BETA


2013/2077(INI) EU regulatory fitness and subsidiarity and proportionality - 19th report on Better lawmaking covering the year 2011

Progress: Procedure completed

RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Lead JURI KARIM Sajjad (icon: ECR ECR) GERINGER DE OEDENBERG Lidia Joanna (icon: S&D S&D), TAYLOR Rebecca (icon: ALDE ALDE)
Committee Opinion AFCO MESSERSCHMIDT Morten (icon: EFD EFD) Ashley FOX (icon: ECR ECR)
Committee Opinion REGI
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 142-p1

Events

2014/06/18
   EC - Commission response to text adopted in plenary
Documents
2014/02/04
   EP - Results of vote in Parliament
2014/02/04
   EP - Decision by Parliament
Details

The Parliament adopted a resolution on EU Regulatory Fitness and Subsidiarity and Proportionality - 19th report on Better Lawmaking covering the year 2011.

General comments : Parliament stressed that legislation proposed and adopted at the European level should be simple, effective and efficient, should provide a clear added value, and should be easy to understand and accessible in all the official languages of the Member States, as well as delivering full benefits at minimum cost. It emphasised the fact that the European institutions are responsible for ensuring that legislation is clear and easily understood and does not place any unnecessary administrative burdens on citizens or enterprises.

Believing that better lawmaking should be pursued in a spirit of multilevel governance, i.e. through coordinated action by the EU, national institutions and local and regional authorities, Parliament considered that the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking of 2003 had become ill-suited to the current legislative environment created by the Treaty of Lisbon, and called for the Agreement to be re-negotiated on the basis of Article 295 TFEU and should be of a binding nature.

In addition, Parliament stressed the following:

the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality were not adequately addressed by the Commission in its impact assessments, as has been pointed out by the Impact Assessment Board and by national parliaments; the Commission and Council need to engage with Parliament in negotiations on the criteria for the appropriate application of Article 290 and 291 TFEU, and this can be achieved in the framework of the revision of the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking, the Commission should step up its review of the application of the principle of proportionality, especially with regard to the use of Articles 290 and 291 TFEU on delegated and implementing acts; close attention should be paid to the early warning system.

Subsidiarity mechanism for national parliaments : Members welcomed the closer participation of national parliaments in the framework of the European legislative process. They recommended that the national parliaments be afforded substantial assistance to enable them to carry out their scrutiny tasks.

On Subsidiarity mechanism, Parliament stressed that in 2011 the Commission received 64 reasoned opinions within the meaning of Protocol No 2 on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality, which represents a considerable increase in comparison to 2010. It notes, however, that these 64 reasoned opinions represented barely 10 % of the total of 622 opinions forwarded to the Commission by national parliaments in 2011 within the terms of the political dialogue in question.

It also drew attention to the fact that no Commission proposal received a sufficient number of reasoned opinions to trigger the ‘yellow or orange card procedures’ under the Protocol. It noted, however, that on 22 May 2012 a ’yellow card procedure’ was for the first time triggered by a Commission proposal (proposal for a Council regulation on the exercise of the right to take collective action within the context of the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services, i.e. the proposal for the ‘Monti II’ Regulation). It stressed that the Commission withdrew the proposal, not because it considered the principle of subsidiarity to have been infringed upon, but because it realised that the proposal was unlikely to gain enough political support in Parliament and the Council to ensure its adoption

Globally, Parliament took the view that the mechanism for verification of the subsidiarity principle must be designed and put to use as a major instrument for collaboration between European and national institutions and emphasised dialogue among the different institutional levels of the multi-level European system.

Better lawmaking : Parliament urged the Commission to come forward with further concrete proposals to reduce the overall EU regulatory burden without undermining health and safety at work .

Members further suggested that the Commission should:

explore the option of introducing a ‘white paper’ stage in the legislative process to afford stakeholders the ability to comment on draft proposals and accompanying provisional impact assessments; put forward proposals implementing regulatory offsetting , which would require equivalent cost offsets to be identified in advance of new legislation that would introduce the imposition of costs, and present an assessment of its impact before the end of the current parliamentary term in 2014.

Impact assessments and European added value : Members proposed that Parliament’s own impact assessments should include a territorial dimension when appropriate.

Lastly, Parliament insisted that the Commission give serious consideration to the European added value assessments accompanying legislative own-initiative reports , setting out in detail the reasons why it did not accept or consider relevant any of the arguments put forward by Parliament.

Documents
2014/02/04
   EP - End of procedure in Parliament
2014/02/03
   EP - Debate in Parliament
2014/01/28
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary
Details

The Committee on Legal Affairs adopted the own-initiative report by Sajjad Karim (ECR, UK) on EU Regulatory Fitness and Subsidiarity and Proportionality - 19th report on Better Lawmaking covering the year 2011.

General comments : Members considered that the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking of 2003 had become ill-suited to the current legislative environment created by the Treaty of Lisbon , and called for the Agreement to be re-negotiated, to take account of the new framework, consolidate current best practices, and bring the agreement up to date in line with the ‘better lawmaking’ agenda. Any new agreement should be adopted on the basis of Article 295 TFEU and should be of a binding nature.

In addition, the Committee stressed the following:

· the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality were not adequately addressed by the Commission in its impact assessments, as has been pointed out by the Impact Assessment Board and by national parliaments;

· the Commission and Council need to engage with Parliament in negotiations on the criteria for the appropriate application of Article 290 and 291 TFEU, and this can be achieved in the framework of the revision of the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking,

· the Commission should step up its review of the application of the principle of proportionality, especially with regard to the use of Articles 290 and 291 TFEU on delegated and implementing acts;

· close attention should be paid to the early warning system.

Subsidiarity mechanism for national parliaments : Members welcomed the closer participation of national parliaments in the framework of the European legislative process.

Initiatives to improve the evaluation of European issues by national parliaments were suggested in the report.

Better lawmaking : Members urged the Commission to come forward with further concrete proposals to reduce the overall EU regulatory burden without undermining health and safety at work.

Members further suggest that the Commission should:

· explore the option of introducing a ‘white paper’ stage in the legislative process to afford stakeholders the ability to comment on draft proposals and accompanying provisional impact assessments;

· put forward proposals implementing regulatory offsetting , which would require equivalent cost offsets to be identified in advance of new legislation that would introduce the imposition of costs, and present an assessment of its impact before the end of the current parliamentary term in 2014.

Lastly, it insisted that the Commission give serious consideration to the European added value assessments accompanying legislative own-initiative reports , setting out in detail the reasons why it did not accept or consider relevant any of the arguments put forward by Parliament.

Documents
2014/01/21
   EP - Vote in committee
2013/12/02
   EP - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2013/10/17
   EP - Committee opinion
Documents
2013/08/30
   EP - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2013/06/21
   EP - Committee draft report
Documents
2013/06/10
   EP - Committee referral announced in Parliament
2013/04/23
   EP - MESSERSCHMIDT Morten (EFD) appointed as rapporteur in AFCO
2013/04/18
   SE_PARLIAMENT - Contribution
Documents
2013/04/15
   EP - KARIM Sajjad (ECR) appointed as rapporteur in JURI
2012/12/12
   EC - For information
Details

PURPOSE: to present a programme, called REFIT , which aims at more targeted EU regulation.

BACKGROUND: EU legislation is essential to achieve the objectives of the EU Treaty and to set the conditions for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, benefitting citizens, businesses and workers. Achieving these goals is a shared responsibility between the Commission, the other European Institutions and the Member States.

The economic and financial crisis has focused attention on the costs of EU legislation and the challenges of implementing and enforcing the laws already on the statute books. National administrations, already under strain, find it difficult to keep up with the transposition and application of EU legislation. Businesses and citizens raise concerns about the complexity and administrative load of laws. The European Council has therefore called for further efforts to reduce the overall regulatory burden at EU and national level.

The Commission is responding to these concerns. Since outlining new initiatives two years ago, it has consolidated its impact assessment system . The 25% target set under the Action Programme for Reducing Administrative Burdens has been met and exceeded. Legislation has been simplified and codified. Significant simplification proposals in several policy areas are being examined by the European Parliament and Council. Many problems on the correct application of EU legislation are being solved without having to resort to formal infringement procedures.

It would appear, nevertheless, necessary to further enhance the initiatives already taken.

