Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | AFCO | CASINI Carlo (PPE) | RANGEL Paulo (PPE), HÄFNER Gerald (Verts/ALE), FOX Ashley (ECR), SØNDERGAARD Søren Bo (GUE/NGL), MESSERSCHMIDT Morten (EFD) |
Lead | AFCO | DUFF Andrew (ALDE) | |
Opinion | JURI | ||
Opinion | LIBE | ||
Opinion | LIBE | GUARDANS CAMBÓ Ignasi (ALDE) |
Legal Basis TFEU 022-p2
Activites
- 2013/01/26 Final act published in Official Journal
- #3213
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2012/12/20
Council Meeting
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2012/12/20
End of procedure in Parliament
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2012/12/20
Act adopted by Council after consultation of Parliament
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2012/11/20
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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T7-0417/2012
summary
The European Parliament adopted by 618 votes to 23, with 14 abstentions, a legislative resolution on the draft Council directive amending Directive 93/109/EC of 6 December 1993 as regards certain detailed arrangements for the exercise of the right to stand as a candidate in elections to the European Parliament for citizens of the Union residing in a Member State of which they are not nationals. Parliament approved the Council’s draft in accordance with the special legislative procedure (renewed consultation of Parliament).
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T7-0417/2012
summary
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2012/10/24
Committee report tabled for plenary, reconsultation
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A7-0352/2012
summary
The Committee on Constitutional Affairs, in the context of a special legislative procedure (renewed consultation of the Parliament) the report by Carlo CASINI (EPP, IT) on the draft Council directive amending Directive 93/109/EC of 6 December 1993 as regards certain detailed arrangements for the exercise of the right to stand as a candidate in elections to the European Parliament for citizens of the Union residing in a Member State of which they are not nationals. The Committee on Constitutional Affairs recommends that the Parliament approves the Council draft. It has decided to use the simplified procedure to issue a swift positive opinion on the Council's draft without amendment in the expectation that the modest but sensible reforms will be in place in time for 2014.
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A7-0352/2012
summary
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2012/10/09
Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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2012/09/13
Formal reconsultation of Parliament
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2012/09/12
Amended legislative proposal for reconsultation published
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13634/2012
summary
On 12 September 2012, COREPER examined the draft text of the Directive on the right to stand as a candidate in elections to the European Parliament for citizens of the Union residing in a Member State of which they are not nationals. At that meeting, delegations agreed on the draft text of the Directive as set out in the Annex and decided to proceed to a new consultation of the European Parliament. The proposed amendments follow on from Commission reports on the application to the European elections 2004 and those of 2009 of Council Directive 93/109/EC laying down detailed arrangements for the exercise of the right to vote and stand as a candidate ion elections to the European Parliament for citizens of the Union residing in a Member State of which they are not nationals. It is proposed to amend certain provisions of the Directive as follows: · any citizen of the Union who has been deprived of his right to stand as a candidate under either the law of the Member State of residence or the law of his home Member State, shall be precluded from exercising that right in the Member State of residence in the case of elections to the European Parliament; · the Member State of residence shall check whether the citizens of the Union who have expressed a desire to exercise their right to stand as a candidate there have not been deprived of that right in the home Member State. The amended Directive provides for the obligation for the Member State of residence to notify the formal declaration that the candidates must produce in order to ensure that the Union candidate was not actually deprived of this right in the home Member State; · upon receipt of such a notification, the home Member State should provide the Member State of residence with relevant information within a time-limit of five working days from the reception of the notification or, where possible, within a shorter time limit, if so requested by the Member State of residence. If the information is not received by the Member State of residence, the candidate shall nonetheless be admitted; · if the information provided invalidates the content of the declaration, the Member State of residence shall take the appropriate steps in accordance with its national law to prevent the person concerned from standing as a candidate; · to facilitate communication between the national authorities, the Member States shall designate one contact point to receive and transmit the information regarding candidates; · to ensure a more efficient identification of candidates registered both on the lists of their home Member State and of the Member State of residence, the list of the data to be required from Union nationals when submitting an application for standing as a candidate in the Member State of residence shall be complemented with the date and place of birth of such citizens and the last address of residence in their home Member State.
