determined by their place of origin but starting in 1987 this was changed to the canton from which they were elected for former members of the Federal Assembly or cantonal legislative or executive bodies or place of residence 10 Nothing prevented candidates from moving to politically expedient cantons this was one of the motivators for abolishing the rule At the 1999 Swiss referendums the Constitution was changed to require an equitable distribution of seats among the cantons and language groups of the country without setting concrete quotas Since the rule against Federal Councillors being from the same canton was abolished there have been a few examples of it happening The first time was from 2003 to 2007 when both Moritz Leuenberger and Christoph Blocher from the canton of Zurich were in office It happened again between 2010 and 2018 starting when Simonetta Sommaruga and Johann Schneider Ammann from the canton of Bern were elected in 2010 9 As of 2023 four cantons have never been represented on the Federal Council Nidwalden Schaffhausen Schwyz Uri The canton of Jura is the most recent canton to be represented It is currently being represented by Elisabeth Baume Schneider since 1 January 2023 With the Council s constitution in 2023 the constitutional requirement that languages and regions be appropriately balanced is under increased strain Latin speakers people who either speak French Italian or Romansh form a majority on the Council despite more than seventy percent of the Swiss citizens speaking German as a first language Likewise all Federal Councillors as of 2023 did not grow up in an urban area with the exception of Karin Keller Sutter who spent some school years in Neuchatel NE Whenever a member resigns they are generally replaced by someone who is not only from the same party but also the same language group In 2006 however Joseph Deiss a French speaker resigned and was succeeded by Doris Leuthard a German speaker In 2016 Eveline Widmer Schlumpf a German speaker was succeeded by Guy Parmelin a French speaker and most recently in 2023 German speaking Simmonetta Sommaruga was replaced by French speaking Elisabeth Baume Schneider Historically at least two Council seats have been held by French or Italian speakers The language makeup of the Council as of 2022 is four German speakers two French speakers and one Italian speaker In November 2017 Ignazio Cassis became the first Italian speaker to serve on the Council since 1999 For elections to the Federal Council candidates are usually helped by a high degree of fluency in German French and Italian Operation of the Federal Council editPresidency edit nbsp The interior of the west wing of the Federal Palace in Berne where the Council meetings are held nbsp Meeting of the Federal Council in 2006Each year one of the seven Councillors is elected by the United Federal Assembly as President of the Confederation 11 The Federal Assembly also elects a Vice President of Switzerland By convention the positions of President and Vice President rotate annually each Councillor thus becoming Vice President and then President every seven years while in office According to the Swiss order of precedence the President of the Confederation is the highest ranking Swiss official They preside over Council meetings and carry out certain representative functions that in other countries are the business of a head of state 12 In urgent situations where a Council decision cannot be made in time they are empowered to act on behalf of the whole Council Apart from that though they are primus inter pares having no power above and beyond the other six Councillors 11 The President is not the Swiss head of state this function is carried out by the Council in corpore that is in its entirety However in recent practice the President acts and is recognised as head of state while conducting official visits abroad as the Council also by convention does not leave the country in corpore More often though official visits abroad are carried out by the head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs Visiting heads of state are received by the Federal Council in corpore Council meetings edit nbsp Before a meeting 1987The Federal Council operates mainly through weekly meetings which are held each Wednesday at the Federal Palace in Bern 12 the seat of the Swiss federal government Apart from the seven Councillors the following officials also attend the meetings Federal Chancellor Viktor Rossi As government chief of staff and head of the Federal Chancellery he participates in the discussion but has no vote in the Council s decisions 12 Nonetheless his influential position is often referred to as that of an eighth Federal Councillor the Vice Chancellor Andre Simonazzi Simonazzi is the spokesman of the Federal Council and conducts the weekly press briefing after the meeting the Vice Chancellor Jorg De Bernardi who is in charge of the Federal Council sector within the Swiss Federal Chancellery During the meetings the Councillors address each other formally e g Mrs Sommaruga Mr Berset even though they are on first name terms with each other This is done to separate the items on the agenda from the person promoting them After the meetings the