CONTENT: the Commission will continue its activities in this field and is determined to meet policy goals at minimum cost , achieving the benefits that only EU legislation can bring and eliminating all unnecessary regulatory burden. It intends therefore to propose a programme designed to set in place fitter regulation .

To this end, it will:

continue to strengthen its regulatory tools and to apply them systematically across its regulatory activities; also step up its implementation and enforcement in close cooperation with the other European institutions and the Member States; combine various initiatives now underway into a Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme (REFIT) aimed at eliminating unnecessary regulatory costs (i.e. burden) and ensuring that the body of EU legislation remains fit for purpose.

Against quantitative targets: in its Communication, the Commission indicates that it does not believe that setting global targets and/or quantitative formulae for managing the stock of legislation will produce the desired results . This requires a more tailored approach with an assessment of actual benefits and costs - identifying whether they are directly related to EU legislation or to the implementation choices made by the Member States. Such an approach would make it possible to more accurately target cost reduction and regulatory improvements and would be better suited to the specificities of EU policy making.

Main objective of a Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme, REFIT: to move towards its goal, the Commission will launch a Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme (REFIT) building on its experience in evaluating and reducing administrative burden. REFIT will identify burdens, inconsistencies, gaps and ineffective measures . Attention will be paid to possible regulatory burden related to how EU legislation is implemented at the national and sub-national level.

Through REFIT , the Commission will:

identify, assess, adopt, and monitor implementation of, initiatives which will result in significant regulatory cost reduction or simplification; propose a common framework for conducting assessments , on the one hand, to show how they fit into the overall objective of ensuring smart regulation and eliminating burdens, to involve all relevant levels of government and, on the other, to facilitate wide stakeholder participation; conduct a mapping exercise to identify the regulatory areas and pieces of legislation with the greatest potential for simplifying rules and reducing regulatory cost for businesses and citizens without compromising public policy objectives. Normally, the mapping will point to areas where further evaluation, including of costs and benefits, is needed. These evaluations will also assess whether quantitative targets for burden reduction should be examined in the concerned field and in relation to EU and Member States responsibilities respectively. Where the mapping provides sufficient evidence that more immediate action is needed, an impact assessment process for the proposals will be launched. Stakeholders will be informed throughout the process; implement REFIT in a transparent manner: once the mapping and appropriate evaluation work has been conducted, REFIT evaluations will be publicly flagged in strengthened multiannual evaluation plans starting from 2014. A tracking system ( scoreboard ) will be set up to assess the progress of proposals through the EU institutions and at the implementation stage; REFIT will include a follow-on to the Administrative Burden Reduction Programme (ABR) - ABR Plus. The 2007 Programme aimed to reduce burdens on business stemming from EU legislation by 25% by 2012. It covered around 80% of the main sources of administrative burden. The Commission has gone beyond the target by presenting proposals to cut the administrative burden by over 30 %, while measures equalling 25% have been adopted by the co-legislators. Benefits will not materialize until the ABR is successfully implemented. ABR Plus will therefore focus on follow-up in the Member States. Member States will be asked to report by 31 December 2013 on how they implemented ABR measures. Special measures will be set in place to evaluate the reduction in administrative burden for SMEs.

The Commission’s communication presents the methodology, the tools and the partners that it envisages being involved in implementing the REFIT programme. This would include, among other things:

the continuation of the impact assessment programme; further evaluation of implementation measures in force; the continuation of the systematic consultation of stakeholders; the involvement of all the European and Member States’ institutions.

the continuation of the impact assessment programme; further evaluation of implementation measures in force; the continuation of the systematic consultation of stakeholders; the involvement of all the European and Member States’ institutions.

2012/10/16
   IT_SENATE - Contribution
Documents
2012/10/10
   IT_CHAMBER - Contribution
Documents
2012/07/10
   EC - Non-legislative basic document
Details

PURPOSE: to present the 19th report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality.

BACKGROUND: this is the nineteenth annual report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality in EU lawmaking.

As in previous years, it looks at how the principles are implemented by the different EU institutions and bodies, the Commission, the European Parliament, the Council and the Committee of the Regions and presents in more detail some Commission initiatives and legislative proposals which have raised subsidiarity issues during 2011. It also examines how the subsidiarity control mechanism, which under Article 12 of the TEU and the Protocol gives national Parliaments a particular role in scrutiny of the principle of subsidiarity , has developed since the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty.

CONTENT: the majority of Commission proposals were adopted by the colegislators without significant discussions on subsidiarity and proportionality. In 2011, the thresholds for the so-called "yellow card" and "orange card" were not reached and only a small percentage ( about 10% ) of national Parliaments' opinions sent to the Commission in the context of the political dialogue were reasoned opinions within the meaning of the Protocol, i.e. stating a breach of subsidiarity . At the same time, in cases where compliance with the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality was questioned, the views of the institutions and other players involved sometimes differed widely.

The concepts of subsidiarity and proportionality are fundamental elements in the policy development process of the EU Institutions , and the Commission's impact assessments remain the main vehicle for addressing subsidiarity and proportionality issues during the pre-legislative phase, the IA Board playing a key role in this respect. However, institutional practice shows that the way these principles are interpreted and applied during the legislative phase often depends on the political context, highlighting thus their political dimension.

The way in which most of the national Parliaments implement the Protocol and use the subsidiarity control mechanism has highlighted the primarily political character of this new tool .

The subsidiarity control mechanism has served to make the process more transparent and has clearly helped to bring EU policies into the public debate in Member States and thus to raise public awareness on these issues.

How the institutions apply these principles: the report reviews how the institutions apply these two fundamental principles:

1. the Commission: it recalls that a subsidiarity statement is presented for each legislative proposal, as foreseen by Article 5 of the Protocol to the Treaty. Impact assessments (IAs), which accompany proposals with significant impacts, provide the most detailed analysis of subsidiarity and proportionality. The quality of this analysis is systematically scrutinised by the IA Board. In 2011, the Board continued to assess EU added value when scrutinising the quality of IAs. Though the Board's recommendations on subsidiarity and proportionality were down slightly compared to 2010, they still featured in a significant number of opinions (43 %). The Board frequently asked for stronger justification of the need for action at EU level, in particular the need for more evidence of problems that require action at EU level and, on some occasions, it concluded that the evidence base to demonstrate the need for and proportionality of an EU legislative initiative remained weak.

2. the national parliaments: the subsidiarity control mechanism gives national Parliaments the right to express their views on whether draft legislative acts, which do not fall within the EU's exclusive competences comply with the principle of subsidiarity. Depending on the number of reasoned opinions concluding that a proposal is in breach of the subsidiarity principle, the so-called ‘ yellow card ’ and ‘ orange card ’ can be triggered. These entail a review of the draft legislation and may lead to the relevant legislative proposal being amended or withdrawn. In 2011, the Commission received 64 reasoned opinions from national Parliaments , an increase of almost 75% in comparison with 2010, the first year of functioning of the subsidiarity control mechanism. These 64 reasoned opinions received in 2011 related to 28 different Commission proposals. Most of the reasoned opinions focused on legislative proposals in the fields of taxation, agriculture, internal market and justice. The proposals which elicited the highest number of reasoned opinions concerned the Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (nine opinions), the temporary reintroduction of border controls at internal borders in exceptional circumstances (six), the Common European Sales Law (five) and the Single CMO Regulation (five).

In none of the 2011 cases were the thresholds for triggering the yellow or orange cards met .

In accordance with its political commitment to national Parliaments, the Commission replied or is in the process of preparing a reply to each reasoned opinion in the context of the political dialogue and put forward into account in the ensuing interinstitutional discussions and negotiations.

3. the European Parliament and the Council: in Council, the Committee of Permanent Representatives (Coreper) ensures that the principles are complied with. In the European Parliament, the internal Rules of Procedure contain a specific Rule on the " Examination of respect for the principle of subsidiarity ", which states that compliance is verified by the committees in charge of specific legislative dossiers, together with the Committee on Legal Affairs, and that the committee responsible may not take its final vote before expiry of the eight-week deadline.

It should also be noted that, in 2011, the Commission received a small number of parliamentary questions ( 32 out of more than 12 000) which concerned issues in relation to respect for the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality. They mainly covered requests to substantiate the compliance of certain Commission proposals with these principles, partially echoing concerns raised by other institutions and players.

