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- From: eubasics@allmansland.com
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.european-union,eunet.politics,alt.politics.ec,alt.answers,talk.answers,news.answers
- Subject: European Union Basics (FAQ), Part3/8
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Followup-To: talk.politics.european-union
- Reply-To: eubasics@allmansland.com (Roland Siebelink)
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- X-URL: http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html
- Summary: This file is part of an eight-part posting containing basic
- information about the European Union and other related or unrelated
- European political organisations. It is hoped to serve both as background
- information for those wishing to discuss European politics on the
- talk.politics.european-union newsgroup, and as a general reference for
- anyone concerned with politics in Europe.
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 14 May 2004 09:07:04 GMT
- Lines: 626
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Trace: 1084525624 senator-bedfellow.mit.edu 570 18.181.0.29
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-
- Archive-name: european-union/basics/part3
- Posting-Frequency: once every three weeks
- URL: http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html
-
- + NB READERS OF THIS TEXT VERSION:
- + The original and most recent version of this file is always available
- + on the world-wide web. If you have Web access, please consider viewing
- + it there at the URL mentioned above.
-
- EU Basics FAQ: The European Parliament
- [questionsabout...]
-
- Personal note: you will notice that in all EU institutions, there is an
- asymmetry between the number of inhabitants of member states and the number
- of representatives they have in the various institutions (e.g. one
- Commissioner for 300,000 Luxemburgers compared to two for 80 million
- Germans). This is a compromise between the supranational principle of
- one-inhabitant-one-vote and the intergovernmental principle of
- one-government-one-vote, and thus an illustration of the general ambiguity
- between supranational and intergovernmental principles that so characterizes
- the European Union.
-
- How is the European Parliament composed?
-
- DIRECT UNIVERSAL ELECTIONS
-
- The European Parliament represents the peoples of the member states. It is
- elected once every five years, through direct universe suffrage in every
- member state.
-
- The last general EP election was held on 9 and 12 June 1994. The next will
- be in June 1999, although Austrians, Finns and Swedes have to elect MEPs
- earlier because their countries had not joined the EU in 1994 yet. Up to
- these elections, MEPs for these countries are appointed by national
- parliaments. In Sweden these elections already took place. Hiski Haapoja[1]
- mentions that for Finland, these elections will take place in October 1996
- together with municipal county elections.
-
- GENERAL COMPOSITION
-
- There are currently 626 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs):
-
- 99 elected in Germany;
-
- 87 each in France, Italy, the UK;
-
- 64 in Spain;
-
- 31 in the Netherlands;
-
- 25 each in Belgium, Greece, Portugal;
-
- 22 in Sweden;
-
- 21 in Austria;
-
- 16 each in Denmark and Finland;
-
- 15 in the Republic of Ireland;
-
- 6 in Luxembourg.
-
- MEPs don't usually vote by country of origin. Instead, they organize in
- political groups according to ideology and/or party affiliation. The minimum
- number of MEPs to form a political group is 29 if the members come from one
- member state, 23 if they come from two, 18 if they come from three and 14 if
- they come from four or more member states. No MEP can be a member of more
- than one political group, but no MEP is under an obligation to be part of a
- political group either (even though it does bring advantages in speaking
- time and infrastructure).
-
- Some MEPs call themselves associate (rather than +full;) members of a
- political group; this reflects the fact that they are not bound by the
- common manifesto/platform of the pan-European political party behind the
- group, usually because their national party is not a member of this
- pan-European political party. This difference is irrelevant as far as
- internal Parliamentary procedures are concerned.
-
- See the list of member states[2] in the first part of this FAQ for an
- overview of ISO country abbreviations used below. Links have been added to
- the official or unofficial home pages of some parties; please drop me a
- line[3] if you know any I did not include.