- DG {'url': 'http://ec.europa.eu/justice/', 'title': 'Justice'}, REDING Viviane
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13634/2012
summary
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2007/09/26
Results of vote in Parliament
- Results of vote in Parliament
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T6-0410/2007
summary
The European Parliament adopted a report drawn up by Andrew Nicholas DUFF (ALDE, UK) and made some amendments to the Commission’s proposal. The amendments, for the most part, aim to serve two purposes. Firstly, Parliament proposed to abolish the current prohibition on standing for election in more than one Member State , provided that the country of residence permits multiple candidatures. Secondly, it seeks to ensure that the country of residence is not automatically obliged to prevent a citizen from voting if he or she has been deprived of his or her electoral rights in another Member State. MEPs feel that in both cases, it should be up to the Member States concerned to decide, case by case, so as to prevent discrimination. The principal amendments are as follows :- a new operative clause states that any person who, on the reference date: (a) is a citizen of the Union within the meaning of Article 17(1) of the Treaty; (b) is not a national of the Member State of residence, but satisfies the same conditions, in respect of the right to vote and to stand as a candidate, as that State imposes by law on its own nationals, shall have the right to vote and to stand as a candidate in elections to the European Parliament in the Member State of residence, unless precluded from exercising those rights by the Member State of residence pursuant to Articles 6 and 7. Where, in order to stand as a candidate, nationals of the Member State of residence must have been nationals for a certain minimum period, citizens of the Union shall be deemed to have met that condition when they have been nationals of a Member State for the same period. Parliament wished to emphasise that any deprivation of electoral rights must be the result of an individual decision taken by the competent authorities of the Member State of residence in conformity with their national law; - since the Act of 1976 explicitly excludes double voting, but does not exclude double candidature, a new clause was inserted stating that Community voters may stand as a candidate in more than one Member State for the same election, as long as the law of the Member State of residence does not exclude that possibility in respect of its nationals, and the Community voter satisfies the conditions in respect of the right to stand as a candidate as provided for in the law of the other Member State concerned; - Parliament further considered that the prohibition to stand as a candidate in the home Member State does not lead to a general prohibition in all Member States. Accordingly, it inserted a new clause stating that the Member State of residence may provide that citizens of the Union who, through an individual criminal or civil law decision, have been deprived of the right to stand as a candidate under the law of their home Member State, are to be precluded from exercising that right inthe Member State of residence in elections to the European Parliament if they would have been deprived of that right under the national law of that State for the same misdemeanour and in the same manner; - it is left to the discretion of the Member State of residence to check whether a candidate has been deprived of his right to stand as a candidate in the home Member State . The obligation to check is deleted; - Parliament similarly felt that that it ought to be up to the discretion of the Member State of residence to inform the home Member State about a candidate's formal declaration and to decide about the consequences of inaccuracies in that declaration. Accordingly, it deleted the obligation to prevent the person concerned from standing as a candidate; - another amendment puts the right to vote in line with the right to stand as a candidate and is based on the same reasoning. It provides that the Member State of residence may provide that citizens of the Union who, through an individual criminal or civil law decision, have been deprived of their right to vote under the law of their home Member State, are to be precluded from exercising that right in the Member State of residence in elections to the European Parliament if they would have been deprived of that right under the national law of that State for the same misdemeanour and in the same manner. The Member State of residence may notify the home Member State of the declaration. To that end, the relevant, and normally available, information from the home Member State shall be provided in good time and in an appropriate manner; such information may only include details which are strictly necessary for the implementation of this Article and may only be used for that purpose. The home Member State may, in good time and in an appropriate manner, submit to the Member State of residence any information necessary for the implementation of this Article;- lastly, the Member State of residence may also require Community nationals who are entitled to stand as candidates to produce a valid identity document. It may also require them to indicate the date from which they have been nationals of a Member State and whether they have been deprived of the right to stand as a candidate in their home Member State.