4. the Committee of the Regions: the Committee of the Regions expresses its views either when it is consulted or in the form of own-initiative opinions. In accordance with Article 8 of the Protocol, it also has the right to challenge under Article 263 TFEU the validity of legislation as regards compliance with the principle of subsidiarity, but only if it has been consulted by virtue of an obligation under the TFEU. 2011 saw preparations for the launch of the REGPEX website, which is designed to help regions with legislative powers play their part in the subsidiarity control mechanism and to provide a source of information and exchange between regional parliaments and governments as they prepare their subsidiarity analyses. The website was launched in March 2012.

5. the Court of Justice: the Court of Justice of the European Union is, in accordance with Article 263 TFEU, competent to review the legality of legislative acts as regards compliance with the principle of subsidiarity. The Protocol states that the Committee of the Regions or Member States, themselves or on behalf of their national Parliaments, can bring a case before the Court.

Lastly, the report cites a number of key cases where subsidiarity and proportionality concerns were raised. These cases are described both from the point of view of the interinstitutional debates that took place in their regard and the arguments put forward by national parliaments to counter the proposals in question.

2012/07/10
   EC - Non-legislative basic document published
Details

PURPOSE: to present the 19th report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality.

BACKGROUND: this is the nineteenth annual report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality in EU lawmaking.

As in previous years, it looks at how the principles are implemented by the different EU institutions and bodies, the Commission, the European Parliament, the Council and the Committee of the Regions and presents in more detail some Commission initiatives and legislative proposals which have raised subsidiarity issues during 2011. It also examines how the subsidiarity control mechanism, which under Article 12 of the TEU and the Protocol gives national Parliaments a particular role in scrutiny of the principle of subsidiarity , has developed since the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty.

CONTENT: the majority of Commission proposals were adopted by the colegislators without significant discussions on subsidiarity and proportionality. In 2011, the thresholds for the so-called "yellow card" and "orange card" were not reached and only a small percentage ( about 10% ) of national Parliaments' opinions sent to the Commission in the context of the political dialogue were reasoned opinions within the meaning of the Protocol, i.e. stating a breach of subsidiarity . At the same time, in cases where compliance with the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality was questioned, the views of the institutions and other players involved sometimes differed widely.

The concepts of subsidiarity and proportionality are fundamental elements in the policy development process of the EU Institutions , and the Commission's impact assessments remain the main vehicle for addressing subsidiarity and proportionality issues during the pre-legislative phase, the IA Board playing a key role in this respect. However, institutional practice shows that the way these principles are interpreted and applied during the legislative phase often depends on the political context, highlighting thus their political dimension.

The way in which most of the national Parliaments implement the Protocol and use the subsidiarity control mechanism has highlighted the primarily political character of this new tool .

The subsidiarity control mechanism has served to make the process more transparent and has clearly helped to bring EU policies into the public debate in Member States and thus to raise public awareness on these issues.

How the institutions apply these principles: the report reviews how the institutions apply these two fundamental principles:

1. the Commission: it recalls that a subsidiarity statement is presented for each legislative proposal, as foreseen by Article 5 of the Protocol to the Treaty. Impact assessments (IAs), which accompany proposals with significant impacts, provide the most detailed analysis of subsidiarity and proportionality. The quality of this analysis is systematically scrutinised by the IA Board. In 2011, the Board continued to assess EU added value when scrutinising the quality of IAs. Though the Board's recommendations on subsidiarity and proportionality were down slightly compared to 2010, they still featured in a significant number of opinions (43 %). The Board frequently asked for stronger justification of the need for action at EU level, in particular the need for more evidence of problems that require action at EU level and, on some occasions, it concluded that the evidence base to demonstrate the need for and proportionality of an EU legislative initiative remained weak.

2. the national parliaments: the subsidiarity control mechanism gives national Parliaments the right to express their views on whether draft legislative acts, which do not fall within the EU's exclusive competences comply with the principle of subsidiarity. Depending on the number of reasoned opinions concluding that a proposal is in breach of the subsidiarity principle, the so-called ‘ yellow card ’ and ‘ orange card ’ can be triggered. These entail a review of the draft legislation and may lead to the relevant legislative proposal being amended or withdrawn. In 2011, the Commission received 64 reasoned opinions from national Parliaments , an increase of almost 75% in comparison with 2010, the first year of functioning of the subsidiarity control mechanism. These 64 reasoned opinions received in 2011 related to 28 different Commission proposals. Most of the reasoned opinions focused on legislative proposals in the fields of taxation, agriculture, internal market and justice. The proposals which elicited the highest number of reasoned opinions concerned the Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (nine opinions), the temporary reintroduction of border controls at internal borders in exceptional circumstances (six), the Common European Sales Law (five) and the Single CMO Regulation (five).

In none of the 2011 cases were the thresholds for triggering the yellow or orange cards met .

In accordance with its political commitment to national Parliaments, the Commission replied or is in the process of preparing a reply to each reasoned opinion in the context of the political dialogue and put forward into account in the ensuing interinstitutional discussions and negotiations.

3. the European Parliament and the Council: in Council, the Committee of Permanent Representatives (Coreper) ensures that the principles are complied with. In the European Parliament, the internal Rules of Procedure contain a specific Rule on the " Examination of respect for the principle of subsidiarity ", which states that compliance is verified by the committees in charge of specific legislative dossiers, together with the Committee on Legal Affairs, and that the committee responsible may not take its final vote before expiry of the eight-week deadline.

It should also be noted that, in 2011, the Commission received a small number of parliamentary questions ( 32 out of more than 12 000) which concerned issues in relation to respect for the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality. They mainly covered requests to substantiate the compliance of certain Commission proposals with these principles, partially echoing concerns raised by other institutions and players.

4. the Committee of the Regions: the Committee of the Regions expresses its views either when it is consulted or in the form of own-initiative opinions. In accordance with Article 8 of the Protocol, it also has the right to challenge under Article 263 TFEU the validity of legislation as regards compliance with the principle of subsidiarity, but only if it has been consulted by virtue of an obligation under the TFEU. 2011 saw preparations for the launch of the REGPEX website, which is designed to help regions with legislative powers play their part in the subsidiarity control mechanism and to provide a source of information and exchange between regional parliaments and governments as they prepare their subsidiarity analyses. The website was launched in March 2012.

5. the Court of Justice: the Court of Justice of the European Union is, in accordance with Article 263 TFEU, competent to review the legality of legislative acts as regards compliance with the principle of subsidiarity. The Protocol states that the Committee of the Regions or Member States, themselves or on behalf of their national Parliaments, can bring a case before the Court.

Lastly, the report cites a number of key cases where subsidiarity and proportionality concerns were raised. These cases are described both from the point of view of the interinstitutional debates that took place in their regard and the arguments put forward by national parliaments to counter the proposals in question.

Documents

Votes

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 1 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: +: 537, -: 125, 0: 17
DE FR IT ES RO PL EL PT AT HU SE BG SK HR FI BE CZ LT DK CY MT IE LV LU SI EE NL ?? GB
Total
92
71
59
49
31
49
17
17
19
16
19
17
12
9
10
22
20
9
9
5
5
12
8
6
4
5
21
1
65
icon: PPE PPE
244

Czechia PPE

2

Denmark PPE

For (1)

1
2

Malta PPE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3

Estonia PPE

For (1)

1
icon: S&D S&D
174

Finland S&D

2

Lithuania S&D

1

Cyprus S&D

1

Ireland S&D

2

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
53

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

GUE/NGL

1

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27

France NI

2

Italy NI

For (1)

Abstain (1)

2

Spain NI

1

Romania NI

2

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

1

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1
icon: EFD EFD
28

France EFD

1

Greece EFD

2

Bulgaria EFD

For (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

Abstain (1)

1

Finland EFD

For (1)

1

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Denmark EFD

1

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
72

Greece ALDE

1

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Finland ALDE

Against (1)

2

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Estonia ALDE

For (1)

3
icon: ECR ECR
49

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 2 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 360, +: 300, 0: 15
FR BE EL FI AT HR MT DK CZ PT CY ?? IE EE NL ES SK SI LU LT SE LV DE RO IT HU BG GB PL
Total
68
21
17
11
19
9
5
10
20
17
5
1
12
6
21
49
12
4
6
9
19
8
90
30
59
16
17
65
49
icon: S&D S&D
171

