Memorandum by Andrew Duff MEP
1. The Committee will be aware of my recent
oral evidence, now published in the 35th Report of Session 2006-07.
I have also submitted memoranda of evidence to Sub-Committee E
and to Sub-Committee G on their respective topics. This memorandum
deals with the broader institutional questions, and is intended
to be fairly factual.
2. To recall my own interest in these matters,
I served in the European Union's Convention on the Charter of
Fundamental Rights (1999-2000) and in the Convention on the Future
of Europe (2002-03). During 2007, I was one of the Parliament's
three representatives in the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC).
3. As we know, the Treaty of Lisbon is due
to be signed on 13 December. It is intended to enter into force
on 1 January 2009.[1]
4. The new Treaty will much enhance the
Union's capacity to act by increasing the efficiency and effectiveness
of the institutions and decision-making mechanisms. Armed with
the Treaty, the EU will be able to face its new global challenges
and address the issues which matter most to citizenssuch
as climate change, energy security, international terrorism, cross-border
crime, asylum and immigration.
5. The Treaty of Lisbon will greatly improve
the democratic character of the Union by increasing Parliament's
powers, by entrenching the Charter of Fundamental Rights and by
strengthening the rule of law. It clarifies the values and reaffirms
the objectives of the Union.
6. The Treaty of Lisbon amends the Treaty
on European Union (TEU) (essentially the Treaty of Maastricht)
and the Treaty establishing the European Community (TEC) (essentially
the Treaty of Rome), which is renamed the Treaty on the Functioning
of the European Union (TFEU). Both treaties have the same
legal rank.[2]
Even if the new Treaty is no longer overtly a constitutional treaty,
it manages to preserve most of the important achievements of the
Treaty establishing a Constitution of Europe which was
signed in 2004 but never ratified.
7. The Charter of Fundamental Rights
becomes binding and has the same legal value as the Treaties,
although its text will not be in the Treaties.[3]
The Charter will be solemnly proclaimed at a plenary session of
the Parliament by the Presidents of the Parliament, the Council
and the Commission on 12 December and published in the Official
Journal. A Protocol introduces specific measures for the United
Kingdom and Poland seeking to establish national exceptions to
the justiciability of the Charter.[4]
The Treaty provides a new legal basis for the accession of the
Union to the European Convention on Human Rights.[5]
The Council will decide this by unanimity, with the consent of
European Parliament and the approval of member states.
8. The concept of EU citizenship is
affirmed and developed.[6]
The right of citizens to approach the Court of Justice is broadened.[7]
Participatory democracy is enhanced notably through the right
of citizens' initiative which allows at least one million
signatures from a significant number of member states to ask the
Commission to take a specific initiative.[8]
9. A clearer and more precise delimitation
of competences conferred on the Union by member states is
introduced.[9]
The Union enjoys three categories of competence: exclusive, shared
or complementary, and supporting or supplementary. EU competences
are in any case limited to those expressly conferred by the Treaties,
and, in non-exclusive areas, their use is governed by the principles
of subsidiarity and proportionality.[10]
The regional and local dimension of subsidiarity is also recognised.
10. There is also a flexibility clause
to allow the Union to acquire powers to attain its objectives
where the Treaties do not already provide them.[11]
Competences can either be increased or reduced.[12]
Member states gain the right to secede from the Union.[13]
11. Co-decision between the Council
and Parliament is substantially extended (as foreseen by the constitutional
treaty) and becomes the ordinary legislative procedure.[14]
Particularly important is the extension of co-decision into agriculture,
fisheries, transport and structural fundsin addition to
the whole of the current "third pillar" of justice and
interior affairs. The European Parliament now becomes the co-equal
legislator for almost all European laws. The new budgetary
procedure ensures full parity between Parliament and Council
for approval of the whole annual budget (the distinction between
compulsory and non-compulsory CAP expenditure is abolished). The
multi-annual financial framework, which becomes legally binding,
also has to be agreed by Parliament.[15]
12. Qualified majority voting becomes
the general rule in the Councildefined as a double majority
of 55% of states representing 65% of the population (while a minimum
number of four states is needed to constitute a blocking minority).[16]
40 significant items move from unanimity to QMV, including the
whole of justice and interior affairs. Only the most sensitive
areas remain subject to unanimity: tax, social security, citizens'
rights, languages, seats of the institutions and the main lines
of common foreign, security and defence policies. In some of these
