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EU Law (Part 1) Legal Order. 2nd lecture , 6 November 2012. Mery Ciacci. Institutions Procedure for the adoption of the legal acts. The Institutions. Listed in Article 13 TEU: European Parliament European Council Council of the European Union (EU Council ) Commission
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EU Law(Part 1)Legal Order 2nd lecture, 6 November 2012 Mery Ciacci
Institutions • Procedure for the adoption of the legalacts
The Institutions Listed in Article 13 TEU: • European Parliament • European Council • Councilof the European Union (EU Council) • Commission • Court of Justice of the European Union • European Central Bank • The Court of Auditors • In addition: Social and EconomicCommittee, Committee of Regions
EU Parliament:Composition • members of the European Parliament (MEPs) represent the Union’s citizens and sit according to political group, rather than nationality (no more than 750 representatives + the President) (art. 14 TEU) • Directly elected by EU voters every 5 years however a uniform electoral procedure (originally envisaged) for all the Mb States has not been created yet • The Parliament elects its own President and 14 Vice-Presidents for 2 and a half year terms; together they form the Bureau of Parliament (responsible for the Parliament’s budget, administrative and organizational matters) • 20 standing committees on different matters (international trade, development, foreign affairs, industry, culture, agriculture, etc...) consider legislative proposal from the Commission; they adopt their own-initiative reports • Seat: Strasbourg + Secretariat in Luxembourg and a seat in Brussels
EU Parliament:role • Three main roles: • Legislative power: debating and passing European laws, with the Council • Supervisory power: scrutinising other EU institutions, to make sure they are working democratically; a dismissal and appointment power: censure the Commission’s accountability and participate in the Commission’s appointment • Budgetary Power: debating and adopting the EU's budget, with the Council • Gradual transformation: from a relatively powerless body to a strengthened institution
Decision-making • SEA: cooperation procedure involved the EP’s participation • TEU: co-decision procedure, it made the EP a co-equal partner with the Council in the area where it applied (art. 251 former TEC) • Today is the ‘ordinary legislative procedure’: Parliament works together with the Council to decide on the content of EU laws and officially adopt them (art. 289 TFEU and art. 294 TFEU) • Under the Lisbon Treaty, the range of policies covered by the new ordinary legislative procedure has increased (giving Parliament more power to influence the content of laws in areas such as agriculture, energy policy, immigration and EU funds) • Parliament must also give its permission for other important decisions, such as allowing new countries to join the EU
European Council • began informally in the 60s and 70s as a forum for discussion between EU head of governments • Institutionalized in 1992, in 2009 it became one of the EU’s 7 official institutions • Today: European Council meetings are essentially summits where EU leaders meet to decide on broad political priorities and major initiatives (twice every 6 months chaired by a permanent president) • Composition: • Heads of State or Government of the Member States • President (elected by the European Council for 2 year and a half • President of the Commission • + the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy shall take part in its work (art. 15)
European Council:role • shall provide the Union with the necessary impetus for its development and shall define the general political directions and priorities thereof. It shall not exercise legislative functions (Art. 15.1) • Main role: to set general political direction and priorities, and dealing with complex or sensitive issues that cannot be resolved at a lower level of intergovernmental cooperation • Decision are taken by consensus except if the Treaties provide otherwise • The President of the European Council shall, at his level and in that capacity, ensure the external representation of the Union on issues concerning its common foreign and security policy, without prejudice to the powers of the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (
Council (EU Council) • this is where national ministers from each EU country meet to adopt laws and coordinate policies • Composition: a representative of each Member State at ministerial level • Meetings: when are convened by the President, or requested by one of its Members, or at the request of the Commission • There are no fixed members as such. At each Council meeting, each country sends the minister for the policy field being discussed – e.g. the environment minister for the meeting dealing with environmental matters. That meeting will then be known as the "Environment Council" • It represents national interests
Council’s powers: • It exercises jointly with the Parliament legislative and budgetary functions • carry out policy-making and coordinating functions as laid down in the Treaties: • Coordinates the broad economic policies of EU member countries • Develops the EU's foreign and defence policies (art. 24 and 26 TEU) • Signs agreements between the EU and other countries
Council’s voting • qualified majority to adopt act is the rule • Votes are weighted according to the number of population • A qualified majority is reached when: - a majority (sometimes even two thirds) of the 27 EU countries vote in favour • at least 255 of the possible 345 votes are cast • Furthermore, a member country can ask for a check to see whether the majority represents minimum 62% of the total population. If this is not the case, the proposal cannot be adopted • Decisions in sensitive areas, like security or externalaffairs, shall be adopted by unanimity
Commission(art. 17 TEU) • It represents and upholds the interests of the EU as a whole • It drafts proposals for new European laws • It manages the day-to-day business of implementing EU policies and spending EU funds • Composition: 27 Commissioners, one from each EU country, provide the Commission’s political leadership during their 5-year term. Each Commissioner is assigned responsibility for specific policy areas by the President. • ThePresident is nominated by the European Council. The Council also appoints the other Commissioners in agreement with the nominated President
Commission’s powers • Legislative power: central role in the legislative process • 'right of initiative’: Union legislative acts may only be adopted on the basis of a Commission proposal, except where the Treaties provide otherwise (Art. 17.2 TEU) • Executive power: • manages the EU's budget and allocating funding • enforces EU law: the Commission brings actions against Member States when they are in breach of EU law • represents the EU internationally, for example, by negotiating agreements between the EU and other countries • Administrative power: management of programmes (administration of policies)
Court of Justice of the European Union • Court of Justice, the General Court and specialised courts (art. 19 TEU) • its mission is to ensure that ‘the law is observed’‘in the interpretation and application’ of the Treaties • Composition: one judge from each Member State; it is assisted by Advocates-General (8)
Role of the Court: • reviews the legality of the acts of the institutions of the European Union • ensures that the Member States comply with obligations under the Treaties, and • interprets European Union law at the request of the national courts and tribunals
5 kind of Rulings: • requests for a preliminary ruling – when national courts ask the Court of Justice to interpret a point of EU law • actions for failure to fulfil an obligation – brought against EU governments for not applying EU law • actions for annulment – against EU laws thought to violate the EU treaties or fundamental rights • actions for failure to act – against EU institutions for failing to make decisions required of them • direct actions – brought by individuals, companies or organisations against EU decisions or actions
Legislation and decision-making:Adoption of the acts Ordinary legislative procedure Special legislative procedure Art. 289.2 TFEU: specific cases provided for by the Treaties the adoption of a regulation, directive or decision by the European Parliament with the participation of the Council, or by the latter with the participation of the European Parliament Important role of the Council exercised through its voting (unanimity or qualified majority) • Pre-Lisbon: cooperation and co-decision, + otherforms • Post-Lisbon: Co-decisionis the ordinary legislative procedure • Art. 294 TFEU Steps: • Commissionsubmits a proposal • First reading • Second reading • Conciliation • Thirdreading The logic behind: - Dialogue - Compromise - More democratic procedure