Nieuws-items bij Totstandkoming Verdrag van Lissabon
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27-07-2012Indiening van EU-burgerinitiatief niet altijd even gemakkelijk
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23-05-2012Toespraak eurocommissaris Sefcovic (Institutioneel beleid) voor Europees Parlement over Lissabon-verdrag (en)
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21-03-2012Rosenthal: even geen nieuw EU-plan
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01-12-2011Toespraak eurocommissaris Sefcovic over de institutionele ontwikkelingen sinds invoering van het Verdrag Lissabon (en)
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14-11-2011Europees Parlement zal vanaf volgende maand 18 nieuwe leden verwelkomen (en)
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25-10-2011Toespraak eurocommissaris Sefcovic over uitdagingen van de EU (en)
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18-10-2011Toespraak eurocommissaris De Gucht over lessen uit het Verdrag van Lissabon (en)
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16-10-2011Trichet wil aanpassing Europese verdragen
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11-10-2011Bijeenkomst Raad over de voorbereidingen voor bijeenkomst van de Europese Raad en voor G20-top
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03-06-2011Voorzitter christendemocraten in Europarlement pleit voor één EU-baas
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09-05-2011Adequate financiering nodig voor EU2020-strategie (en)
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08-05-2011Interview Commissievoorzitter Barroso: Europa is goed op weg (en)
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03-05-2011Toespraak eurocommissaris Šefcovic over de samenwerking tussen de Europese Commissie en het Europarlement (en)
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25-03-2011Europese Raad bereikt akkoord over wijziging Verdrag van Lissabon voor permanent noodfonds (en)
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24-02-2011Knapen geeft gastcollege Europa
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18-01-2011Voorzitters EU-instituties bespreken meerjarig financieel kader voor het eerst sinds Lissabon (en)
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11-01-2011Deense premier aangeklaagd wegens goedkeuren Verdrag van Lissabon zonder referendum (en)
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20-12-2010Steven Vanackere maakt een balans op van het Belgische voorzitterschap
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14-12-2010Groen licht voor Europees burgerinitiatief
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01-12-2010Toespraak EP-voorzitter Buzek over één jaar Verdrag van Lissabon en de versterkte rol van het EP (en)
BRUSSELS - The European Parliament is expecting to welcome 18 new members over the course of next month, as a two-and-a-half-year-long bureaucratic procedure draws to a close.
“I’m expecting everybody to arrive between December and January next year,” Jaume Duch, spokesperson of the EU parliament, told EUobserver on Monday (14 November).
The Lisbon Treaty, in which the rules governing the European Union were last modified, limits the number of MEPs to 750 plus one president and tweaks their allocation among member states after the massive enlargements of 2005 and 2007.
Twelve countries are to gain one or more representatives - Spain: 4; Austria, France, and Sweden: 2; Bulgaria, Italy, Malta, Latvia, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, and the UK: 1 - whereas Germany is set to lose three of them.
The new treaty only came into force, however, half a year after elections in June 2009 had already produced the 736-strong parliament of today, creating something of a legal conundrum: adding the 18 newcomers would amount to a surplus of three deputees - illegal under the new rules.
The solution foreseen by EU leaders was a treaty change that would allow the total number of MEPs to rise temporarily to 754 until the end of the 2009-2014 legislative term. “The objective is that this modification should enter into force, if possible, during the year 2010,” according the conclusions of the European council of December 2008.
It took longer than expected, though. “It is a procedure that has to go through the parliaments of all the 27 member states. That takes a bit of time,” says Duch.
Belgium was the latest to ratify, as the treaty change passed the latest of its six parliaments late last month.
“It now still has to send the ratification to Rome, as other member states have already done, where the treaty is located. There, Italian diplomats will assess the validity of the documents and annex it to the original. The modified treaty then comes into force on the first of the next month, in this case 1 December,” explained Duch.
Yet, even when 18 newcomers are expected to begin their new life as MEPs as early as next month, not all have been informed. “I haven’t received any official communication. I do not know when I’m supposed to begin. Nothing is certain,” said Joseph Cuschieri, of the Maltese Labour Party - of the 18 MEPs in limbo.
He has long criticised the fact that he and his 17 counterparts have not been installed ealier as observing members. “I think it is anti-democratic. We have been elected and it is unfair with regard to the people who have voted for us.”
Duch, for his part, says that the European Parliament “did not consider that necessary. Even more so because in certain cases, the observing members would not have been the same people as the full members afterwards.”
For Cuschieri, the approval may have come too late. “I don’t know if I am going anymore. It depends on whether I will be able to deliver politically or not. I will decide in the coming days.”
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