-
- PES/GROUP OF THE PARTY OF EUROPEAN SOCIALISTS
-
- [LOGO PES]
-
- Leader: Ms Pauline Green (Labour, UK)
-
- 217 members:
-
- 62 Labour (UK)[4]
-
- 40 Socialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (DE)[5]
-
- 22 Partido Socialista Obrero Espaqol[6] (ES)
-
- 16 Partido democratico della Sinistra (IT) [7]
-
- 15 Europe Solidaire (Parti Socialiste) (FR)
-
- 10 Partido Socialista (PT)[8]
-
- 10 Panellinio Socialistiko Kinima (GR) [9]
-
- 8 Partij van de Arbeid (NL) [10]
-
- 8 Sozialdemokratische Partei Vsterreichs (AT)[11]
-
- 7 Socialdemokratiska arbetarepartiet (SE)[12]
-
- 4 Suomen Sosialidemokraattinen Puolue (FI)[13]
-
- 3 Parti Socialiste[14] (BE)
-
- 3 Socialdemokratiet (D[15]K)
-
- 3 Socialistische Partij (BE)[16]
-
- 2 LSAP - d'Sozialisten (LU)
-
- 2 Partito socialista italiano-Alleanza democratica
- (IT)[17]
-
- 1 Labour Party (IE)[18]
-
- 1 Social Democratic and Labour Party (UK)
-
- EPP/EUROPEAN PEOPLE'S PARTY (CHRISTIAN-DEMOCRATS)
-
- Leader: Mr Wilfried Martens (Christelijke Volkspartij, BE)
-
- 172 members:
-
- 39 Christlich-Demokratische Union[19] (DE)
-
- 28 Partido Popular (ES)[20]
-
- 18 Conservative and Unionist Party (UK) [21]
-
- 13 Union pour la Dimocratie Frangaise/Rassemblement pour
- la Ripublique* (FR)
-
- 10 Christendemocratisch Appel (NL) [22]
-
- 9 Nea Demokratia (GR) [23]
-
- 8 Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern (DE)
-
- 8 Partito popolare italiano (IT)
-
- 6 Vsterreichische Volkspartei (AT)[24]
-
- 5 Moderata samlingspartiet (SE)[25]
-
- 4 Christelijke Volkspartij (BE) [26]
-
- 4 Fine Gael (IE)
-
- 4 Kansallinen Kokoomus (FI)[27]
-
- 3 Konservative Folkeparti (DK) [28]
-
- 3 Patto Segni (IT)
-
- 2 Chrkslich-Sozial Vollekspartei (LU)
-
- 2 Coalicisn Nacionalista (ES)
-
- 2 Parti Social-Chritien (BE)
-
- 1 Christlich Soziale Partei (BE)
-
- 1 Partido Social Democrata* (PT)
-
- 1 S|dtiroler Volkspartei (IT)
-
- 1 Ulster Unionist Party (UK) [29]
-
- UE/UNION FOR EUROPE GROUP
-
- The Union for Europe Group was formed in October 1995 as a grouping of two
- formerly separate parliamentary groups: the Forza Europa group consisting of
- the sole Forza Italia party and the traditional +Gaullist; Group of the
- European Democratic Alliance. Through this merger, they replaced the Liberal
- group (ELDR[30], cf. infra) as the third biggest group in the European
- Parliament.
