MP Adrian Severin. Photo: Agerpres.: Investigation in The European Parliament
MP Adrian Severin. Photo: Agerpres.: Investigation in The European Parliament
MP Adrian Severin. Photo: Agerpres.: Investigation in The European Parliament
European Socialists after the British newspaper The Sunday Times accused him and two other MPs of
corruption.
Adrian Severin is retiring from the Party of the European Socialists until the investigation the authorities in Brussels
launched after the MP together with two fellow colleagues were accused of corruption.
Adrian Severin made the announcement on Monday, after having a discussion with the leader of the Group of the
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament, Martin Schultz.
According to the Radio România reporter, Claudia Marcu, Adrian Severin would not resign but retire from the
Socialist Party.
Adrian Severin stated that "you cannot present your resignation unless you approve that the allegations are true. And
the fact that some people are influenced to believe that these allegations are true, is not a good reason either to
resign but to start an investigation."
Adrian Severin became a Member of the European Parliament as a PSD representative in 2007.
Diana Wallis, the Vice-President of the institution in which transparency is the main responsibility stated for Radio
România that Adrian Severin, Ernst Strasse and Zoran Thaler would be investigated by the European Parliament
based on the documents put at their disposal by the daily The Sunday Times.
Diana Wallis stated that they would not only investigate the separate cases, but especially "the wider consequences
upon the institution".
Diana Wallis added that on Wednesday the case of the three MPs would be discussed within the European
Parliament.
MP Marian Jean Marinescu(the Liberal Democratic Party) stated that the incident would tarnish the image of the
Parliament.
Marian Jean Marinescu underlined that "the repercussions that this image will have upon our activity and us as a
people’ were the worst side of the whole situation.
Meanwhile, in Bucharest, the leader of the Democratic Socialist Party, Victor Ponta, stated that the party was waiting
for the result of the investigation conducted by the European Parliament regarding Adrian Severin.
Victor Ponta pointed out that PSD would immediately apply the decision of European Parliament, whatever that may
be.
Adrian Severin announced that he was retiring from the PSD National Permanent Bureau until the investigation was
concluded.
The NAD attorneys decided to start their own investigation on the possibility of Adrian Severin being involved in
corruption.
Adrian Severin is also being investigated by the National Integrity Agency for anomalies in his wealth statement.
the strengthening of the socialist and social democratic movement in the Union and throughout Europe;
the development of close working relationships between the national parties, the national parliamentary
groups, the Parliamentary Group of the PES, PES Women, ECOSY, and other socialist and social democratic
organisations;
the definition of common policies for the European Union; and
the adoption of a common manifesto for elections to the European Parliament.
There are 33 full member parties from the 27 EU member States and Norway. In addition, there are twelve associate
and five observer parties. The PES was founded in 1992 following the Treaty on European Union and the
recognition of the importance of political parties at a European level in Article 191 of the Treaty. It succeeded the
Confederation of Socialist Parties of the European Community, which had been set up in 1974.
2009 Accounts
2009 auditor's report
2009 annual balance
2008 Accounts
2008 auditor's report
2008 balance
2007 Accounts
2006 Accounts
How does the PES work?
The Congress, which meets twice every five years, decides on the political orientation of the PES and elects
the President and the Vice-President(s), who lead and represent the PES on a daily basis. Every year without a
Congress, the Councilcontributes to the shaping of PES policy.
The Leaders’ Conference gathers Prime Ministers and Party Leaders from PES Member parties 3 to 4 times a year to
define the strategy and adopt common resolutions.
The Presidency, elected by the Congress, is the highest organ for the management of the day-to-day business of the
PES. The Secretary General also convenes theCo-ordination Team to discuss the planning, preparation, follow-up
and financing of PES activities. The Secretariat, based in Brussels, ensures the daily running of the PES.
ECOSY and PES Women are respectively the Youth and the Women’s organization of the PES.
The President
The PES is the Party of socialists and social democrats in Europe. I am proud and honoured to be its President since
2004. Since I started, the PES has been modernising, changing and innovating to become a more open, democratic,
influential and effective Party for socialists and social democrats in Europe and for the benefit of all Europe’s
citizens.
We are facing tough times. The real economy has been hit by the crisis of the global financial markets. People in
Europe are uncertain about their jobs, pensions and mortgages. We are uncertain about our future. But this crisis is
not a law of nature. Together, we can do something about it.