areas, such as anti-discrimination measures, Parliament gains
the right of consent.[17]
And in others, such as ecological taxation, specific passerelles
to the ordinary legislative procedure are inserted.[18]
13. However, the new system will not come
into force until 2014and will still be subject, until 2017,
to being blocked by recourse to the voting rules of the Treaty
of Nice.[19]
On top of that, a new mechanism based on the "Ioannina
compromise" will allow 55% of states forming a blocking
minority to ask for a delay and reconsideration of a draft law
before its adoption.[20]
A Protocol negotiated in the last hours of the IGC, at the request
of Poland, states that the Council can only amend or repeal the
Ioannina clause by consensus.[21]
14. Enhanced cooperation[22]
among nine or more states becomes both easier and more purposeful,
due to the fact that a core group is enabled to introduce QMV
where unanimity will still apply in the Council of 27.[23]
The militarily capable and politically willing are enabled to
go forward to (permanent) structured cooperation in defence.[24]
A solidarity clause means that member states will assist
each other in the event of armed aggression.[25]
15. A new "permanent" President
of the European Council (elected for 2.5 years) will chair
and drive forward its work. He or she will prepare meetings of
the European Council and report to Parliament afterwards.[26]
The European Council becomes a fully fledged institution of the
Union, subject to supervision by the Court of Justice.[27]
16. With the exception of the Council of
foreign ministers, which is to be chaired by the High Representative,
the other sectoral Councils are to be chaired by ministers
from a team of three member states for a period of 18 months.[28]
The Council will have to legislate in public.[29]
17. The new Treaty introduces the principle
of degressive proportionality for the apportionment of seats
in the European Parliament. Paradoxically, this principle
was immediately breached by the IGC, which gave one more seat
to Italy for the term 2009-14, asserting that the Parliament will
now be composed of 750 members plus its President.[30]
The largest state (Germany) will have 96 MEPs; the smallest (Malta
and Luxembourg) six. MEPs will henceforward represent "the
Union's citizens" rather than "the peoples of the States".[31]
18. The President of the Commission will
be elected by Parliament. The candidate will be proposed to MEPs
by the European Council, nominated by QMV, taking into account
the results of the parliamentary elections.[32]
Parliament will also invest the whole Commission,[33]
including the High Representative for Foreign Affairs, who will
also be Vice-President of the Commission.[34]
The size of the European Commission will be reduced after
2014, corresponding to two thirds of the number of member states,
unless the European Council decides (unanimously) otherwise. To
ensure equality between states, a rotation system will assure
each state representation in two colleges out of three.[35]
19. The double-hatted High Representative
for Foreign Affairs will chair the Council of Foreign Affairs.
He or she will be appointed by the European Council with the agreement
of the President of the Commission.[36]
Parliament will be consulted about the appointment of the first
(interim) High Representative, foreseen for January 2009.[37]
The High Representative will manage a new European External
Action Service, formed by a combination of national civil
servants, the Council secretariat and the Commission. The External
Action Service will be established by the Council during 2008
with the consent of the Commission after consulting Parliament.[38]
As the External Action Service will be funded from the EU budget,
MEPs will obtain significant control.
20. The jurisdiction of the European
Court of Justice is expanded to all the activities of the
Union with the express exception of common foreign and security
policy.[39]
However, the Court has oversight in the case of a breach of procedure
or a conflict over competence (in effect, patrolling the frontier
between the first and second pillar). It can hear appeals against
restrictive measures and give an opinion about an international
treaty.[40]
Where the opinion of the Court is adverse, the agreement envisaged
may not enter into force unless it is amended or the Treaties
are revised.[41]
The number of advocates-general is increased from eight to eleven.[42]
Specialised courts can be set up, with the agreement of Parliament,
for example, in patent law.
21. The primacy of EU law is affirmed,
if rather clumsily.[43]
Member states must ensure adequate remedies, and the powers of
the Court and the Commission to impose penalties in case of infringement
are increased.[44]
Any further expansion of the Court's powers has to be agreed unanimously.[45]
22. The Union gains a single legal personality
in international law across its whole competence.[46]
Member states may only sign international agreements that are
compatible with EU law. Parliament has to approve all agreements
in fields covered by the ordinary legislative procedure, association
agreements, and those with budgetary or institutional implications.