-
- Leader: Mr. Jean-Claude Pasty (Rassemblement pour la Ripublique, FR)
-
- 55 members:
-
- 29 Forza Italia (IT)[31]
-
- 14 Union pour la Dimocratie Frangaise/Rassemblement pour
- la Ripublique* (FR)
-
- 7 Fianna Fail[32] (IE)
-
- 3 Centro Democratico Social/Partido Popular (PT)
-
- 2 Politiki Anixi (GR) [33]
-
- ELDR/GROUP OF THE EUROPEAN LIBERAL, DEMOCRATIC AND REFORMIST PARTY
-
- Leader: Mr Gijs de Vries (Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie, NL)
-
- 52 members:
-
- 8 Partido Social Democrata* (PT)
-
- 5 Lega Nord (IT)
-
- 6 Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie (NL) [34]
-
- 4 Democraten '66 (NL) [35]
-
- 4 Suomen Keskusta (FI)
-
- 4 Venstre[36] (DK)
-
- 3 Parti Riformateur Libiral/Front Dimocratique des
- Francophones (BE)
-
- 3 Vlaamse Liberalen en Democraten (BE) [37]
-
- 2 Centerpartiet (SE)[38]
-
- 2 Convergencia y Unio* (ES)
-
- 2 Liberal Democrats (UK) [39]
-
- 2 Svenska Folkpartiet (FI)
-
- 1 Demokratesch Partei (LU)
-
- 1 Folkpartiet liberalerna (SE)[40]
-
- 1 Independents (IE)
-
- 1 Liberales Forum (AT)[41]
-
- 1 Partito reppublicano italiano (IT)
-
- 1 Radikale Venstre (DK)
-
- 1 Union pour la Dimocratie Frangaise/Rassemblement pour
- la Ripublique* (FR)
-
- GUE/CONFEDERAL GROUP OF THE UNITED LEFT - NORTHERN GREEN LEFT
-
- Leader: Mr Alfonso Puerta Gutierrez (Izquierda Unida - Iniciativa per
- Catalunya, ES)
-
- 33 members:
-
- 9 Izquierda Unida (ES)
-
- 7 Parti Communiste (FR)
-
- 5 Rifondazione comunista (IT)
-
- 3 Vdnsterpartiet (SE)[42]
-
- 3 Coligagao Democratica Unitaria (PT)
-
- 2 Kommounistiko Komma Elladas (GR) [43]
-
- 2 Synaspismos tis Aristeras kai tis Proodou (GR) [44]
-
- 1 Socialistisk Folkeparti (DK) [45]
-
- 1 Vasemmistoliitto (FI)
-
- GRN/GREEN GROUP IN THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT[46]
-
- Leaders: Ms Claudia Roth (Die Gr|nen, DE) & Mr Alexander Langer
- (Federazione dei Verdi, IT)
-
- 28 members:
-
- 12 B|ndnis 90/Die Gr|nen (DE) [47]
-
- 4 Miljvpartiet de grvna (SE)[48]
-
- 3 Federazione dei Verdi (IT)
-
- 2 Green Party[49] (IE)
-
- 1 Agalev (BE) [50]
-
- 1 Dii Gring GLEI-GAP (LU)
-
- 1 Ecolo (BE)
-
- 1 Groen Links (NL) [51]
-
- 1 Gr|ne - Die Gr|ne Alternative (AT)[52]
-
- 1 La Rete-Movimento democratico (IT)
-
- 1 Vihred Liitto (FI)[53]
-
- ERA/GROUP OF THE EUROPEAN RADICAL ALLIANCE
-
- Leader: Ms Cathirine Lalumihre (Energie Radicale, FR)
-
- 19 members:
-
- 13 Energie Radicale (FR)
-
- 2 Panella-Riformatori[54] (IT)
-
- 2 Scottish National Party (UK)[55]
-
- 1 Convergencia y Unio* (ES)
-
- 1 Volksunie/Vlaamse Vrije Democraten (BE)
-
- EN/EUROPE OF NATIONS GROUP
-
- Leader: Mr Jimmy Goldsmith (Majoriti pour l'autre Europe, FR)
-
- 19 members:
-
- 13 Majoriti pour l'autre Europe (FR)
-
- 2 Folkebevfgelsen mod EF (DK)
-
- 2 Junibevfgelsen (DK)
-
- 2 Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij[56]/ Gereformeerd
- Politiek Verbond[57]/ Reformatorisch-Politieke
- Federatie[58] (NL)
-
- NI/NON-ATTACHED MEMBERS
-
- 10 Alleanza nazionale (IT)
-
- 11 Front National (FR)
-
- 5 Freiheitliche Partei Vsterreichs/Die Freiheitlichen
- (AT)
-
- 2 Vlaams Blok (BE)
-
- 1 Democratic Unionist Party (UK)
-
- 1 Front National (BE)
-
- 1 Partito socialista democratico italiano (IT) [59]
-
- The long list above is represented more concisely in the following table:
-
- PES EPP UE ELDR GUE GRN ERA EN NI TOT
- AT 8 6 - 1 - 1 - - 5 21
- BE 6 7 - 6 - 2 1 - 3 25
- DE 40 47 - - - 12 - - - 99
- DK 3 3 - 5 1 - - 4 - 16
- ES 22 30 - 2 9 - 1 - - 64
- FI 4 4 - 6 1 1 - - - 16
- FR 15 13 14 1 7 - 13 13 11 87
- GR 10 9 2 - 4 - - - - 25
- IE 1 4 7 1 - 2 - - - 15
- IT 18 12 29 6 5 4 2 - 11 87
- LU 2 2 - 1 - 1 - - - 6
- NL 8 10 - 10 - 1 - 2 - 31
- PT 10 1 3 8 3 - - - - 25
- SE 7 5 - 3 3 4 - - - 22
- UK 63 19 - 2 - - 2 - 1 87
- TOT 217 172 55 52 33 28 19 19 31 626
-
- What are the powers of the European Parliament?