Finland S&D

2

Cyprus S&D

1

Ireland S&D

2

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Netherlands S&D

2

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Lithuania S&D

1
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
55

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Sweden Verts/ALE

4

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

GUE/NGL

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27

France NI

2

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1

Spain NI

1

Romania NI

2

Italy NI

Against (1)

Abstain (1)

2

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1
icon: EFD EFD
27

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Finland EFD

For (1)

1

Denmark EFD

1

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

Abstain (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Bulgaria EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
72

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Finland ALDE

Against (1)

3

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

2

Ireland ALDE

4

Estonia ALDE

For (1)

3

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
49

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: PPE PPE
242

Belgium PPE

Against (1)

Abstain (1)

5

Finland PPE

3

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

Cyprus PPE

2

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1
3

Luxembourg PPE

3

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 3 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 372, +: 280, 0: 20
FR EL AT MT CZ DK SE BE CY ?? HR PT FI SK SI EE LT ES LU IE LV NL HU DE RO BG IT GB PL
Total
71
17
18
5
20
9
18
21
5
1
9
15
11
12
4
6
9
49
5
12
8
21
16
91
30
17
59
64
49
icon: S&D S&D
169

Cyprus S&D

1

Finland S&D

2

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Lithuania S&D

1

Ireland S&D

2

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
54

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

GUE/NGL

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: EFD EFD
28

France EFD

1

Greece EFD

2

Denmark EFD

Abstain (1)

1

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

Abstain (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: NI NI
26

France NI

2

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Spain NI

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Romania NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Italy NI

Against (1)

Abstain (1)

2
icon: ECR ECR
48

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
72

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1
icon: PPE PPE
243

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1

Belgium PPE

Abstain (1)

5

Cyprus PPE

2

Finland PPE

3
3

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 8 S #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 372, +: 283, 0: 24
SE BE FI EE MT RO HR FR ES LU DK AT EL ?? SI SK LT LV BG CY IE DE PT CZ NL HU IT GB PL
Total
19
21
11
6
5
28
9
72
50
6
10
19
17
1
4
12
9
7
17
5
12
92
16
20
21
16
59
66
49
icon: S&D S&D
171

Finland S&D

2

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Lithuania S&D

1

Cyprus S&D

1

Ireland S&D

2

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: ALDE ALDE
74

Luxembourg ALDE

For (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

2

Austria ALDE

1

Greece ALDE

1

Lithuania ALDE

1

Latvia ALDE

For (1)

1

Ireland ALDE

For (1)

4
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
55

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

For (1)

Against (2)

3
icon: EFD EFD
28

Belgium EFD

Against (1)

1

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

France EFD

Against (1)

1

Denmark EFD

Against (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Slovakia EFD

Against (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Bulgaria EFD

Against (1)

1

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: NI NI
27

Belgium NI

Against (1)

1

Romania NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

France NI

2

Spain NI

1
5

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Italy NI

2
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

Spain GUE/NGL

Against (1)

1

GUE/NGL

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

Against (1)

1

Cyprus GUE/NGL

2

Ireland GUE/NGL

Against (1)

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
49

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: PPE PPE
243

Belgium PPE

Abstain (1)

5

Finland PPE

3

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1
3

Cyprus PPE

2

Czechia PPE

2

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 9 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 564, +: 108, 0: 9
?? LT CY LV EE LU SI MT EL NL FI PT SK AT DK HR IE SE BG CZ BE HU FR RO ES PL IT DE GB
Total
1
9
5
8
6
6
4
5
17
21
10
17
12
19
11
9
12
19
17
20
22
16
70
31
50
49
58
93
64
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
54

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

For (1)

Against (2)

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

GUE/NGL

1

Cyprus GUE/NGL

2

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Greece GUE/NGL

Abstain (1)

3

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27
4

Ireland NI

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Belgium NI

Against (1)

1

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

France NI

2

Romania NI

2

Spain NI

1

Italy NI

2
icon: EFD EFD
28

Lithuania EFD

2

Greece EFD

2

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

For (1)

1

Denmark EFD

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria EFD

For (1)

1

Belgium EFD

Against (1)

1

France EFD

Abstain (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
47

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
76

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

3
icon: S&D S&D
172

Lithuania S&D

1

Cyprus S&D

Against (1)

1

Estonia S&D

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg S&D

Against (1)

1

Slovenia S&D

Against (1)

1

Netherlands S&D

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Finland S&D

Against (1)

1

Ireland S&D

2

Bulgaria S&D

3
icon: PPE PPE
245

Cyprus PPE

2

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3
3

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

Belgium PPE

Abstain (1)

5

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 4 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 392, +: 285, 0: 4
FR BE AT EL MT CZ DK CY ?? HR SE PT EE ES SI SK LU LT LV FI IE BG NL RO HU DE IT GB PL
Total
72
22
19
17
5
20
11
5
1
9
19
16
5
50
4
12
6
9
7
11
12
17
21
31
16
93
58
64
49
icon: S&D S&D
172

Cyprus S&D

1

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Lithuania S&D

1

Finland S&D

2

Ireland S&D

2

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
55

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

GUE/NGL

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27

France NI

2

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Spain NI

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Romania NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Italy NI

2
icon: EFD EFD
28

France EFD

1

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Denmark EFD

1

Slovakia EFD

Against (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria EFD

For (1)

1

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
49

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
74

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

3

Estonia ALDE

2

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Italy ALDE

Against (1)

3
icon: PPE PPE
244

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1

Cyprus PPE

2

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1
3

Luxembourg PPE

3

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 5 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 391, +: 280, 0: 5
FR EL AT MT CZ PT CY ?? HR SE NL BE DK ES SI SK LT FI EE LU IE LV RO HU BG DE IT GB PL
Total
71
16
19
5
20
17
5
1
9
19
20
21
11
50
4
12
9
11
5
5
12
8
31
16
16
91
58
65
49
icon: S&D S&D
171

Cyprus S&D

1

Netherlands S&D

2

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Lithuania S&D

1

Finland S&D

2

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Ireland S&D

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
52

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

GUE/NGL

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27

France NI

2

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Spain NI

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1

Romania NI

2

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Italy NI

2
icon: EFD EFD
27

France EFD

Against (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Netherlands EFD

For (1)

1

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Denmark EFD

Against (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

Against (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
48

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
76

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

3

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1

Italy ALDE

Against (1)

3
icon: PPE PPE
243

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

Cyprus PPE

2

Netherlands PPE

Against (1)

3

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1
3

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 6 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 378, +: 288, 0: 14
FR EL BE AT MT IE PT CZ CY ?? HR SE ES DK SK SI LU EE LV FI LT NL RO HU BG DE IT GB PL
Total
70
17
22
19
5
12
16
20
5
1
9
19
49
11
12
4
6
6
7
11
9
21
31
16
16
93
58
66
49
icon: S&D S&D
174

Ireland S&D

2

Cyprus S&D

1

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Finland S&D

2

Lithuania S&D

1

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
54

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

GUE/NGL

1

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27

France NI

2

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1

Spain NI

1

Romania NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Italy NI

Against (1)

Abstain (1)

2
icon: EFD EFD
28

France EFD

Against (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Denmark EFD

Against (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

Abstain (1)

1

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

For (1)

Abstain (1)

2

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
49

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
75

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Ireland ALDE

Against (1)

4

Denmark ALDE

3

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Italy ALDE

Against (1)

3
icon: PPE PPE
241

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

Cyprus PPE

2

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1
3

Luxembourg PPE

3

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 10 S #

2014/02/04 Outcome: -: 579, +: 92, 0: 11
?? SI LV EE LU CY MT FI LT SE DK HR EL IE PT CZ AT SK BG NL BE HU FR RO ES PL GB DE IT
Total
1
4
8
6
6
5
5
11
9
17
11
9
17
12
17
20
19
12
17
21
22
16
71
31
50
48
65
93
59
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
55

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

For (1)

Against (2)

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

GUE/NGL

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Cyprus GUE/NGL

2

Greece GUE/NGL

Abstain (1)

3

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

For (1)

3

Netherlands GUE/NGL

Against (1)

2

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

Abstain (1)

1
icon: EFD EFD
28

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Denmark EFD

Against (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Slovakia EFD

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria EFD

For (1)