The Congress
The Congress of the PES meets twice every five years. The responsibilities of the Congress include: electing the
President, adopting changes to the statutes and to the membership status of parties. When the Congress takes place
before European elections, it adopts a common manifesto for those elections.
There have been seven Congresses to date: The Hague (1992), Barcelona (1995), Malmö
(1997), Milan (1999), Berlin (2001), Brussels (2004), Porto (2006) and Prague(2009).
PES Congress, Prague, 7-8 December 2009
The PES Congress is a major gathering of European socialist, social-democrats and labour members. It meets twice
every five years and brings together over 330 delegates from the PES member parties and numerous guests and PES
activists. The responsibilities of the Congress include: deciding on the political orientation of the PES, electing the
President and adopting changes to the statutes and to the membership status of parties.
In 2009 the Congress took place in Prague, Czech Republic on 7-8 December and it was be the starting point of a
broad debate on the European Left for the 21st century.
Putting in practice its approach towards limiting climate change, the PES decided tooffset its staff's CO2 emissions.
Following the success of the PES Councils in 2008 and 2007 and PES Congress in 2006, where PES activists were a
lively presence that marked a new way of integrating grassroots into European politics, activists were invited to take
part to this important socialist gathering.
The Council
The Council meets every year without a Congress to debate issues. Its composition is one fourth of the Congress.
The Conservative majority of the EU, decided last week in the European Council to keep running their austerity-
only way out of the crisis. The PES opposition to this policy found fresh allies in the European business community
and the US Administration, who fear Merkel’s recessionary vision could strangle the way to recovery. Against such
a conservative approach, the PES calls for aEuropean Debt Agency to be 'seriously explored') by the EU. The
mechanism is based on the simple principle that this agency would buy national debt in the form of bonds and then
sell them as Euro-bonds on the financial markets.
The leaders of social democratic and socialist parties around Europe last night agreed a political statement which
calls on the European Council to ‘Get Europe Working Again’. The text critisizes the direction that Europe has
taken stating that; “Under Conservative direction, there has been a misguided response, largely based on public
budget cuts and austerity measures that threaten long term recovery, employment and social cohesion. It is an
attempt to strangle our way back to good economic health”.
PES Prime Ministers’ and Leaders’ Declaration adopted on 16th June 2010:
“Let’s get Europe Working Again”
The European Union has, over the last six months, undergone a sustained period of crisis. Under Conservative
direction, there has been a misguided response, largely based on public budget cuts and austerity measures that
threaten long term recovery, employment and social cohesion. It is an attempt to ‘strangle our way back to good
economic health’. It will not work. Indeed, when austerity measures begin also to be implemented by countries in
good economic health, one must ask if these measures are nothing less than a conservative assault on the welfare
state.
Having practically all EU member states simultaneously implementing austerity measures, is simply a guarantee for
a slump in growth and a return to recession. It will lead to an extra 4.5 million job lost by 2013. Europe is the only
major trading area pursuing an imbalanced ‘austerity only’ approach.
There is another way. The Party of European Socialists (PES) proposes a more balanced approach. Our way
would result in a more effective consolidation of public finances than the ideologically driven conservative
approach. Our approach prioritizes job creation, which is the most important indicator of recovery and sustainable
growth. It is an approach based on recognizing the need for budget consolidation, but also the role of public
investment.
Unemployment in Europe is heading for the 25 million mark. The EU is at risk of losing a generation of young
people to long-term unemployment. As a consequence, European society is at risk of losing this generation to
political apathy or, worse, to political extremism.
The European Council has the opportunity to take far reaching decisions on economic governance, financial
regulation and climate change. It also has an opportunity to make poverty reduction, social inclusion and decent
work a central pillar of the EU’s long-term strategy. It is unclear if the Conservative dominated Council has the
political courage to make real progress on any of these subjects.
Political leaders in Europe must illustrate that they can react to crisis in ways that actually create more job
opportunities, as have been done in other parts of the world also hit by the global financial crisis. It is time to
revitalise the European decision-making process. It is time for the European Union Governments to develop a
real economic union, to rediscover solidarity and to identify a collective way out of the crisis.
The PES, supported by the hard work of the Spanish EU Presidency, has a proven track record on concrete actions
for the Euro-zone crisis. The PES has first identified and promoted the Financial Transaction Tax and a bank levy as
new sources for much needed tax revenue, but also a balanced and fair measure to make those that caused the crisis
contribute to its handling. The PES also was first to call for the European Financial Stability Facility and the
emergency stability mechanism.