Councillors take lunch together The Council also meets regularly in conclave to discuss important topics at length it annually conducts what is colloquially referred to as its field trip a day trip to some attractions in the President s home canton In that and other respects the Council operates like a board of directors of a major corporation citation needed Decisions and responsibilities edit Each Federal Councillor heads a government department much like the ministers in the governments of other countries 13 Colloquially and by the press especially outside Switzerland they are often referred to as ministers even though no such post formally exists For example the head of the Federal Department of Defence Civil Protection and Sports is often called the Swiss defence minister even though no such post officially exists However as Council members they are not only responsible for their own department but also for the business of their colleagues departments as well as for the conduct of the government and the federal administration as a whole Decisions to be taken by the Council are always prepared by the responsible department 12 Accordingly a change in the salaries of federal employees would be proposed to the Council by the head of the Federal Department of Finance to whose department the Federal Office of Personnel belongs Before a vote is taken at a Council meeting though all proposals are circulated in writing to the heads of departments who commission the senior career officials of their department the heads of the Federal Offices to prepare a written response to offer criticism and suggestions This is called the co report procedure Mitberichtsverfahren procedure de co rapport designed to build a wide consensus ahead of a Council meeting 14 To prepare for important decisions an additional public consultation is sometimes conducted to which the cantons the political parties and major interest groups are invited and in which all members of the public can participate If a change in a federal statute is to be proposed to the Federal Assembly this step is mandated by law In such cases the consultation procedure also serves to identify political concerns that could later be the focus of a popular referendum to stop passage of the bill at issue The decisions themselves are formally taken by voice vote by a majority of the Councillors present at a meeting However the great majority of decisions are arrived at by consensus even though lately there is said to be a trend towards more contentious discussions and close votes by whom Secrecy edit The meetings of the Federal Council and the result of the votes taken are not open to the public and the records remain sealed for 50 years This has lately been the subject of some criticism In particular the parties at the ends of the political spectrum argue that this secrecy is contrary to the principle of transparency However the Council has always maintained that secrecy is necessary to arrive at consensus and to preserve the collegiality and political independence of the individual Councillors Constitutional conventions edit Due to the Federal Council s unique nature as a voluntary grand coalition of political opponents its operation is subject to numerous constitutional conventions Most notable is the principle of collegiality that is the Councillors are not supposed to publicly criticise one another even though they are often political opponents In effect they are expected to publicly support all decisions of the Council even against their own personal opinion or that of their political party 12 In the eye of many observers this convention has become rather strained after the 2003 elections see below Travels abroad edit Due to the fact that technically no sole federal councillor but rather the entire council in corpore is the Swiss head of state 15 Federal Councillors did for a long time not travel abroad in official business In other countries Switzerland was nearly exclusively represented by diplomats 16 After the assassination of John F Kennedy the Federal Councillors convened an urgent meeting where they discussed sending a Councillor to Kennedy s funeral Given that the absence of the Swiss government would not be understood by the population they decided to send Friedrich Traugott Wahlen On his travel to the U S capital Wahlen also met with Secretary of State Dean Rusk to discuss tariffs Despite the opening of Switzerland due to the Kennedy assassination foreign travels of Federal Councillors were only normalized after the dissolution of the USSR 17 Election and composition editMain article 2023 Swiss Federal Council election The most recent federal council elections were held on 13 December 2023 Federal Council Alain Berset and Federal Chancellor Walter Turnherr had both announced that they would not be seeking reelection The other Federal Councillors were all reelected the FDP councillors seats were unsuccessfully attacked by the green party The following councillors were reelected Guy Parmelin SVP VD since 2016 head of the Federal Department of Economic Affairs Education and Research elected with 215 out of 233 votes cast Ignazio Cassis FDP TI since 2017 head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs elected with 167 out of 239 votes cast Viola Amherd DM VS since 2019 head of the Federal Department of Defence Civil Protection and Sport elected with 201 out of 228 votes cast Karin Keller Sutter FDP SG since 2019 head of the Federal Department of Finance elected with 176 out of 224 votes cast Albert Rosti SVP BE since 2023 head of the Federal Department of Environment Transport Energy and Communications elected with 189 out of 217 votes cast Elisabeth Baume Schneider SP JU since 2023 head of the Federal Department of Justice and Police elected with 151 out of 216 votes cast Following the resignation of Alain Berset as of 31 December 2023 replacement elections were held Beat Jans SP BS elected in the third round of voting with 134 out of 245 votes cast In addition Viktor Rossi GLP was newly elected as Federal Chancellor with 135 out of 245 votes cast in the second round of voting Additionally Viola Amherd was elected President of the Swiss confederation for the year 2024 and Karin Keller Sutter was elected Vice president of the Federal Council for the year 2024 Following the elections there was a departmental reshuffle Elisabeth Baume Schneider took over the Federal Department of Home Affairs vacated by Alain Berset and newly elected Beat Jans took over Baume Schneiders Justice and Police Department Election mode edit nbsp 2006 election of the Federal Council in the Federal AssemblyThe members of the Federal Council are elected for a term of four years by both chambers of the Federal Assembly sitting together as the United Federal Assembly Each Federal Council seat is up for re election in the order of seniority beginning with the Councillor who had the longest term of office The office holders are then elected individually by secret ballot by an absolute majority of the valid votes Every adult Swiss citizen is eligible and could even be elected against his own will but in practice only members of Parliament or more rarely members of cantonal governments are nominated by the political parties and receive a substantial number of votes The voting is conducted in several rounds under a form of exhaustive ballot 18 In the two first rounds any adult Swiss citizen with voting right is eligible At the issue of the second round eligible for the third round is anybody who has received at least ten votes At the issue of the third and later rounds if necessary the candidates with less than ten votes are excluded or the candidate with the lowest vote count is excluded No such exclusion takes place when two or more candidates share a lowest vote count at least equalling 10 After the election is concluded the winner holds a short speech and accepts or refuses the office of Federal Councillor The oath of office is then taken even then the regular term of office only begins a few weeks later on 1st January Usually the party which has a seat to fill presents two candidates with mainstream viewpoints to the United Federal Assembly which then chooses one This was not so however during the 2003 election which was the most controversial in recent memory Until the end of the 19th century it was informally required of Federal Councillors to be elected to the National Council in their canton of origin every four years to put their popularity to a test This practice was known under the French term of election de compliment The first Councillor who failed to be reelected Ulrich Ochsenbein lost his election to the National Council in 1854 Once elected Councillors remain members of their political parties but hold no leading office with them In fact they usually maintain a certain political distance from the party leadership because under the rules of collegiality they will often have to publicly promote a Council decision which does not match the political conviction of their party or of themselves Resignation edit Once elected for a four year term Federal Councillors can neither be voted out of office by a motion of no confidence nor can they be impeached Reelection is possible for an indefinite number of terms it has historically been extremely rare for Parliament not to reelect a sitting Councillor This has only happened four times to Ulrich Ochsenbein in 1854 to Jean Jacques Challet Venel in 1872 to Ruth Metzler in 2003 and to Christoph Blocher in 2007 19 In practice therefore Councillors serve until they decide to resign and retire to private life usually after three to five terms of office Status of Federal Councillors editCouncillors lives edit nbsp Faces in the Crowd In keeping with the spirit of Swiss direct democracy the 2008 official photograph of the Federal Council depicted them as everymen nbsp Federal Councillor Ignazio Cassis speaks in 2019 accompanied by a BundesweibelUnlike most senior members of government in other countries the Federal Councillors are not entitled to an official residence however the Federal Palace houses living apartments for both the Federal Chancellor and President of the Confederation Mostly they have chosen to rent apartments or hotel suites in Bern at their own expense However they are entitled to use the Federal Council s country estate Lohn for holidays this estate is also used to host official guests of the Swiss