1

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1

Belgium EFD

Against (1)

1

France EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: NI NI
27

Ireland NI

Against (1)

1
5

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Belgium NI

Against (1)

1

Hungary NI

Abstain (1)

1

France NI

2

Romania NI

2

Spain NI

Against (1)

1

Italy NI

2
icon: ECR ECR
49

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Italy ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
74

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Sweden ALDE

3

Denmark ALDE

3

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1
icon: S&D S&D
174

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Estonia S&D

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg S&D

Against (1)

1

Cyprus S&D

Against (1)

1

Finland S&D

2

Lithuania S&D

1

Ireland S&D

2

Bulgaria S&D

3

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: PPE PPE
243
3

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3

Cyprus PPE

2

Malta PPE

Against (1)

1

Denmark PPE

Against (1)

1

Czechia PPE

2

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Am 7 #

2014/02/04 Outcome: +: 529, -: 144, 0: 6
FR DE ES IT RO PL PT AT EL HU BE SE SK HR CZ BG LT CY MT FI LV LU SI IE DK ?? NL EE GB
Total
71
93
50
56
31
49
17
19
17
16
22
19
12
9
20
17
9
5
5
10
8
6
4
11
11
1
20
6
65
icon: PPE PPE
244

Czechia PPE

2
2

Malta PPE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

3

Denmark PPE

For (1)

1

Estonia PPE

For (1)

1
icon: S&D S&D
170

Lithuania S&D

1

Cyprus S&D

1

Finland S&D

2

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Ireland S&D

1

Netherlands S&D

1

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
54

Portugal Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Greece Verts/ALE

1

Finland Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

3
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

3

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

GUE/NGL

1

Netherlands GUE/NGL

2

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
27

France NI

2

Spain NI

1

Italy NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Romania NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Hungary NI

1

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1

Ireland NI

For (1)

1
icon: EFD EFD
28

France EFD

Against (1)

1

Greece EFD

2

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

For (1)

1

Bulgaria EFD

For (1)

1

Lithuania EFD

2

Finland EFD

For (1)

1

Denmark EFD

Abstain (1)

1

Netherlands EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
49

Italy ECR

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Denmark ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
75

Austria ALDE

Against (1)

1

Greece ALDE

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1
3

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg ALDE

Against (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

3

A7-0056/2014 - Sajjad Karim - Résolution #

2014/02/04 Outcome: +: 413, -: 252, 0: 12
PL GB DE IT HU LT BG LV RO CZ ES IE FR LU BE FI PT EE SK SI DK AT CY NL SE EL HR ?? MT
Total
49
63
92
58
16
9
15
8
30
20
49
12
72
6
22
11
17
6
12
4
11
19
5
21
19
17
9
1
4
icon: PPE PPE
242

Czechia PPE

2

Luxembourg PPE

3

Estonia PPE

For (1)

1

Denmark PPE

For (1)

1
2

Malta PPE

For (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
75

Italy ALDE

For (1)

3

Lithuania ALDE

1

Latvia ALDE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg ALDE

For (1)

1
3

Austria ALDE

1

Greece ALDE

1
icon: ECR ECR
49

Italy ECR

1

Hungary ECR

For (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

1

Latvia ECR

For (1)

1

Belgium ECR

For (1)

1

Denmark ECR

For (1)

1
icon: EFD EFD
26

Lithuania EFD

2

Bulgaria EFD

For (1)

1

France EFD

1

Belgium EFD

For (1)

1

Finland EFD

For (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

For (1)

1

Denmark EFD

1

Netherlands EFD

For (1)

1

Greece EFD

2
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
32

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

Abstain (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

Against (1)

1

Portugal GUE/NGL

For (1)

3

Cyprus GUE/NGL

2

Netherlands GUE/NGL

Against (1)

2

Greece GUE/NGL

3

GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
26

United Kingdom NI

Abstain (1)

6

Italy NI

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Hungary NI

Against (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

1

Romania NI

Against (1)

2

Spain NI

1

Ireland NI

Against (1)

1

France NI

2

Belgium NI

Abstain (1)

1
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
54

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

Against (1)

3

Latvia Verts/ALE

Against (1)

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1
4

Finland Verts/ALE

Against (2)

2

Portugal Verts/ALE

Against (1)

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

Against (1)

1

Denmark Verts/ALE

Against (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Greece Verts/ALE

Against (1)

1
icon: S&D S&D
173

Hungary S&D

For (1)

4

Lithuania S&D

1

Bulgaria S&D

3

Ireland S&D

2

Luxembourg S&D

Against (1)

1

Finland S&D

2

Estonia S&D

Against (1)

1

Slovenia S&D

Against (1)

1

Cyprus S&D

Against (1)

1

Netherlands S&D

2
AmendmentsDossier
117 2013/2077(INI)
2013/09/02 JURI 19 amendments...
source: PE-516.887
2013/09/26 AFCO 43 amendments...
source: PE-519.763
2013/12/02 JURI 55 amendments...
source: PE-524.664