-
- Richard Corbett[60] provided me with this excellent rewritten and extended
- section on the powers of the European Parliament:
-
- +The powers of the European Parliament vary considerably from one p
- olicy area to the next. In some policy areas it is significantly lack
- ing in power compared with the position of national parliaments in fu
- nctioning democracies, whereas in other areas, it virtually forms par
- t of the bicameral legislature together with the Council. The procedu
- res are as follows (all beginning with a proposal from the Commission
- ):
-
- Consultation procedure:
- Parliament is simply asked to give its opinion, and
- Council takes the decision. However, Council must wait
- for Parliament's opinion and any parliamentary
- amendments that are accepted by the Commission can
- only be modified in Council by unanimity;
-
- Co-operation procedure:
- two readings in each body (Council and Parliament),
- the first as under the consultation procedure, the
- second allowing Parliament to adopt further amendments
- or to reject Council's text (in which case Council can
- only approve it by overruling Parliament unanimously
- within three months);
-
- Co-decision procedure:
- two readings in each body followed by a conciliation
- committee if their positions still diverge. If the
- conciliation committee agrees on a compromise, both
- Council and Parliament have to approve it. If
- conciliation fails, Council may adopt a text
- unilaterally, but this text will not become law if
- Parliament rejects it within six weeks;
-
- Assent procedure: Parliament's approval required (in a single reading
- with no amendments) for a measure to be adopted by
- Council;
-
- Budget procedure: two readings in each body with Parliament having the
- final say over some items and Council over others.
- However, neither can go beyond a certain rate of
- increase without the approval of the other, and
- Parliament can reject the budget as a whole.
-
- In the second reading of the cooperation or codecision procedures,
- Parliament is constrained by the requirement to obtain a majority of
- its members to amend the Council position or to reject it. In other w
- ords, abstentions or absences do not count: 314 of the 626 members mu
- st vote in favour of the amendment or rejection.
-
- Given the inevitable absenteeism of at least some members at any gi
- ven moment, this requirement has the effect of obliging Parliament's
- political groups to negotiate broadly based compromises: something th
- at probably makes political sense anyway when dealing with the Counci
- l, which is composed of ministers from a variety of different politic
- al backgrounds according to the majorities and coalitions in the Mem
- ber States.
-
- Only under the codecision procedure and the assent procedure does P
- arliament have an absolute right of veto which cannot be overriden by
- the Council (even by unanimity). The codecision procedure applies to
- about a quarter of the total volume of European legislation going th
- rough Parliament. This includes most single market legislation, the r
- esearch programme, environmental programmes, consumer protection legi
- slation, programmes in the field of public health and education and t
- ranseuropean networks.
-
- In the other procedures, Parliament remains somewhat dependent on t
- he position adopted by the Commission. If the Commission accepts Parl
- iament's amendments to its proposals and incorporates them in a modif
- ied proposal to the Council, the latter needs unanimity to remove the
- amendments, whereas a qualified majority will normally be enough to
- adopt the proposal as a whole.
