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European parliament backers of a better gender balance on the ECB applauded the move spurred by Spain. Greens expert Sven Giegold said such an approval by member states `'would have represented cynical political chicanery in the extreme." When it rejected Mersch's nomination, the Parliament said the EU nations had not responded adequately to a request to come up with a plan to find more female candidates. Legislators also pointed out that appointing a man this time means the ECB's top body will continue without a woman member until 2018, when the next scheduled vacancy occurs. A woman had always served on the executive council from the bank's founding in 1998 until last year. Sirkka Haemaelaeinen served until May 2003, when she was succeeded by Gertude Tumpel-Gugerell. Since Tumpel-Gugerell's eight year term expired in May, 2011, however, there has been no woman on the executive board or on the 23-seat governing council which sets interest rates. The government council is made up of the executive board plus the heads of the 17 national central banks in the eurozone, all of whom are men. Four of the six posts on the executive board have come open but been filled with men since Tumpell-Gugerell left.
[Associated
Press;
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