Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, has narrowly navigated a politically symbolic but institutionally serious motion of censure tabled by the far-right Patriots for Europe group. Although the motion failed—as expected—it has revealed the growing strain between the Commission and the centrist blocs that ensured von der Leyen’s ascent in 2019.
During Tuesday’s plenary session of the European Parliament in Strasbourg, MEPs rejected the censure motion by 360 votes to 175, with 18 abstentions. The proposal fell well short of the two-thirds majority required to trigger the Commission’s collective resignation, rendering its procedural threat minimal but its political message unambiguous.
At the heart of the dispute lies von der Leyen’s gradual ideological drift toward more right-leaning policy positions—a move that has unsettled the pro-European coalition that delivered her presidency. While the European People’s Party (EPP), to which von der Leyen belongs, mobilised to defend the Commission, support from the Renew Europe and Socialists & Democrats (S&D) groups came with visible hesitation and mounting frustration.
The Renew group, led by liberals, had made its position clear early on: they would not align with a far-right initiative, even as their reservations about von der Leyen’s policy concessions to conservative forces intensified. Their vote, however, is not to be read as a renewal of trust but rather as a conscious firewall against democratic backsliding.
Similarly, the S&D group—whose discontent with the Commission has been steadily growing—initially floated abstention but ultimately chose to vote against the motion, having extracted last-minute policy commitments. Chief among these was von der Leyen’s pledge to integrate the European Social Fund (ESF) into the EU’s revised Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), a significant concession that underscores the fragile bargaining equilibrium in today’s Parliament.
A Historical Echo
While the current censure motion lacked real prospects of passing, it evoked one of the most consequential episodes in the institutional history of the European Union. In 1999, the Santer Commission—already weakened by accusations of nepotism and mismanagement—was brought to the brink by mounting pressure from the European Parliament, especially following scandals tied to French Commissioner Edith Cresson.
Although an official motion of censure failed in February 1999—with 232 MEPs in favour, 293 against, and 27 abstentions—the writing was on the wall. Merely two weeks later, the S&D group withdrew its political support, leading to the Commission’s collective resignation. This precedent remains the only instance of a forced Commission exit and serves as a constitutional reminder of the Parliament’s latent institutional leverage, even when formal thresholds are not met.
>Related articles
In that case, it was Romano Prodi who inherited the task of restoring public trust in the EU executive.
Reading the Present
Today’s failed censure is not likely to alter the trajectory of von der Leyen’s presidency in procedural terms. Yet the underlying political arithmetic is changing. The once-reliable pro-European majority, which spans centrist, liberal, and centre-left formations, is showing signs of structural fatigue—its cohesion now increasingly dependent on transactional negotiations and last-minute compromises.
The vote has, in effect, drawn a line under von der Leyen’s political capital within the Parliament. If she is to secure a second term, or even complete the current one with institutional stability, she will need to recalibrate not just her policy tone but her entire strategic alignment within an increasingly fragmented European political landscape.
Ask me anything
Explore related questions