-
- Despite Parliament's weakness in the cooperation procedure - where
- it can ultimately be overruled by Council - a large proportion of its
- amendments under this procedure still gets through. In his excellent
- work on the European Parliament, Martin Westlake[61] puts forward a
- grand total of all the 322 proposals dealt with under the co-operati
- on procedure up to 30 December 1993.
-
- First reading Second reading
- European Parliament 4572 amendments tabled 1074 amendments tabled
- European Commission 2499 (54,65%) taken up 475 (44,22%) taken up
- Council of Ministers 1966 (43%) accepted 253 (23,55%) accepted
- [Source: Westlake 1994, p265]
-
- In looking at these figures, and seeing that only half of Parliamen
- t amendments end up in the final legislation, two things should be bo
- rne in mind. First, the other branch of the legislative authority - t
- he Council - is also democratically elected, albeit indirectly, as ea
- ch of its members belongs to an elected national government.
-
- Secondly, the executive (in this case the Commission) is rather wea
- k compared to most national executives (governments). Its proposals r
- arely get through Parliament and Council without substantial amendmen
- ts -unlike the situation in many national parliaments. In absolute te
- rms, the number of amendments put into legislation by the European Pa
- rliament is far greater than many national parliaments."
-
- There is another area in which the EP's powers have risen considerably.
- Since the Maastricht Treaty,[62] the European Parliament must approve both
- of the President of the Commission and of the Commission in full. It can
- also make the Commission resign with a 2/3 majority. It cannot sack
- individual Commissioners.
-
- The newly elected EP of 1994 has interpreted this decision as such that it
- has the right to question all individual candidate Commissioners thoroughly
- (modelled on the US Senate +hearings; for candidate government ministers)
- before approving of the new Commission as a whole. The new Commission
- president has accepted this interpretation in practice; hearings have taken
- place from 16 to 20 January 1995, and the Commission president has had to
- make some changes to and supplementary promises about the portfolios of his
- fellow Commissioners as a result of the hearings, before his Commission was
- approved with a 417 against 104 majority.
-
- Who is the President of the European Parliament?
-
- MEPs elect the President (or chair) of the European Parliament and his/her
- bureau from their midst, with a mandate of two and a half years. Subsequent
- EP presidents since the first direct elections were:
-
- 1979-1982 Ms Simone Veil (LDR[63], France)
-
- 1982-1984 Mr Piet Dankert (PES[64], Netherlands)
-
- 1984-1987 Mr Pierre Pflimlin (EPP[65], France)
-
- 1987-1989 Sir Henry Plumb (Conservative, UK) [Tory MEPs were in
- the former European Democrats group during Lord
- Plumb's presidency; in 1992 they followed their former
- European Democrats group partners, and joined the
- EPP[66] group.]
-
- 1989-1992 Mr Enrique Baron Crespo (PES[67], Spain)
-
- 1992-1994 Mr Egon Klepsch (EPP[68], Germany)
-
- 1994-1997 Mr Klaus Hdnsch (PES[69], Germany)
-
- Where can I find the European Parliament on the net?
-
- EMAIL CONNECTIVITY
-
- Many of the civil servants working at the European Parliament have an email
- address with a gateway to the Internet, in the +gw.europarl.org; zone. MEPs
- and their assistants are less likely to be reachable. You could try to ask
- the <postmaster@gw.europarl.org> for a specific person's email address.
-
- DATABASES AND INFOSYSTEMS
-
- The European Parliament is currently preparing its own WorldWideWeb presence
- on the Internet. Up to now, there are only the following electronic
- information services which are not available on the Internet:
-
- News and general press information is available in the menu-based EPISTEL
- system, available via X.25 and PSTN. Subscription is free for accredited
- journalists; others pay ECU 100/month. Information: tel.+32.2.2842128,
- fax +32.2.2305808.