We, PES leaders, also believe that there is a need for budget consolidation. But itmust be combined with economic
recovery and structural reform. Both revenue measures and expenditure measures need to be socially balanced. In
particular, cuts in welfare systems, with its dire consequences on social cohesion and gender equality should be
avoided. What we need is an alternative way, in which a tax on financial transactions and a bank levy play a
complementary and central part. In this context, a collective European debt mechanism, otherwise known as
“Eurobonds”, should also be put on the political agenda.
The European Union now needs to move from crisis management to long term recovery and sustainable
development. On the basis of the declarations on a Progressive Way out of the Crisis and on priorities for the
Europe 2020 Strategy, as adopted by the PES Presidency and the Group in the European Parliament, and the
annexed PES policy paper, we, the Prime Ministers and Leaders of the PES, call for:
a coordinated economic policy that recognises that the EU is a single trading area, not a disparate
collection of competing member states;
a long-term ‘Europe 2020’ strategy that puts social justice, poverty reduction, green growth and jobs at
the centre, reinforcing a sustainable way out of the crisis;
effective and urgent financial regulation, including strengthening European supervisory authorities; more
transparent and tighter control of derivatives products and speculative actors, such as hedge funds and private
equity; regulating private rating agencies; and the creation of a European independent rating agency;
a clear response to the EU sovereign debt crisis, in which a system of Eurobonds, , managed by
a European debt agency, for handling existing debt, facilitating future debt management and protecting against
speculative attacks, should be seriously explored. This could provide relief to national budgets and be combined
with clear political conditionalities to ensure sound economic and sustainable growth. Furthermore, the capacity for
the EU to issue Eurobonds could fund investment projects managed at the European level;
a European Employment and Social Progress Pact, including concrete measures to create new, decent
jobs; promote active labour market policies; increase quality of work; fight precarious jobs; overcome social
inequalities such as the gender pay gap; and improve the quality of and access to public services.
Ordinary people did not cause this crisis. Condemning people to unemployment is unjust. Putting people back to
work is the true path out of the crisis. Let’s defend our welfare states. Alone, no country can defend itself against
speculative attacks. By acting together we guarantee our strength. To the people of Europe, the Party of European
Socialists says; ‘Let’s get Europe Working Again’.
Ad Personam
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen - President
Philip Cordery - Secretary General
Full Members of the Presidency
Werner Faymann - SPÖ Austria
Elio Di Rupo - PS Belgium
Said El Khadraoui - SP.A Belgium
Kristian Vigenin - BSP Bulgaria
Kyriakos Mavronikolas - EDEK Cyprus
Vladimir Spidla - CSSD Czech Republic
Nicolai Wammen - SD Denmark
Ivari Padar - SDE Estonia
Johannes Koskinen - SDP Finland
Alain Richard - PS France
Martin Schulz - SPD Germany
Stavros Lambrinidis - PASOK Greece
Agnes Vadai - MSZP Hungary
Alexandra Dobolyi - MSZDP Hungary
Ruairi Quinn - Treasurer ; LP Ireland
To be nominated - DS Italy
Luca Cefisi - PS Italy
Atis Lejins - LSDSP Latvia
Justas Paleckis - LSDP Lithuania
Alex Bodry - LSAP Luxembourg
George Vella - PL Malta
Marije Laffeber - PvdA Netherlands
Espen Barth Eide - DNA Norway
Boguslaw Liberadzki - SLD Poland
Katarzyna Matuszewska - UP Poland
José Lello - PS Portugal
To be nominated - PSD Romania
Vladimir Manka - SMER Slovakia
Borut Pahor - SD Slovenia
Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar - PSOE Spain
Urban Ahlin - SAP Sweden
Wayne David - LP Great Britain, United Kingdom
To be nominated - SDLP Northern Ireland
Full Member Organizations
Martin Schulz - S&D Group in the European Parliament
Karl-Heinz Klär - PES Group in the Committee of the Regions
Zita Gurmai - PES Women
Petroula Nteledimou - ECOSY
Ernst Stetter - FEPS
Associate parties
Edi Rama - PSS Albania
Zlatko Lagumdzija - SDP Bosnia Herzegovina
Iglika Ivanova - PBS Bulgaria
Neven Mimica - SDP Croatia
Zoran Popov - SDUM FYR Macedonia
Dagur B Eggertsson - Samylkingin Iceland
Predrag Sekulic - DPS Montenegro
Ranko Krivokapic - SDP Montenegro
Milos Jevtic - DS Serbia
Walter Suter - SP Switzerland
Fayik Yagiyaz - DTP Turkey
Kader Sevinç - CHP Turkey
Associate Organisations
To be nominated - Socialist International
To be nominated - Socialist Group in the Council of Europe
To be nominated - Socialist Group in the OSCE
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Kristian Vigenin, BSP, Bulgaria
CV coming up soon
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Neven Mimica, SDP, Croatia
CV coming up soon
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Kyriakos Mavronikolas, EDEK, Cyprus
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Nicolai Wammen, SD, Denmark
Nicolai Halby Wammen was born on 7 February 1971. He studied Political Science at the University of Aarhus. He