23. The single legal personality means that
the "third pillar" in the field of justice and home
affairs will disappear entirely after a five year transition,
with common policies in the area of freedom, security and justice,
including Schengen, assimilated within the "first pillar"
or Community method.[47]
The Commission's right of initiative in justice and interior affairs,
however, is shared with one quarter of member states.[48]
24. Only the common foreign, security and
defence policies, provided for in the TEU, continue, in the main,
to have specifically intergovernmental procedures.[49]
The mandate of the European Defence Agency, however, is broadened.[50]
25. Accordingly, while the powers of the
Commission, Parliament and Court are extended to the Union's policies
on interior affairs, initiatives by member states remain possible
in certain cases. There are also some "emergency brakes"
which allow states to refer issues to the European Council if
they feel that their vital national interests are at stake. In
all those cases, other states are propelled forward into enhanced
cooperation.
26. The UK and, reluctantly, Ireland have
specific protocols which allow them to either opt into or opt
out of EU common policies concerning Schengen and the area
of freedom security and justice. But they may exercise this privilege
only according to terms, conditions and timetables to be established
in each case by the Council and Commission (who will try to maximise
both participation and coherence).[51]
The UK may not opt in at the beginning of a legislative procedure
and, then, at the end, opt out. Nor may it stick with an existing
policy if the others wish to revise it. Nor may it continue to
participate in existing common policies if, after a transitional
period of five years, it refuses to accept the new powers of the
Commission, Parliament or Court.[52]
27. The UK has obliged its partners to raise
the barrier with respect to the free movement of workers.
Any member state may now veto a law on labour mobility by claiming
that it affects "important" (rather than "fundamental")
aspects of its national social security.[53]
The European Council may suspend the legislative process.
28. The time allowed for national parliaments
to scrutinise draft law is raised from six to eight weeks.
One third of national parliaments may object to a draft legislative
proposal on the grounds of a breach of subsidiaritythe
"yellow card". The Commission will then reconsider
it. In addition, if a simple majority of national parliaments
continue to object, the Commission refers the reasoned objection
to the Council and Parliament, which will decide the matterthe
"orange card".[54]
A new clause usefully describes all the formal functions of national
parliaments in relation to EU affairs.[55]
29. The Committee of the Regions gains
the right to approach the Court of Justice.[56]
Dialogue between the institutions and civil society, including
the churches, is enhanced.[57]
The tripartite summits, with the social partners, are enshrined
in the treaty.[58]
30. New legal bases have been introduced
for intellectual property rights, sport, space, tourism, civil
protection and administrative cooperation.[59]
Environment policy has been supplemented by a reference to combating
climate change.[60]
Common energy policy has been strengthened with respect to security
and interconnectivity of supply and solidarity.[61]
Enlargement policy will now need to take into account the Copenhagen
criteria.[62]
The Commission's role in the excessive deficit procedure is enhanced.[63]
Whereas competition is no longer one of the official objectives
of the Union, the status of competition policy is (probably) undiminished.[64]
31. Otherwise, the economic governance of
the Union is adjusted modestly to give more autonomy of action
to the eurogroup, including in international financial institutions.[65]
A specific legal basis is introduced for services of general
economic interest.[66]
32. New horizontal clauses ensure
that, in the definition and implementation of its policies, the
Union will take into account the social dimension of the single
market, sustainable development and combating discrimination.[67]
33. A new hierarchy of norms is established
which distinguishes between legislative acts, delegated acts and
implementing acts[68]although,
confusingly, the terms "law" and "framework law"
postulated in the 2004 constitutional treaty have been abandoned
in favour of keeping the present terminology (directives, regulations
and decisions). Parliament and Council have co-equal powers to
decide how to control delegated and implementing acts (comitology).[69]
34. Parliament has an enhanced role in the
procedure for future Treaty revision: vitally, it gets
the right of initiative, it is part of the Convention which will
be the norm for major treaty change (and its consent is necessary
if there is not to be a Convention). There are simplified revision
procedures for minor amendments: common internal policies
can be modified by unanimous decision of the European Council
with the approval of national parliaments (with the European Parliament
consulted); decision making can be switched from unanimity to
QMV, or from abnormal to the normal legislative procedure, by
a unanimous decision of the Council (and the consent of both European
and national parliaments)the "passerelle".[70]
35. If successfully ratified, the Treaty
of Lisbon will be a decisive step forward in the constitutional
evolution of the European Union. In historic terms it is at least
as significant as the Treaty of Maastricht (1991) which introduced
the single currency and established early provisions for foreign
and security policy and for cooperation in police and judicial
affairs.
36. Agreement on the new Treaty will mark
the end of the phase of controversial political integration which
began with the Convention on the Charter of Fundamental Rights
in 1999, and later developed by the Treaty of Nice (2000), the
Declaration of Laeken (2001), the Convention on the Future of
Europe (2002-03), the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe
(2004), the referendums in France and the Netherlands (2005),
and the subsequent "period of reflection".