Confederation While Councillors can draw on an Army security detail if they need personal protection in particular during official events it is more usual to encounter them without any escort at all in the streets restaurants and tramways of Bern 20 and Ueli Maurer was known to use the bicycle on most days from his apartment in Munsingen to the Federal Palace in Bern 21 Councillors are also entitled to a personal bailiff huissier or Bundesweibel who accompanies them in a red and white ceremonial uniform to official events The spouses of Councillors do not play an official part in the business of government apart from accompanying the Councillors to official receptions Councillors salary edit Federal councillors receive an annual salary of CHF 456 854 about EUR 471 000 USD 529 000 plus another CHF 30 000 annually for expenses 22 The councillors pay tax on this income 23 Former councillors with at least four years of service receive a pension equivalent to half the salary of Federal Council members in office 23 If a councillor leaves office for health reasons they may receive this pension even if their length of service was less than three years 23 Councillors who leave their offices after less than four years may also receive a partial pension 23 After leaving office former federal councillors frequently pursue some other lucrative activity but their earnings when added to the pension they receive as an ex federal councillor may not exceed the salary of a federal councillor in office otherwise their pension is reduced accordingly 23 Serving federal councillors enjoy a certain number of special benefits from free telephone contracts to a chauffeur driven car for official business a courtesy car for personal use or the use of federal planes and helicopters for official business trips Each member of the Federal Council also has the right to a first class SBB GA travelcard also in retirement They are also given personal security which is often very discreet 23 nbsp First Federal Council with a majority of women 2010 Immunity edit Federal Councillors like members of parliament enjoy absolute legal immunity for all statements made in their official capacity 24 Prosecution for crimes and misdemeanors that relate to the Councillors official capacity requires the assent of the immunity commissions of the Federal Assembly In such cases Parliament can also suspend the Councillor in office but not actually remove them 25 According to statements to the media by a Federal Chancellory official 26 in none of the few cases of accusations against a Federal Councillor has the permission to prosecute ever been granted Such cases usually involved statements considered offensive by members of the public However one unnamed Councillor involved in a traffic accident immediately prior to his date of resignation was reported to have voluntarily waived his immunity and Councillor Elisabeth Kopp decided to resign upon facing an inquiry over allegations of secrecy violations List of firsts in the Federal Council edit nbsp The first seven members elected 18481848 The first seven members elected Ulrich Ochsenbein Jonas Furrer Martin J Munzinger Henri Druey Friedrich Frey Herose Wilhelm Matthias Naeff and Stefano Franscini 1854 First of only four so far sitting Federal Councillor not to be reelected Ulrich Ochsenbein 1855 The first elected Councillor to refuse the office Johann Jakob Stehlin 1875 Louis Ruchonnet wins the election but refuses the office In a repeated election Charles Estoppey wins but refuses too In a third election Numa Droz is elected and accepts the office He still is the youngest person to have ever served on the Federal Council 1891 First Councillor of the Christian Democratic People s Party of Switzerland Josef Zemp 1893 First member whose father was a member of the Council Eugene Ruffy son of Victor Ruffy In 2007 the second is elected Eveline Widmer Schlumpf the daughter of Leon Schlumpf 1911 First and only octogenarian in office Adolf Deucher FDP 1913 First and only native Romansh speaker Felix Calonder FDP 1917 First and only Councillor of the Liberal Party elected Gustave Ador 1917 1919 First majority of Romance speaking Councillors making German speakers a minority Gustave Ador Giuseppe Motta Camille Decoppet and Felix Louis Calonder This would happen again more than hundred years later in 2023 1930 First Councillor of the Party of Farmers Traders and Independents BGB PAI now the Swiss People s Party Rudolf Minger 1943 First Councillor of the Social Democratic Party SP Ernst Nobs 1973 First Councillor of the working class Willi Ritschard of the SP He was trained as a heating engineer his father was a shoemaker 27 28 1983 First female candidate for the Council from a government party Lilian Uchtenhagen SP 1984 First woman Councillor Elisabeth Kopp FDP 1993 Ruth Dreifuss SP is elected the first Jewish Councillor 1995 First Councillor living in a domestic partnership Moritz Leuenberger SP with architect Gret Loewensberg whom he later married 1999 First woman President of the Confederation Ruth Dreifuss SP 2010 First majority of women in the Swiss Federal Council with the election of Simonetta Sommaruga SP 2019 After 1900 the overwhelming majority of the