is mayor of the Municipality of Aarhus as of 1 January 2006. As Mayor he is a member of the presidency of the
Business Policy Committee of the Municipality of Aarhus, chairman of the board of the Port of Aarhus, chairman of
the board of the Aarhus Festival, chairman of the Local Committee concerning Police Activities, and chairman of
the License Commission. Since September 2005 he has been vice-president of the Social Democrats. He was also
member of Aarhus City Council 1997-2006 (leave of absence whilst serving as Member of Parliament 2001-2005),
deputy chairman of the Social Democratic city council group and political spokesman, chairman of the Schools and
Cultural Committee, and member of the Financial Committee. He was president of Frit Forum Aarhus between 1996
and1997. He was Member of Parliament for the Aarhus County Constituency (the Skanderborg Constituency) 2001-
2005.
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Zoran Popov, SDUM, FYR Macedonia
CV coming up soon.
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Agnes Vadai, MSZP, Hungary
CV coming up soon.
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To be nominated, DS, Italy
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Atis Lejins - LSDSP Latvia
CV coming up soon.
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Justas Paleckis, LSDP, Lithuania
CV coming up soon.
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Dr George Vella, PL, Malta
Dr George Vella was born in 1942. He is married and has three children. He has been a doctor by profession since
1964. He was elected as a member of the Maltese parliament in 1978 and headed Malta's delegation at the local and
regional authorities conference in the Council of Europe. He was also a substitute member of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe and of the Council's commission for the relations with the European Parliament.
Between 1996 and 1998 Dr George Vella was Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs. In April
1997 he was appointed honorary President of the second Euro-Med Conference which was held in Malta. As Malta's
Foreign Minister, Dr Vella made official visits to China, Italy, Belgium, Tunisia, Austria, the United Kingdom,
Switzerland, Greece, Germany and Egypt. He representaed the Malta Labour Party at various meetings of the
OSCE, IPU and Socialst International. Dr Vella was also the Malta Labour Party's substitute member at the
Convention for the Future of Europe. Today he is the Malta Labour Party's main spokesperson on European Affairs.
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Espen Barth Eide, DNA, Norway
Espen Barth Eide was born on 1 May 1964. He studied political science at the University of Oslo and Ciencias
Políticas, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona. He started his professional career as Project director and acting
secretary general of the Norwegian European Movement during the campaign preceding Norway's 1994 referendum
on membership in the European Union (1991-1993). From 1993 to 1996, he was Researcher then Director of NUPIs
UN Programme (1996-2000). From 2000 to 2001, he was State Secretary (Deputy Foreign Minister) at the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. Since 2002, he has been Director of the Department of International Politics at Norwegian
Institute of International Affairs. Espen Barth Eide is an active member of the Labour Party since 1979. He has held
several positions in the Labour Party Youth (early 1980s), later Labour Party particularly in relation to the
international work of the party.
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Boguslaw Liberadzki, SLD, Poland
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To be nominated, PSD, Romania
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Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar, PSOE, Spain
CV coming up soon.
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Urban Ahlin, SAP, Sweden
CV coming up soon
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Walter Suter, SP, Switzerland
Walter Suter was born 1943 in Zurich, Switzerland. He graduated from the School for Public Administration of the
Canton of Zurich, joined the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1964 and after his training he was successively
transferred to Paris, Beijing, Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Santiago de Chile, Madrid, Palma de Mallorca, Mumbai
and Freiburg in Breisgau. From 1989 onwards, Walter Suter served as Head of the Swiss Diplomatic Missions in
Paraguay and Lebanon, and as well as Consul General in Vancouver. In 1999 he becomes a member of the Socialist
Party of Switzerland (SPS). He is then one of the co-founders of the International section of the party and the next
year, he integrates the SPS Group of Experts for Foreign and Security Policy. In 2003, Walter Suter is nominated
Ambassador of Switzerland to Venezuela, as well as to Guyana, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada, Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines, Barbados, Saint Lucia, Dominica, Antigua and Barbuda and Saint Kitts and Nevis. In
August 2007 Walter Suter ends his mission in Venezuela, retires from the diplomatic career and becomes the
President of the International Section of the SPS. He is the permanent representative of the SPS to the PES.