37. With the new Treaty in force, the Union
will not need and will not seek the transfer of new competences
from member states. Although some further rationalisation and
simplification will continue to be both possible and desirable,
the system of government achieved by Lisbon should, in all essentials,
be strong and durable.
1 Article 6(2) Reform Treaty. Back
2
Article 1 TEU. Back
3
Article 6(1) TEU; Declaration 1. Back
4
Protocol on the application of the Charter of Fundamental Rights
to Poland and to the United Kingdom; Declarations 61 & 62. Back
5
Article 6(2) TEU and Protocol on the accession of the Union to
the European Convention on the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms; Declaration 2. Back
6
Articles 8 TEU & 17 TFEU. Back
7
Article 230(4) TFEU. Back
8
Articles 8b TEU & 21 TFEU. Back
9
Articles 2a-2e TFEU and Protocol on the exercise of shared competence. Back
10
Article 3b TEU. Back
11
Article 308 TFEU. Back
12
Article 48(2) TEU; Declaration 18. Back
13
Article 49a TEU. Back
14
Article 251 TFEU. Back
15
Articles 9a(1), 9c(1) TEU & 268-279b TFEU. Back
16
Articles 9c(4) TEU & 205 TFEU. Back
17
Article 16e TEU. Back
18
Article 175 TFEU. Back
19
Article 9c(5) TEU and Articles 3 & 4 of Protocol on transitional
provisions. Back
20
Declaration 7. Back
21
Protocol on the Decision of the Council relating to the implementation
of Article 9c(4) TEU and Article 205(2) TFEU between 1 November
2014 and 31 March 2017 on the one hand, and as from 1 April 2017
on the other. Back
22
Articles 10 TEU & 280a-280i TFEU. Back
23
Article 280h TFEU. Back
24
Articles 27(6) & 28e TEU and Protocol on permanent structured
cooperation established by Article 28a TEU. Back
25
Articles 28a(7) TEU & 188r TFEU. Back
26
Article 9b TEU; Declaration 6. Back
27
Article 230 TFEU. Back
28
Articles 9c(9) TEU, 201b(b) TFEU; Declaration 9. Back
29
Article 9c(8) TEU. Back
30
Article 9a(2) TEU; Declaration 4. Back
31
Article 189 TEC. Back
32
Article 9d(7) TEU; Declarations 6 & 11. Back
33
Article 9d TEU. Back
34
Article 9e TEU. Back
35
Article 9d(5) TEU; Declaration 10. Back
36
Article 9e TEU; Declaration 6. Back
37
Declaration 12. Back
38
Article 13a TEU; Declaration 15. Back
39
Articles 9f & 11(1) TEU. Back
40
Article 240a TFEU. Back
41
Article 188n(11) TFEU. Back
42
Declaration 38. Back
43
Declaration 17. Back
44
Article 228(2-3) TFEU. Back
45
Article 229a TFEU. Back
46
Article 46a TEU. Back
47
Article 10 Protocol on transitional provisions. Back
48
Article 61i TEFU. Back
49
Articles 10a-28e TEU. Back
50
Article 28a TEU. Back
51
Article 5 of the Schengen Protocol; Protocol on position of the
UK and Ireland in respect of the area of freedom, security and
justice. Back
52
Article 10 Protocol on transitional provisions. Back
53
Article 42 TFEU. Back
54
Article 7(2) & 7(3) of the Protocol on the application of
the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality as well as
Protocol on the role of national Parliaments in the European Union.
For the role of national parliaments see also Articles 3b, 8a(2),
8c & 48 (2-3) & (7) TEU & 61b, 65 & 308(2) TFEU. Back
55
Article 8c TEU. Back
56
Protocol on subsidiarity; Article 230(3) TFEU. Back
57
Articles 8b TEU; 16c TFEU. Back
58
Article 136a TFEU. Back
59
Respectively, Articles 97a, 149, 172a, 176b, 176c, 176d TFEU. Back
60
Article 174 TFEU. Back
61
Article 176a TFEU. Back
62
Article 49 TEU. Back
63
Article 104 TFEU. Back
64
Protocol on the Internal Market and Competition. Back
65
Articles 115a & 115ac TFEU. Back
66
Article 16 TFEU; Protocol on services of general interest. Back
67
Articles 2 TEU & 2a-6b TFEU. Back
68
Articles 249-249d TFEU. Back
69
Articles 249b & 249c TFEU. Back
70
Except in defence policy. Article 48 TEU. Back
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