Federal Councillors had an academic education From January 2019 until December 2022 non academics featured a majority Ueli Maurer salesman accountant Guy Parmelin high school diploma farmer Simonetta Sommaruga high school diploma concert pianist and Karin Keller Sutter trade school translator Popularity editAs of August 2022 half of the Swiss population was satisfied with the Federal Council 29 See also editList of members of the Swiss Federal Council by date of election List of members of the Swiss Federal Council by date by first day in office Composition of the Swiss Federal Council Category Members of the Federal Council Switzerland alphabetical list List of presidents of the Swiss Confederation Hotel Bellevue Palace Government and Administration Organisation Act Switzerland Federal act Switzerland Notes and references edit German Bundesrat French Conseil federal Italian Consiglio federale Romansh Cussegl federal dCst art 174 Archived from the original on 8 December 2010 Retrieved 17 March 2006 See Directorate in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Departments Development on the Federal Level in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Collegial System in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland a b Zauberformel in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Jaberg Samuel Stephens Thomas 28 October 2015 Finance Minister Eveline Widmer Schlumpf to Stand Down Swissinfo Retrieved 12 January 2016 Mombelli Armando 10 December 2015 People s Party Gains Second Seat in Cabinet Swissinfo Retrieved 12 January 2016 Swiss Federal Council 16 June 2023 Frauen im Bundesrat women on the Federal Council a b Elections produce female majority in cabinet Swissinfo ch SRG SSR Idee Suisse 22 September 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2010 See Federal Council in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland a b Information services of the Federal Chancellery 2008 The Swiss Confederation a brief guide 2008 p 42 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c d e Information services of the Federal Chancellery 2008 The Swiss Confederation a brief guide 2008 p 43 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Information services of the Federal Chancellery 2008 The Swiss Confederation a brief guide 2008 pp 44 45 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Information services of the Federal Chancellery 2008 The Swiss Confederation a brief guide 2008 p 46 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Protocol Regulations for the Swiss Confederation PDF www eda admin ch Archived PDF from the original on 20 March 2018 Retrieved 31 August 2023 Erst eine Leiche hat die Schweizer Aussenpolitik verandert Only a dead body has changed Swiss foreign policy in German Tages Anzeiger 16 May 2019 Das Kennedy Attentat und der Bundesrat The Kennedy Assassination and the Federal Council in German Neue Zurcher Zeitung 13 November 2013 Law on the federal parliament Art 132 and 133 Information services of the Federal Chancellery 2008 The Swiss Confederation a brief guide 2008 p 13 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Information services of the Federal Chancellery 2008 The Swiss Confederation a brief guide 2008 p 41 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Bundesrat Maurer fahrt mit dem Fahrrad zur Arbeit Pilatus Today 15 June 2015 Retrieved 8 December 2022 Council The Federal How much does a federal councillor earn www admin ch Retrieved 15 July 2023 a b c d e f Federal councillors salaries and benefits Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Art 2 of the Federal Law on the Responsibility of the Confederation and its Members of Authorities and Functionaries Art 14 of the Federal Law on the Responsibility of the Confederation and its Members of Authorities and Functionaries Jurg Sohm 30 May 2006 Bisher stets immun Wegen Albisguetli Rede steht die Immunitat von Christoph Blocher erneut zur Debatte in German Der Bund Klare Sprache und viel Herz Willi Ritschard wurde 100 Jahre alt SWI swissinfo ch in German 27 September 2018 Retrieved 11 December 2022 Ritschard Willi La confiance populaire dans le Conseil federal baisse Le Temps 29 August 2022 Bibliography editFederal Council in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland The Swiss Confederation A brief guide 2006 2009 edited by the Swiss Federal Chancellery Resultate der Wahlen des Bundesrats der Bundeskanzler und des Generals compiled by the services of the Swiss Parliament Clive H Church 2004 The Politics and Government of Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 333 69277 2 Altermatt Urs 1993 Conseil Federal Dictionnaire biographique des cent premiers conseillers federaux Cabedita Yens ISBN 2 88295 104 3External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Swiss Federal Council nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Switzerland Government Official website Federal Council in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Portals nbsp Politics nbsp Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Council Switzerland amp oldid 1205969528, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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