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Deniy Baykal, CHP Turkey
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Fayik Yagiyaz, DTP, Turkey
CV coming p soon.
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David Wayne, LP, Great Britain, United Kingdom
Wayne David has been the Member of Parliament for Caerphilly since June 2001. He is currently the Shadow
Minister for Europe. Prior to this he was the Shadow Minister for Wales, having been the Wales Office Minister
between October 2008 and May 2010. Between June 2007 and his appointment to the Wales Office he was a
Government Whip. Previously, Wayne was a Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Ministry of Defence Team and
then to the Minister for the Armed Forces. Before entering Government Wayne was a member of the European
Scrutiny Committee. He was the Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Poland and established an All Party
Parliamentary European Union Group, which he chaired. Before being elected to Westminster, Wayne worked for
the Youth Service. For 10 years he was a Member of the European Parliament for South Wales and was Leader of
the Labour Group. He also played a key role in securing Objective 1 funding for West Wales and the Valleys.
Before being elected to the European Parliament, Wayne worked in the Rhymney Valley as a lecturer and organiser
for the Workers' Educational Association. He lectured on Trade Union Health and Safety and shop steward courses,
and taught classes on a range of political and economic subjects. Born and brought up in a former mining
community, Wayne comes from a mining family. He has lived in the South Wales Valleys all his life.
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To be nominated, SDLP Northern Ireland
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Petroula Nteledimou, President of ECOSY
Coming up soon.
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Chaired by PES Secretary General, the Co-ordination team is composed of the Heads of the International
departments of all PES member parties and organisations members of the Presidency.
It meets four or five times a year to discuss the planning, preparation, follow-up and financing of PES activities.
The Secretariat
The PES Secretariat is based in Brussels. The Secretary General is responsible for the day-to-day functioning of the
Party, carrying out its decisions and preparing its meetings.
ECOSY
The ECOSY "Young European Socialists" gathers Socialist youth movements of the European Union, Central and
Eastern Europe and of the Mediterranean countries. It was founded in November 1992 in The Hague with the
following objectives:
to promote and support the values of democratic socialism
to defend the interests of young people towards the European institutions
to promote European citizenship and the emergence of a common identity in order to achieve mutual
understanding.
ECOSY is the youth organisation of the Party of European Socialists (PES), works in close co-operation with the
International Union of Socialist Youth (IUSY) and is a member of the European Youth Forum.
PES Women
PES Women brings together women - MPs, MEPs and activists - from PES member parties to discuss and promote
gender equality within and outside the PES.
Zita Gurmai MEP was reelected President of PES Women on 5 December 2009. Under Zita’s leadership, PES
Women has entered a new period of reinforced cooperation amongst its members and is developing a stronger role
within a stronger PES.
PES Women seeks to promote gender equality on two different levels. Firstly, PES Women is permanently
strengthening the external dimension of its work, in terms of formulating and advocating policy recommendations
on various issues.
Secondly, PES Women pushes for equal representation in PES bodies (such as working groups and high level
groups) and supports the increase of women in decision-making in PES member parties. The PES Women President
is a full member of the PES Presidency.
PES Women has its own executive bureau, formed by its President, the three Vice-Presidents and the Bureau
members. PES statutory meetings gather all members in representation of PES member parties and associated
member parties.
PES Women members, who are nominated by PES member parties, meet three times a year to:
PES Women launch pension campaign video; “It’s different for women”
Speaking before the launch of the Party of European Socialists (PES) campaign, ‘It’s different for Women’, the
President of PES Women, and Hungarian Member of the European Parliament, Zita Gurmai MEP stated that; “On
International Women's Day, the European Union must send a signal that the lives of ordinary women are central in
our concerns. On the fundamental issue of pensions, the European Commission should be leading the charge in
closing the structural gaps between men and women. It is all very well to look at the gender gap in the boardroom,
but outside those windows there are gender gaps that continue long into old age”.
