Meklēt

Meklēšanas rezultāti

Tiek rādīts Nr. 7 no 7 rezultāti

This study, commissioned by the European Parliament’s Policy Department for Citizens’ Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the request of the AFCO Committee, examines the legislative procedures in the Treaties. It focuses on special legislative procedures where either Parliament or the Council adopts an act with the participation (consultation or consent) of the other institution. This should not mean, however, that the participating institution could not influence the substance of the act. Instead ...

The absence of a single fiscal policy in the euro area does not necessarily constitute a problem for the ECB. In a deep financial crisis poorly coordinated national fiscal policies are likely to be insufficient. But outside crisis periods spill-over effects of fiscal policy are likely to be small and of uncertain sign. Moreover, fiscal policy is always subject to policy errors and other shocks. With many different national policies, individual errors and shocks would tend to cancel out each other ...

On 14 April 2015, the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) delivered a judgment on the power of the Commission to withdraw a legislative proposal during the legislative procedure. The Court confirmed, for the first time, that the right of the Commission to withdraw legislative proposals is inseparable from its right of initiative.

The aim of this report is to emphasise some of the challenges that the EP will have to confront during the next parliamentary term. In legislative terms, MEPs will have to direct their attention towards trilogues, legislative initiative and reviews of pending proposals. As regards scrutiny, the global strategy of the EP towards the Commission (support or independence) is at stake. Delegated legislation and committee procedure also merit some attention. Finally, the internal organisation of the EP ...

The European Commission has a near monopoly on legislative initiative in the European Union (EU), with special initiative rights for other institutions applying only in certain specific cases. However, the European Parliament (EP) has the right to invite the Commission to present legislative proposals. Many see the EP's increasing participation in overall political planning, particularly through negotiations on the Commission's Annual Work Programme, as a further channel for Parliament's influence ...

This document contains the presentations by the three experts invited and the subsequent discussion with Members of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the representative of the European Parliament's Legal Service, as taken from the recording of the English interpretation.

The CAP and the Lisbon Treaty

Padziļināta analīze 15-10-2008

The changes on the CAP made by the Treaty of Lisbon are therefore essentially institutional and procedural. The substantive changes concern the statement in Article 38 (1) and (4). The provisions in the Lisbon Treaty relating to the CAP should, on the whole, prove to be very positive for the European Parliament.