The European Council brings together EU leaders to set the EU's political agenda.
It represents the highest level of political cooperation between EU countries.
One of the
EU's 7 official institutions, the Council takes the form of (usually quarterly) summit meetings
between EU leaders, chaired by a permanent president.
On each issue, the European Council can:
The European Council is made up of the heads
of state or government of all EU countries, the European
Commission President and the High
Representative for Foreign Affairs & Security Policy.
It is convened and chaired by its President, who is elected by the
European Council itself for a once-renewable two-and-a-half-year term. The President represents the
EU to the outside world.
It usually meets
4 times a year – but the President can convene additional meetings to address urgent issues.
It generally decides issues by consensus – but by unanimity or qualified majority in
some cases. Only the heads of state/government can vote.
You can put
general about the Council's work to its Public
Information Service.