Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin says he will not seek re-election in 2027.
It comes after Uefa voted to
change its rules, which would have allowed the 56-year-old Slovenian to run
again and potentially stay at the helm of European football's governing body
until 2031.
The English Football
Association (FA) was the only nation to oppose the rule amendment at a Uefa
congress in Paris.
The FA said leaders should
serve a "maximum" of three terms of four years.
Previous rules allowed a
president to serve three terms in office but the new ruling means Ceferin's
initial term, when he replaced Michel Platini in 2016 part-way through a
four-year cycle, does not count as a full term served.
Ceferin took over when Platini stepped down in May 2016 after
being banned by the world governing body Fifa over ethics breaches.
Despite a two-thirds majority
of 49 nations voting to pass the motion, he later announced he would not stand
in 2027.
Ceferin told a news conference:
"I decided six months ago that I would not run anymore. The reason is
that after some time every organization needs fresh blood, but mainly because I
was away from my family for seven years now.
"I intentionally didn't
want to disclose my thoughts before, because firstly, I wanted to see the real
face of some people and I saw it."
Opponents of the motion -
including FA chief executive Mark Bullingham - argued the change goes against
the pledge Ceferin made to preside over cleaner corporate governance of Uefa
when he took over from Platini.
Uefa general secretary Theodore
Theodoridis said Ceferin's decision not to tell the national associations of
his plans beforehand was not an embarrassment for the FA.
"I don't think so,"
he said. "We have a democracy."
The change is seen as a
controversial one and Uefa's technical director Zvonimir Boban quit his role in
January in protest at Ceferin's presumed intention to stay on for a further
term, calling the move "beyond comprehension".
Ceferin responded to this after
making his announcement, saying Boban was aware he would not seek re-election
and called his stance a "pathetic cry".
"He could not wait because, after my disclosure, his whining would not make sense," Ceferin added.
Other statute changes,
including the requirement to have at least two female members on the Uefa
executive committee, were also part of the motion, and Bullingham, along with
representatives from Norway and Iceland, had voted against the plan to
"bundle" them together.
The FA says it was supportive
of the other proposed statute changes but that once the motion to group them
together was passed, it was forced to vote against them all.
"We requested and voted
for the statute changes to be tabled separately, but this was not supported by
a sufficient majority and we respect that," said an FA spokesperson.
"We believe that it was
always intended that a principle of three terms of four years should be a
maximum period for any Uefa exco member to serve."
Analysis - Is FA on Uefa's naughty step after vote stance?
The FA is putting a brave face
on where it has ended up, feeling it opposed Uefa's statute change on a point
of principle and that would have remained even if it had known of Ceferin's
intentions.
"I wanted to see the real
face of some people and I saw it," Ceferin said after making his
announcement. In other words, who is with him and who is against him, who can be
trusted and who can't?
Evidently, Zvonimir Boban is in
the latter category given Ceferin's stinging rebuke of the Croatian and
one-time close friend.
But are David Gill, who spoke
up in an executive committee meeting last year about the plans, and the FA now
on the naughty step?
The FA may not get an
especially warm reception when it comes to getting points across and having
influence within Uefa circles.
Around spectacular failed World
Cup bids, England's football leaders have been naive when it comes to football
politics. And the opposition to the statute vote appears to be another example,
given they were on their own in literally showing Congress a red card on the
issue.
What no one can know is
whether, at some point between now and 2027, Ceferin has a change of heart and
decides to stand for election again anyway as he is now able to do.
On balance, it is probably a
good job Wembley has already been confirmed as host venue for this season's
Champions League final, and the hosting rights for Euro 2028 are agreed.
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