The gun has been raised on one of the most far-reaching of international diplomats elections of 2026. There are five applicants to replace Antonio Guterres as the Secretary-General of the United Nations and starting April 20, one candidate will be subjected to the most examined job interview in the universe.
On Friday, General Assembly President Annalena Baerbock said the interactive selection process, where each candidate will be subjected to a three-hour public session, question-and-answer format, and make his or her case to 193 member states, will commence next month. It is a very transparent, very neutral, and fair procedure, she said, where all candidates will be given equal chances and opportunities.
The meetings will be accessible to civil society groups and will be live-streamed through the internet and this will be a level of openness to the society that has not necessarily been a hallmark of past transitions in the summit of the UN.
The Five in the Frame
To date the sphere is an amalgamation of the familiar and the unobtrusive mighty.
The biggest name is that of the former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet who also is the UN High Commissioner of Human Right and has the support of three Latin American giants Chile, Brazil, and Mexico. Her resume is difficult to rival: elected two times as the president of one of the largest democracies in South America, and having served as the head of UN Women, she comes with political authority, as well as institutional knowledge.
In conjunction with her, Costa Rica has put forward Rebecca Grynspan, who is the present Secretary-General of UN Trade and Development also known as UNCTAD and the former Vice President of Costa Rica. In multilateral circles, Grynspan is a low-profile, consensus-seeking individual who has years of solid experience in the field of development economics, which the battered UN finances and Reform agenda could be desperately in need of.
The third candidate is an Argentine, Virginia Gamba, who has been nominated by Maldives and has even served as Secretary-General Guterres Special Representative on Children and Armed Conflict and as the head of the Organisation to Prohibit Chemical Weapons.
The two men contending in the race are Rafael Grossi, an Argentinean member the International Atomic Energy Agency nominated to the organization by Argentina, and Macky Sall, the former president and prime minister of Senegal nominated by Burundi. Grossi comes with nuclear diplomacy qualifications at the time when the world is scurrying over the proliferation crises. Sall adds African political gravitas to a continent that has always felt underrepresented in the top leadership in the UN.
The nominations can be done until April 1, and the sphere may still grow.
Gender Question In Election
Gender is the elephant in the room or rather, in the General Assembly hall. In the call of candidates given by Baerbock and the then-president of the security council last year, he indeed urged women to nominate their names. The mood among many of the membership was simple, it was time, after 80 years of an organisation where there has never been once a woman within its leadership.
In the General Assembly resolution that regulates the election, the even and fair distribution is based on the gender and this is desired. They called out the name, three out of five candidates that have been called are women. However, that two men are also competing is a reminder that resolutions that demand gender parity do not have any enforcement mechanism. When it comes it is the vote that counts.
Process of Chosing the Winner
Its formal procedure is one to be appreciated, since the vote of the General Assembly which formally appoints the Secretary-General is not the entire affair.
The winning candidate has to be confirmed by a bare majority of the 193-member Assembly. However, in the Charter of the UN, the Assembly nominates the Secretary-General, under the recommendation of the Security Council, that is, the actual decision is made in that much smaller, much more controversial room, where the five permanent members have a veto vote. The United States, China, Russia, the United Kingdom and France can each cast a veto of any candidate they consider unacceptable, irrespective of the kind of support such a candidate has by the larger membership.
It is a structural anomaly that has influenced all the elections of the Secretary-General throughout the history of the organisation, and it will influence this one, as well. The process of great-power negotiation behind that transparency of the dialogues in the month of April and the airing sessions is less transparent and significantly quieter.
What the Next Leader Will Inherit
The requirements that Baerbock outlined of the next Secretary-General were less of a job description and rather of a brief to manage a crisis. She said that the individual must possess robust and committed, efficient governmental skills that have experience in governmental structures and the administrative skill, namely the ability to direct the UN through internal reforms, would be equally significant as the diplomatic reputation.
Guterres is a two-term former prime minister of Portugal who retires at the end of this year. During his tenure, the organisation was put to the test due to a global pandemic, two major wars, an ever-growing climate crisis, and a rapid degradation of the international agreement that the UN was established to uphold. Whatever replaces him is not going into a silent office.
Nominations close April 1. Interactive candidate conversations start April 20 and are to be broadcast publicly.