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

docs/0
date
2012-07-10T00:00:00
docs
summary
type
Non-legislative basic document
body
EC
docs/6
date
2013-04-19T00:00:00
docs
url: http://www.connefof.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373
type
Contribution
body
SE_PARLIAMENT
docs/7
date
2013-04-18T00:00:00
docs
url: https://connectfolx.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373
type
Contribution
body
SE_PARLIAMENT
docs/7
date
2012-10-11T00:00:00
docs
url: http://www.connefof.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373
type
Contribution
body
IT_CHAMBER
docs/8
date
2012-10-10T00:00:00
docs
url: https://connectfolx.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373
type
Contribution
body
IT_CHAMBER
docs/8
date
2012-10-17T00:00:00
docs
url: http://www.connefof.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373
type
Contribution
body
IT_SENATE
docs/9
date
2012-10-16T00:00:00
docs
url: https://connectfolx.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373
type
Contribution
body
IT_SENATE
events/4/docs
  • url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/CRE-7-2014-02-03-TOC_EN.html title: Debate in Parliament
docs/1/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE514.600
New
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/JURI-PR-514600_EN.html
docs/2/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE516.887
New
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/JURI-AM-516887_EN.html
docs/3/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE514.776&secondRef=02
New
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/AFCO-AD-514776_EN.html
docs/4/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE524.664
New
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/JURI-AM-524664_EN.html
events/0/docs/0/url
Old
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2012&nu_doc=373
New
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2012&nu_doc=0373
events/1/type
Old
Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
New
Committee referral announced in Parliament
events/2/type
Old
Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
New
Vote in committee
events/3
date
2014-01-28T00:00:00
type
Committee report tabled for plenary
body
EP
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/A-7-2014-0056_EN.html title: A7-0056/2014
summary
events/3
date
2014-01-28T00:00:00
type
Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
body
EP
docs
url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/A-7-2014-0056_EN.html title: A7-0056/2014
summary
events/4/docs
  • url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20140203&type=CRE title: Debate in Parliament
events/6
date
2014-02-04T00:00:00
type
Decision by Parliament
body
EP
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-7-2014-0061_EN.html title: T7-0061/2014
summary
events/6
date
2014-02-04T00:00:00
type
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
docs
url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-7-2014-0061_EN.html title: T7-0061/2014
summary
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure EP 142-p1
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure EP 132-p1
committees/0
type
Responsible Committee
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Legal Affairs
committee
JURI
rapporteur
name: KARIM Sajjad date: 2013-04-15T00:00:00 group: European Conservatives and Reformists abbr: ECR
shadows
committees/0
type
Responsible Committee
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Legal Affairs
committee
JURI
date
2013-04-15T00:00:00
rapporteur
name: KARIM Sajjad group: European Conservatives and Reformists abbr: ECR
shadows
committees/2
type
Committee Opinion
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Constitutional Affairs
committee
AFCO
rapporteur
name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten date: 2013-04-23T00:00:00 group: Europe of Freedom and Democracy abbr: EFD
committees/2
type
Committee Opinion
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Constitutional Affairs
committee
AFCO
date
2013-04-23T00:00:00
rapporteur
name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten group: Europe of Freedom and Democracy abbr: EFD
docs/5/body
EC
events/0
date
2012-07-10T00:00:00
type
Non-legislative basic document published
body
EC
docs
summary
events/0
date
2012-07-10T00:00:00
type
Non-legislative basic document published
body
EC
docs
summary
events/3/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2014-0056&language=EN
New
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/A-7-2014-0056_EN.html
events/6/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2014-0061
New
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-7-2014-0061_EN.html
activities
  • date: 2012-07-10T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/registre/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2012/0373/COM_COM(2012)0373_FR.pdf title: COM(2012)0373 type: Non-legislative basic document published celexid: CELEX:52012DC0373:EN body: EC commission: DG: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/secretariat_general/index_en.htm title: Secretariat-General Commissioner: ŠEFČOVIČ Maroš type: Non-legislative basic document published
  • date: 2013-06-10T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: AFCO date: 2013-04-23T00:00:00 committee_full: Constitutional Affairs rapporteur: group: EFD name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten body: EP shadows: group: S&D name: GERINGER DE OEDENBERG Lidia Joanna group: ALDE name: TAYLOR Rebecca responsible: True committee: JURI date: 2013-04-15T00:00:00 committee_full: Legal Affairs rapporteur: group: ECR name: KARIM Sajjad body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Regional Development committee: REGI
  • date: 2014-01-21T00:00:00 body: EP type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: AFCO date: 2013-04-23T00:00:00 committee_full: Constitutional Affairs rapporteur: group: EFD name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten body: EP shadows: group: S&D name: GERINGER DE OEDENBERG Lidia Joanna group: ALDE name: TAYLOR Rebecca responsible: True committee: JURI date: 2013-04-15T00:00:00 committee_full: Legal Affairs rapporteur: group: ECR name: KARIM Sajjad body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Regional Development committee: REGI
  • date: 2014-01-28T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2014-0056&language=EN type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading title: A7-0056/2014 body: EP type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • date: 2014-02-03T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20140203&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament body: EP type: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2014-02-04T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=24069&l=en type: Results of vote in Parliament title: Results of vote in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2014-0061 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0061/2014 body: EP type: Results of vote in Parliament
commission
  • body: EC dg: Secretariat-General commissioner: ŠEFČOVIČ Maroš
committees/0
type
Responsible Committee
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Legal Affairs
committee
JURI
date
2013-04-15T00:00:00
rapporteur
name: KARIM Sajjad group: European Conservatives and Reformists abbr: ECR
shadows
committees/0
body
EP
responsible
False
committee
AFCO
date
2013-04-23T00:00:00
committee_full
Constitutional Affairs
rapporteur
group: EFD name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten
committees/1
type
Committee Opinion
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Regional Development
committee
REGI
opinion
False
committees/1
body
EP
shadows
responsible
True
committee
JURI
date
2013-04-15T00:00:00
committee_full
Legal Affairs
rapporteur
group: ECR name: KARIM Sajjad
committees/2
type
Committee Opinion
body
EP
associated
False
committee_full
Constitutional Affairs
committee
AFCO
date
2013-04-23T00:00:00
rapporteur
name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten group: Europe of Freedom and Democracy abbr: EFD
committees/2
body
EP
responsible
False
committee_full
Regional Development
committee
REGI
docs
  • date: 2012-12-12T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2012/0746/COM_COM(2012)0746_EN.doc title: COM(2012)0746 url: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2012&nu_doc=746 title: EUR-Lex summary: PURPOSE: to present a programme, called REFIT , which aims at more targeted EU regulation. BACKGROUND: EU legislation is essential to achieve the objectives of the EU Treaty and to set the conditions for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, benefitting citizens, businesses and workers. Achieving these goals is a shared responsibility between the Commission, the other European Institutions and the Member States. The economic and financial crisis has focused attention on the costs of EU legislation and the challenges of implementing and enforcing the laws already on the statute books. National administrations, already under strain, find it difficult to keep up with the transposition and application of EU legislation. Businesses and citizens raise concerns about the complexity and administrative load of laws. The European Council has therefore called for further efforts to reduce the overall regulatory burden at EU and national level. The Commission is responding to these concerns. Since outlining new initiatives two years ago, it has consolidated its impact assessment system . The 25% target set under the Action Programme for Reducing Administrative Burdens has been met and exceeded. Legislation has been simplified and codified. Significant simplification proposals in several policy areas are being examined by the European Parliament and Council. Many problems on the correct application of EU legislation are being solved without having to resort to formal infringement procedures. It would appear, nevertheless, necessary to further enhance the initiatives already taken. CONTENT: the Commission will continue its activities in this field and is determined to meet policy goals at minimum cost , achieving the benefits that only EU legislation can bring and eliminating all unnecessary regulatory burden. It intends therefore to propose a programme designed to set in place fitter regulation . To this end, it will: continue to strengthen its regulatory tools and to apply them systematically across its regulatory activities; also step up its implementation and enforcement in close cooperation with the other European institutions and the Member States; combine various initiatives now underway into a Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme (REFIT) aimed at eliminating unnecessary regulatory costs (i.e. burden) and ensuring that the body of EU legislation remains fit for purpose. Against quantitative targets: in its Communication, the Commission indicates that it does not believe that setting global targets and/or quantitative formulae for managing the stock of legislation will produce the desired results . This requires a more tailored approach with an assessment of actual benefits and costs - identifying whether they are directly related to EU legislation or to the implementation choices made by the Member States. Such an approach would make it possible to more accurately target cost reduction and regulatory improvements and would be better suited to the specificities of EU policy making. Main objective of a Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme, REFIT: to move towards its goal, the Commission will launch a Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme (REFIT) building on its experience in evaluating and reducing administrative burden. REFIT will identify burdens, inconsistencies, gaps and ineffective measures . Attention will be paid to possible regulatory burden related to how EU legislation is implemented at the national and sub-national level. Through REFIT , the Commission will: identify, assess, adopt, and monitor implementation of, initiatives which will result in significant regulatory cost reduction or simplification; propose a common framework for conducting assessments , on the one hand, to show how they fit into the overall objective of ensuring smart regulation and eliminating burdens, to involve all relevant levels of government and, on the other, to facilitate wide stakeholder participation; conduct a mapping exercise to identify the regulatory areas and pieces of legislation with the greatest potential for simplifying rules and reducing regulatory cost