With 21 living ex-presidents, Switzerland's political system is unique. This article delves into the annually rotating presidency and the role of the seven-member Federal Council, which functions as a collective head of state, with the president acting as 'first among equals' with no additional powers.

"Primus inter pares"
"Re-election for the following year is not permitted."
While the United States grapples with five living ex-presidents and France counts a mere two, Switzerland shatters global norms with a staggering 21 living former leaders. This isn't a sign of political volatility; it is the deliberate design of a system built to reject the cult of personality. In 2026, this 'Living Former Presidents Society' stands as a testament to the Swiss model's radical efficiency.
The sheer volume of ex-leaders is a direct result of the one-year rotating presidency, a mechanism that ensures no single individual ever consolidates power. Unlike the Chancellor in Germany or the Prime Minister in Britain, a Swiss President is a temporary steward. This creates a rotating door of leadership that is paradoxically the most stable in the world. While other nations obsess over the legacy of a single figurehead, Switzerland treats the presidency as a functional duty rather than a coronation, resulting in a surplus of experienced statesmen and stateswomen walking the streets of Bern without security details.
Forget the 'Leader of the Free World' archetype; Switzerland is ruled by a collective. The seven-member Federal Council functions as a single, seven-headed head of state. This is not a figure of speechâit is a constitutional reality. Decisions are forged in the fires of consensus, with the majority ruling the room.
Guy Parmelin, the President for 2026, holds the title, but he possesses no more executive authority than his six colleagues. He is 'primus inter pares'âthe first among equals. Crucially, the presidency is a side job. Throughout his tenure, Parmelin must still grind as the Economics Minister. This dual burden ensures that the president remains tethered to the practical realities of governance, rather than floating in a bubble of ceremonial pomp. The system demands 'one for all and all for one,' forcing ministers to defend collective decisions publicly, even those they personally opposed behind closed doors.
The Swiss President commands no army, vetoes no laws, and sleeps in no palace. If you are looking for motorcades and police escorts, look elsewhere. The presidency in Switzerland is stripped of the imperial trappings that define the office in almost every other republic.
The perks are shockingly minimal: a busy schedule, a celebration in their home canton, and the duty of delivering the New Yearâs address. That is it. A Swiss President never pays a 'state visit' in the traditional sense because they are not the sole head of state. When foreign dignitaries arrive, they are often greeted by a delegation of the Council, reinforcing the collective nature of Swiss power. This lack of individual grandeur is a feature, not a bug. It prevents the elevation of the politician above the citizen, maintaining a grounded political culture where the 'President' is just a minister with a slightly tighter schedule for 365 days.
Becoming President of the Swiss Confederation is less about a brutal campaign trail and more about survival and seniority. The unwritten rule is absolute: get elected to the cabinet by parliament, then wait your turn. The presidency is handed down based on seniority, cycling through the seven ministers.
This predictable rotation eliminates the chaos of succession crises. In 2026, Guy Parmelin holds the gavel, but the path is already clear for Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis, currently the Vice-President, to take the reins in 2027. This system rewards longevity and stability over charisma. While history records anomaliesâlike 19th-century titans Karl Schenk and Emil Welti serving six terms eachâmodern politics is more egalitarian. With only six female presidents in history, starting with Ruth Dreifuss in 1999, the demographic shift is slow but steady. In Switzerland, you don't seize power; you serve your time until power briefly lands on your desk.