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Swiss Federal Council elections of 12 December 2007

Swiss Federal Council election, 2007
Switzerland
← 2006 12 December 2007 2008 →

All 7 seats to the Swiss Federal Council
  First party Second party
  Pascal Couchepin, 2009.jpg Moritz Leuenberger, 2010.jpg
Leader Pascal Couchepin Moritz Leuenberger
Party Free Democrats Social Democrats
Seat change ±0 ±0

  Third party Fourth party
  BR-Samuel-Schmid.jpg Doris Leuthard, 2010.jpg
Leader Samuel Schmid Doris Leuthard
Party Swiss People's Christian Democrats
Seat change ±0 ±0

President before election

Micheline Calmy-Rey
Social Democrats

Elected President

Pascal Couchepin
Free Democrats


Micheline Calmy-Rey
Social Democrats

Pascal Couchepin
Free Democrats

On December 12, 2007, all seven members of the Federal Council, the government of Switzerland, were elected by the joint chambers of the Federal Assembly for the 2008–2012 term of office. Councillors are elected individually by an absolute majority of votes, with the incumbent councillors defending their seats in descending order of seniority.

All seven incumbents were running for re-election. All were re-elected, with the exception of Christoph Blocher, the councillor from the Swiss People's Party (SVP). The Federal Assembly elected Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf in Blocher's place, who accepted her election on the following morning. Pascal Couchepin was elected President of the Swiss Confederation for 2008, and Hans-Rudolf Merz, instead of Blocher, was elected Vice President of the Federal Council for 2008.

As a result of the non-election of their official candidate Christoph Blocher, the People's Party declared itself an opposition party and excluded its nominal representatives on the Federal Council, Samuel Schmid and Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, from its parliamentary group.

In the 2007 Swiss federal elections, the SVP expanded their share of votes again, mostly at the expense of the Social Democrats (SPS). Christoph Blocher, the de facto leader of the SVP, had become embroiled in a political scandal over the circumstances of the resignation of federal chief prosecutor Valentin Roschacher in 2006. However, a parliamentary oversight commission controlled by his political opponents failed to implicate him in any substantial wrongdoing. Under these circumstances, it was generally assumed that any attempt by the center-left parties in Parliament to unseat him must fail, even though Blocher had made many personal opponents with his confrontational political style.


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