for businesses and citizens without compromising public policy objectives. Normally, the mapping will point to areas where further evaluation, including of costs and benefits, is needed. These evaluations will also assess whether quantitative targets for burden reduction should be examined in the concerned field and in relation to EU and Member States responsibilities respectively. Where the mapping provides sufficient evidence that more immediate action is needed, an impact assessment process for the proposals will be launched. Stakeholders will be informed throughout the process; implement REFIT in a transparent manner: once the mapping and appropriate evaluation work has been conducted, REFIT evaluations will be publicly flagged in strengthened multiannual evaluation plans starting from 2014. A tracking system ( scoreboard ) will be set up to assess the progress of proposals through the EU institutions and at the implementation stage; REFIT will include a follow-on to the Administrative Burden Reduction Programme (ABR) - ABR Plus. The 2007 Programme aimed to reduce burdens on business stemming from EU legislation by 25% by 2012. It covered around 80% of the main sources of administrative burden. The Commission has gone beyond the target by presenting proposals to cut the administrative burden by over 30 %, while measures equalling 25% have been adopted by the co-legislators. Benefits will not materialize until the ABR is successfully implemented. ABR Plus will therefore focus on follow-up in the Member States. Member States will be asked to report by 31 December 2013 on how they implemented ABR measures. Special measures will be set in place to evaluate the reduction in administrative burden for SMEs. The Commission’s communication presents the methodology, the tools and the partners that it envisages being involved in implementing the REFIT programme. This would include, among other things: the continuation of the impact assessment programme; further evaluation of implementation measures in force; the continuation of the systematic consultation of stakeholders; the involvement of all the European and Member States’ institutions. the continuation of the impact assessment programme; further evaluation of implementation measures in force; the continuation of the systematic consultation of stakeholders; the involvement of all the European and Member States’ institutions. type: For information body: EC
  • date: 2013-06-21T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE514.600 title: PE514.600 type: Committee draft report body: EP
  • date: 2013-08-30T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE516.887 title: PE516.887 type: Amendments tabled in committee body: EP
  • date: 2013-10-17T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE514.776&secondRef=02 title: PE514.776 committee: AFCO type: Committee opinion body: EP
  • date: 2013-12-02T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE524.664 title: PE524.664 type: Amendments tabled in committee body: EP
  • date: 2014-06-18T00:00:00 docs: url: /oeil/spdoc.do?i=24069&j=0&l=en title: SP(2014)414 type: Commission response to text adopted in plenary
  • date: 2013-04-19T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.connefof.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373 type: Contribution body: SE_PARLIAMENT
  • date: 2012-10-11T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.connefof.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373 type: Contribution body: IT_CHAMBER
  • date: 2012-10-17T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.connefof.europarl.europa.eu/connefof/app/exp/COM(2012)0373 title: COM(2012)0373 type: Contribution body: IT_SENATE
events
  • date: 2012-07-10T00:00:00 type: Non-legislative basic document published body: EC docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/registre/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2012/0373/COM_COM(2012)0373_FR.pdf title: COM(2012)0373 url: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2012&nu_doc=0373 title: EUR-Lex summary: PURPOSE: to present the 19th report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality. BACKGROUND: this is the nineteenth annual report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality in EU lawmaking. As in previous years, it looks at how the principles are implemented by the different EU institutions and bodies, the Commission, the European Parliament, the Council and the Committee of the Regions and presents in more detail some Commission initiatives and legislative proposals which have raised subsidiarity issues during 2011. It also examines how the subsidiarity control mechanism, which under Article 12 of the TEU and the Protocol gives national Parliaments a particular role in scrutiny of the principle of subsidiarity , has developed since the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty. CONTENT: the majority of Commission proposals were adopted by the colegislators without significant discussions on subsidiarity and proportionality. In 2011, the thresholds for the so-called "yellow card" and "orange card" were not reached and only a small percentage ( about 10% ) of national Parliaments' opinions sent to the Commission in the context of the political dialogue were reasoned opinions within the meaning of the Protocol, i.e. stating a breach of subsidiarity . At the same time, in cases where compliance with the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality was questioned, the views of the institutions and other players involved sometimes differed widely. The concepts of subsidiarity and proportionality are fundamental elements in the policy development process of the EU Institutions , and the Commission's impact assessments remain the main vehicle for addressing subsidiarity and proportionality issues during the pre-legislative phase, the IA Board playing a key role in this respect. However, institutional practice shows that the way these principles are interpreted and applied during the legislative phase often depends on the political context, highlighting thus their political dimension. The way in which most of the national Parliaments implement the Protocol and use the subsidiarity control mechanism has highlighted the primarily political character of this new tool . The subsidiarity control mechanism has served to make the process more transparent and has clearly helped to bring EU policies into the public debate in Member States and thus to raise public awareness on these issues. How the institutions apply these principles: the report reviews how the institutions apply these two fundamental principles: 1. the Commission: it recalls that a subsidiarity statement is presented for each legislative proposal, as foreseen by Article 5 of the Protocol to the Treaty. Impact assessments (IAs), which accompany proposals with significant impacts, provide the most detailed analysis of subsidiarity and proportionality. The quality of this analysis is systematically scrutinised by the IA Board. In 2011, the Board continued to assess EU added value when scrutinising the quality of IAs. Though the Board's recommendations on subsidiarity and proportionality were down slightly compared to 2010, they still featured in a significant number of opinions (43 %). The Board frequently asked for stronger justification of the need for action at EU level, in particular the need for more evidence of problems that require action at EU level and, on some occasions, it concluded that the evidence base to demonstrate the need for and proportionality of an EU legislative initiative remained weak. 2. the national parliaments: the subsidiarity control mechanism gives national Parliaments the right to express their views on whether draft legislative acts, which do not fall within the EU's exclusive competences comply with the principle of subsidiarity. Depending on the number of reasoned opinions concluding that a proposal is in breach of the subsidiarity principle, the so-called ‘ yellow card ’ and ‘ orange card ’ can be triggered. These entail a review of the draft legislation and may lead to the relevant legislative proposal being amended or withdrawn. In 2011, the Commission received 64 reasoned opinions from national Parliaments , an increase of almost 75% in comparison with 2010, the first year of functioning of the subsidiarity control mechanism. These 64 reasoned opinions received in 2011 related to 28 different Commission proposals. Most of the reasoned opinions focused on legislative proposals in the fields of taxation, agriculture, internal market and justice. The proposals which elicited the highest number of reasoned opinions concerned the Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (nine opinions), the temporary reintroduction of border controls at internal borders in exceptional circumstances (six), the Common European Sales Law (five) and the Single CMO Regulation (five). In none of the 2011 cases were the thresholds for triggering the yellow or orange cards met . In accordance with its political commitment to national Parliaments, the Commission replied or is in the process of preparing a reply to each reasoned opinion in the context of the political dialogue and put forward into account in the ensuing interinstitutional discussions and negotiations. 3. the European Parliament and the Council: in Council, the Committee of Permanent Representatives (Coreper) ensures that the principles are complied with. In the European Parliament, the internal Rules of Procedure contain a specific Rule on the " Examination of respect for the principle of subsidiarity ", which states that compliance is verified by the committees in charge of specific legislative dossiers, together with the Committee on Legal Affairs, and that the committee responsible may not take its final vote before expiry of the eight-week deadline. It should also be noted that, in 2011, the Commission received a small number of parliamentary questions ( 32 out of more than 12 000) which concerned issues in relation to respect for the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality. They mainly covered requests to substantiate the compliance of certain Commission proposals with these principles, partially echoing concerns raised by other institutions and players. 4. the Committee of the Regions: the Committee of the Regions expresses its views either when it is consulted or in the form of own-initiative opinions. In accordance with Article 8 of the Protocol, it also has the right to challenge under Article 263 TFEU the validity of legislation as regards compliance with the principle of subsidiarity, but only if it has been consulted by virtue of an obligation under the TFEU. 2011 saw preparations for the launch of the REGPEX website, which is designed to help regions with legislative powers play their part in the subsidiarity control mechanism and to provide a source of information and exchange between regional parliaments and governments as they prepare their subsidiarity analyses. The website was launched in March 2012. 5. the Court of Justice: the Court of Justice of the European Union is, in accordance with Article 263 TFEU, competent to review the legality of legislative acts as regards compliance with the principle of subsidiarity. The Protocol states that the Committee of the Regions or Member States, themselves or on behalf of their national Parliaments, can bring a case before the Court. Lastly, the report cites a number of key cases where subsidiarity and proportionality concerns were raised. These cases are described both from the point of view of the interinstitutional debates that took place in their regard and the arguments put forward by national parliaments to counter the proposals in question.
  • date: 2013-06-10T00:00:00 type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP
  • date: 2014-01-21T00:00:00 type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading body: EP