-
- EPOQUE is a documentary database produced by the European Parliament. Its
- first objective is to make information easily accessible internally, but
- it is also intended to provide information on the EP activities to the
- outside world. Access is free, but requires previous registration; EPOQUE
- is available through PSTN in Luxembourg and through X.25. Information:
- fax +352.439317.
-
-
- ___________________________________
-
-
- Edited by Roland Siebelink & Bart Schelfhout[70]
- corrections and suggestions welcome.
-
- [Go to Table of Contents][71]
-
- *** References from this document ***
- [1] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/about.html#contr
- [2] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/general.html#memberstates
- [3] mailto:eubasics@allmansland.com
- [4] http://www.poptel.org.uk/labour-party/
- [5] http://www.spd.de/
- [6] http://www.civing.carleton.ca/SiSpain/politics/parliame/socialis.html
- [7] http://www.pds.it/pds.htm
- [8] http://www.partido-socialista.pt/ps/
- [9] http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/umponti0/politics.html
- [10] http://www.pvda.nl/
- [11] http://www.spoe.or.at/
- [12] http://www.sap.se/
- [13] http://www.tky.hut.fi/~oodi/SDP/SDP-homepage.html
- [14] http://sga.ulb.ac.be/pinstall/legis_95/ps/index.htm
- [15] http://gress.lo.dk/socdem/dk/historie/english/index.htm
- [16] http://www.sp.be/
- [17] http://www.socialisti.it/
- [18] http://194.106.128.3/labour/index.html
- [19] http://www.cdu.de/
- [20] http://www.docuweb.ca/SiSpain/politics/parliame/popular.html
- [21] http://www.conservative-party.org.uk/
- [22] http://www.dds.nl/overheid/pdc/678/351/35165.html
- [23] http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/umponti0/politics.html
- [24] http://www.oevp.co.at/oevp/
- [25] http://www.moderat.se/
- [26] http://www.cocacola.be/cvp/
- [27] http://www.kokoomus.fi/kokoomus/
- [28] http://www.dis.dk/dis/org/kons/index.html
- [29] http://www.uup.org/
- [30] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#ldr
- [31] http://www.forza-italia.it/
- [32] http://www.iol.ie/fiannafail/
- [33] http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/umponti0/politics.html
- [34] http://www.dds.nl/overheid/pdc/678/354/35451.html
- [35] http://www.xs4all.nl/~d66ned/d66menu.html
- [36] http://www.venstre.dk/
- [37] http://www.eunet.be/vld/
- [38] http://www.centerpartiet.se/
- [39] http://www.libdems.org.uk/
- [40] http://www.one.se/liberty/LUF/fphome.html
- [41] http://www.lif.co.at/lif/
- [42] http://www.kiruna.se/kommun/partier/v/v.html
- [43] http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/umponti0/politics.html
- [44] http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/umponti0/politics.html
- [45] http://molly.sf.dk/
- [46] http://www.axl.be/green/
- [47] http://www.gruene.de/
- [48] http://www.angelfire.com/free/miljopartiet.html
- [49] http://www.iol.ie/resource/green/index.htm
- [50] http://box.eunet.be/./agalev/
- [51] http://www.dds.nl/~groen-l/
- [52] http://www.t0.or.at/gruene/
- [53] http://www.vihrealiitto.fi/
- [54] http://www.riformatori.stm.it/
- [55] http://www.snp.org.uk/
- [56] http://www.dds.nl/overheid/pdc/678/351/35153.html
- [57] http://www.dds.nl/overheid/pdc/678/351/35152.html
- [58] http://www.dds.nl/overheid/pdc/678/351/35176.html
- [59] http://www.fpoe.or.at/fpoe/
- [60] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/about.html#contr
- [61] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/about.html#mwestlake
- [62] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/general.html#maastricht
- [63] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#ldr
- [64] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#pes
- [65] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#epp
- [66] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#epp
- [67] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#pes
- [68] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#epp
- [69] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/parliament.html#pes
- [70] mailto:eubasics@allmansland.com
- [71] http://eubasics.allmansland.com/index.html
-
-
-