Women are being disadvantaged for contributing to society. For reasons that are often beyond their power such as
the pay-gap, taking care of children and the elderly and because of work in precarious and undervalued sectors,
women are all too often in receipt of pensions barely above the minimum subsistence level. Their pension income as
a proportion of men’s is difficult to calculate but could be about 66% in Italy, 60% in Britain, and 56% in France,
42% in Germany.
The OECD’s ‘Pensions at a Glance’ for 2009 and Romanian MEP Rovana Plumb’sreport on female poverty provide
substance to these claims.
All European societies are facing aging populations and pension systems all over Europe are being reformed. These
reforms are now mostly led by conservative governments that don’t specifically take into account a gender
dimension. They should, because pension issues are gendered. Women aged over 65 years are at a much higher risk
of poverty than men: on average the poverty risk for women is 22% versus 16% for men.
Ms. Gurmai added that; “Investing in gender equality rather than going down the road of the Annual Growth Survey
is essential. We believe in investing in child care facilities, in the equal sharing of domestic work, in a renewed
effort of tackling the pay gap, in fair parental leave and in designing equality and redistribution into pension
schemes, such as generous carer credits. Some of these factors we have illustrated with the animation, but all of
them majorly impact on women’s wellbeing in retirement”.
PES Women priorities
Priorities 2010-2011
Activities are centered around the theme My Body, My Rights, a commitment with three windows of action: calling
for universal maternal health (New York, March 2010), combating violence against women (Madrid, June 2010) and
an Annual Conference focusing on sexual and reproductive rights (Warsaw, December 2010).
Priorities 2005-2009
Gender equality has always been a priority of the PES and of MEP Zita Gurmai, President of PES Women, full
member of the PES Presidency and Vice-Chairwoman of the European Parliament’s Committee on Women’s Rights
and Gender Equality between 2004 and 2009.
PES Women seeks to promote gender equality on two different levels. Firstly, PES Women is permanently
strengthening the external dimension of its work, in terms of formulating and advocating policy recommendations
on various issues. Secondly, PES Women pushes for equal representation in PES bodies (such as working Groups
and high level Groups) and supports the increase of women in decision-making in PES member parties.
On 2008, PES Women made strong inputs in the drafting of PES Manifesto and included a whole chapter on gender
equality, “Championing Gender Equality” showing PES’ commitments towards women’s empowerment. LGBT
activists fromPES Rainbow Rose Network share gender equality activists’ fights for equality and diversity.
In December 2006, PES Women agreed on four working priorities: equal pay, reconciliation of professional, private
and family life, migration, women and decision-making.
On 2005 International Women’s Day, PES Women launched its first pledge card. It served as a communication tool
to raise awareness of the work of PES Women and to convey its priorities: more and better jobs for women, equal
opportunities and equal pay, better childcare, an end to all forms of violence against women, women’s rights and
empowerment.
Moreover, PES Women initiated or took part into several PES campaigns in 2006-08:
International
(1)Beijing +10 - preparation and follow-up of the meeting to be held under the Luxembourg presidency (early
February in Luxembourg) and the UN meeting in New York (late February - early March). To consider in particular
the objective of the empowerment of women.
(3)A campaign on gender equality in the workplace throughout the year, in particular on the persistent pay gap
between men & women and the need to increase the provision of accessible and affordable childcare.
PES Women has its own executive bureau, formed by its President, the three Vice-Presidents and the eight Bureau
members. PES statutory meetings gather all members in representation of PES member parties and associated
member parties
PES Women organizes several events, be it with its members or with public audience to raise awareness on gender
issues. It is also very active in organizing or initiating PES campaigns.
Currently (2010-2011) activities are centered around the theme My Body, My Rights, a commitment with three
windows of action: calling for universal maternal health (New York, March 2010), combating violence against
women (Madrid, June 2010) and an Annual Conference focusing on sexual and reproductive rights (Warsaw,
December 2010).
Earlier Activities:
A Charter for European Women's Rights, December 2009
European Day of Action – Celebrating International Women’s Day – 7-8 March 2009
The Party of European Socialists and its member parties are highlighting their commitment to women’s equality by
celebrating International Women’s Day. The PES has designated the weekend March 7-8 as its first ‘European Day
of Action’ for the 2009 European elections.
Conference on International Women’s Day, Brussels, 4 March 2009
PES Women Statutory meeting, Brussels, 19 February 2009
Fringe meeting on HIV/AIDS, PES Council, Madrid, 1 December 2008
PES Women Statutory meeting, Paris, 10 October 2008