  • date: 2014-01-28T00:00:00 type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2014-0056&language=EN title: A7-0056/2014 summary: The Committee on Legal Affairs adopted the own-initiative report by Sajjad Karim (ECR, UK) on EU Regulatory Fitness and Subsidiarity and Proportionality - 19th report on Better Lawmaking covering the year 2011. General comments : Members considered that the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking of 2003 had become ill-suited to the current legislative environment created by the Treaty of Lisbon , and called for the Agreement to be re-negotiated, to take account of the new framework, consolidate current best practices, and bring the agreement up to date in line with the ‘better lawmaking’ agenda. Any new agreement should be adopted on the basis of Article 295 TFEU and should be of a binding nature. In addition, the Committee stressed the following: · the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality were not adequately addressed by the Commission in its impact assessments, as has been pointed out by the Impact Assessment Board and by national parliaments; · the Commission and Council need to engage with Parliament in negotiations on the criteria for the appropriate application of Article 290 and 291 TFEU, and this can be achieved in the framework of the revision of the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking, · the Commission should step up its review of the application of the principle of proportionality, especially with regard to the use of Articles 290 and 291 TFEU on delegated and implementing acts; · close attention should be paid to the early warning system. Subsidiarity mechanism for national parliaments : Members welcomed the closer participation of national parliaments in the framework of the European legislative process. Initiatives to improve the evaluation of European issues by national parliaments were suggested in the report. Better lawmaking : Members urged the Commission to come forward with further concrete proposals to reduce the overall EU regulatory burden without undermining health and safety at work. Members further suggest that the Commission should: · explore the option of introducing a ‘white paper’ stage in the legislative process to afford stakeholders the ability to comment on draft proposals and accompanying provisional impact assessments; · put forward proposals implementing regulatory offsetting , which would require equivalent cost offsets to be identified in advance of new legislation that would introduce the imposition of costs, and present an assessment of its impact before the end of the current parliamentary term in 2014. Lastly, it insisted that the Commission give serious consideration to the European added value assessments accompanying legislative own-initiative reports , setting out in detail the reasons why it did not accept or consider relevant any of the arguments put forward by Parliament.
  • date: 2014-02-03T00:00:00 type: Debate in Parliament body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20140203&type=CRE title: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2014-02-04T00:00:00 type: Results of vote in Parliament body: EP docs: url: https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=24069&l=en title: Results of vote in Parliament
  • date: 2014-02-04T00:00:00 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2014-0061 title: T7-0061/2014 summary: The Parliament adopted a resolution on EU Regulatory Fitness and Subsidiarity and Proportionality - 19th report on Better Lawmaking covering the year 2011. General comments : Parliament stressed that legislation proposed and adopted at the European level should be simple, effective and efficient, should provide a clear added value, and should be easy to understand and accessible in all the official languages of the Member States, as well as delivering full benefits at minimum cost. It emphasised the fact that the European institutions are responsible for ensuring that legislation is clear and easily understood and does not place any unnecessary administrative burdens on citizens or enterprises. Believing that better lawmaking should be pursued in a spirit of multilevel governance, i.e. through coordinated action by the EU, national institutions and local and regional authorities, Parliament considered that the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking of 2003 had become ill-suited to the current legislative environment created by the Treaty of Lisbon, and called for the Agreement to be re-negotiated on the basis of Article 295 TFEU and should be of a binding nature. In addition, Parliament stressed the following: the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality were not adequately addressed by the Commission in its impact assessments, as has been pointed out by the Impact Assessment Board and by national parliaments; the Commission and Council need to engage with Parliament in negotiations on the criteria for the appropriate application of Article 290 and 291 TFEU, and this can be achieved in the framework of the revision of the Interinstitutional Agreement on Better Lawmaking, the Commission should step up its review of the application of the principle of proportionality, especially with regard to the use of Articles 290 and 291 TFEU on delegated and implementing acts; close attention should be paid to the early warning system. Subsidiarity mechanism for national parliaments : Members welcomed the closer participation of national parliaments in the framework of the European legislative process. They recommended that the national parliaments be afforded substantial assistance to enable them to carry out their scrutiny tasks. On Subsidiarity mechanism, Parliament stressed that in 2011 the Commission received 64 reasoned opinions within the meaning of Protocol No 2 on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality, which represents a considerable increase in comparison to 2010. It notes, however, that these 64 reasoned opinions represented barely 10 % of the total of 622 opinions forwarded to the Commission by national parliaments in 2011 within the terms of the political dialogue in question. It also drew attention to the fact that no Commission proposal received a sufficient number of reasoned opinions to trigger the ‘yellow or orange card procedures’ under the Protocol. It noted, however, that on 22 May 2012 a ’yellow card procedure’ was for the first time triggered by a Commission proposal (proposal for a Council regulation on the exercise of the right to take collective action within the context of the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services, i.e. the proposal for the ‘Monti II’ Regulation). It stressed that the Commission withdrew the proposal, not because it considered the principle of subsidiarity to have been infringed upon, but because it realised that the proposal was unlikely to gain enough political support in Parliament and the Council to ensure its adoption Globally, Parliament took the view that the mechanism for verification of the subsidiarity principle must be designed and put to use as a major instrument for collaboration between European and national institutions and emphasised dialogue among the different institutional levels of the multi-level European system. Better lawmaking : Parliament urged the Commission to come forward with further concrete proposals to reduce the overall EU regulatory burden without undermining health and safety at work . Members further suggested that the Commission should: explore the option of introducing a ‘white paper’ stage in the legislative process to afford stakeholders the ability to comment on draft proposals and accompanying provisional impact assessments; put forward proposals implementing regulatory offsetting , which would require equivalent cost offsets to be identified in advance of new legislation that would introduce the imposition of costs, and present an assessment of its impact before the end of the current parliamentary term in 2014. Impact assessments and European added value : Members proposed that Parliament’s own impact assessments should include a territorial dimension when appropriate. Lastly, Parliament insisted that the Commission give serious consideration to the European added value assessments accompanying legislative own-initiative reports , setting out in detail the reasons why it did not accept or consider relevant any of the arguments put forward by Parliament.
  • date: 2014-02-04T00:00:00 type: End of procedure in Parliament body: EP
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/secretariat_general/index_en.htm title: Secretariat-General commissioner: ŠEFČOVIČ Maroš
procedure/dossier_of_the_committee
Old
JURI/7/12547
New
  • JURI/7/12547
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure EP 132-p1
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 132-p1
procedure/subject
Old
  • 8.40.10 Interinstitutional relations, democratic deficit, subsidiarity, comitology
  • 8.50.02 Legislative simplification, coordination, codification
New
8.40.10
Interinstitutional relations, subsidiarity, proportionality, comitology
8.50.02
Legislative simplification, coordination, codification
activities/0/docs/0/celexid
CELEX:52012DC0373:EN
activities/0/docs/0/url
Old
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2012&nu_doc=373
New
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/registre/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2012/0373/COM_COM(2012)0373_FR.pdf
activities/0/commission/0/DG/title
Old
Secretariat General
New
Secretariat-General
activities/0/docs/0/celexid
CELEX:52012DC0373:EN
activities/0/docs/0/url
Old
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/registre/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2012/0373/COM_COM(2012)0373_FR.pdf
New
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=2012&nu_doc=373
other/0/dg/title
Old
Secretariat General
New
Secretariat-General
activities
  • date: 2012-07-10T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/registre/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2012/0373/COM_COM(2012)0373_FR.pdf title: COM(2012)0373 type: Non-legislative basic document published celexid: CELEX:52012DC0373:EN body: EC type: Non-legislative basic document published commission: DG: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/secretariat_general/index_en.htm title: Secretariat General Commissioner: ŠEFČOVIČ Maroš
  • date: 2013-06-10T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: AFCO date: 2013-04-23T00:00:00 committee_full: Constitutional Affairs rapporteur: group: EFD name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten body: EP shadows: group: S&D name: GERINGER DE OEDENBERG Lidia Joanna group: ALDE name: TAYLOR Rebecca responsible: True committee: JURI date: 2013-04-15T00:00:00 committee_full: Legal Affairs rapporteur: group: ECR name: KARIM Sajjad body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Regional Development committee: REGI
  • date: 2014-01-21T00:00:00 body: EP type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: AFCO date: 2013-04-23T00:00:00 committee_full: Constitutional Affairs rapporteur: group: EFD name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten body: EP shadows: group: S&D name: GERINGER DE OEDENBERG Lidia Joanna group: ALDE name: TAYLOR Rebecca responsible: True committee: JURI date: 2013-04-15T00:00:00 committee_full: Legal Affairs rapporteur: group: ECR name: KARIM Sajjad body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Regional Development committee: REGI
  • date: 2014-01-28T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2014-0056&language=EN type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading title: A7-0056/2014 body: EP type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • date: 2014-02-03T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20140203&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament body: EP type: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2014-02-04T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=24069&l=en type: Results of vote in Parliament title: Results of vote in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2014-0061 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0061/2014 body: EP type: Results of vote in Parliament
committees
  • body: EP responsible: False committee: AFCO date: 2013-04-23T00:00:00 committee_full: Constitutional Affairs rapporteur: group: EFD name: MESSERSCHMIDT Morten
  • body: EP shadows: group: S&D name: GERINGER DE OEDENBERG Lidia Joanna group: ALDE name: TAYLOR Rebecca responsible: True committee: JURI date: 2013-04-15T00:00:00 committee_full: Legal Affairs rapporteur: group: ECR name: KARIM Sajjad
  • body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Regional Development committee: REGI
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/secretariat_general/index_en.htm title: Secretariat General commissioner: ŠEFČOVIČ Maroš
procedure
dossier_of_the_committee
JURI/7/12547
reference
2013/2077(INI)
title
EU regulatory fitness and subsidiarity and proportionality - 19th report on Better lawmaking covering the year 2011
legal_basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 132-p1
stage_reached
Procedure completed
subtype
Annual report
type
INI - Own-initiative procedure
subject