- 2007/06/29 Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading
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2007/06/26
Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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2007/03/13
Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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2006/12/12
Legislative proposal published
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COM(2006)0791
summary
PURPOSE : to amend Directive 93/109/EC as regards the rules on double voting and double candidature for EU citizens standing in elections to the European Parliament and residing in a Member State of which they are not nationals.PROPOSED ACT : Council Directive.CONTENT : according to EU citizenship rights enshrined in the EC Treaty, every citizen of the Union residing in a Member State of which he is not a national has the right to vote and to stand as a candidate to the European Parliament in the Member State in which he resides, under the same conditions as nationals of that State. The principles for voting and standing as a candidate in a Member State of which an EU citizen is not a national are set out in Directive 93/109/EC. No one may vote more than once in an EP election or stand as a candidate in two countries in the same election (Article 4).Directive 93/109/EC establishes two means to prevent people from voting or standing as a candidate in more than one Member State in the same elections:- EU non-nationals must provide a formal declaration that he/she will exercise the right to vote or to stand as a candidate in their Member State of residence only (Articles 9 and 10);- Member States are obliged to exchange information on nationals of other Member States who have been entered on electoral rolls or have stood as a candidate. On the basis of the information sent by the Member State of residence to the home Member State, the latter must take appropriate action to ensure that their nationals do not vote or stand as a candidate in more than one Member State (Article 13). To this end, an information exchange system between the Member States was set up. The Commission and the Member States have informally agreed on practical details for the exchange of information within the system. However, there is no legal obligation for the Member States to follow them. The system is too administratively burdensome for Member States and lacks operability and effectiveness, mainly because of the non-harmonised national legislations in electoral matters. The proposal discusses in detail the problems that have been identified with the system. The Directive also stipulates that citizens of the EU who have been deprived of the right to stand as a candidate under either the law of the Member States of residence or the law of their home Member state, shall be precluded from exercising that right in the Member State of residence in elections to the EP (Article 6.1). EU citizens who wish to stand as a candidate in EP elections in their country of residence instead of in their country of origin are obliged, under the Directive, to certify with an attestation delivered by the competent authorities in the Member State of origin, that they are not deprived of the right to stand as a candidate in that Member State (Article 10.2). An application form is declared inadmissible where that citizen is unable to provide this attestation (Article 6.2). This obligation results in a heavy administrative burden on EU non-nationals wishing to stand as a candidate in the Member State of residence and might be one reason for the low participation rate of these citizens.Proposed amendments to the Directive : in order to remedy the deficiencies of the current mechanism on how to prevent double vote and double candidature, the objectives of this proposal are:to replace the obligation of the exchange of information by less burdensome measures, whilst introducing the necessary guaranties and deterrents;to abolish the obligation for EU citizens who wish to stand as a candidate in the Member State of residence to provide the attestation that they are not deprived of the right to stand as a candidate, and to replace it with a reference to that effect to be introduced in the formal declaration that candidates must submit under current Article 10.1.Information exchange system: the Commission proposes to abolish this while maintaining the formal declaration of EU non-nationals that they will exercise the right to vote or stand as a candidate in one Member State only. The obligation of such a declaration is, in itself, a deterrent to voting or standing twice as a candidate. Article 2.9 defines the 'formal declaration' as 'a declaration by the person concerned, inaccuracy in which makes that person liable to penalties, in accordance with the national law applicable'. However, the dissuasive effect is limited because this provision refers back to national law on penalties. Therefore, in order to reinforce the deterrent to voting or standing twice, the Commission proposes to introduce a new provision laying down explicitly the obligation for the Member States to apply effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for inaccuracy in declarations produced under the Directive resulting in a violation of obligations posed therein. Furthermore, these penalties which should be at least equivalent to those applicable under relevant national measures, will be the subject of information measures by Member States, which they are currently obliged to undertake under Article 12. The Commission also proposes to present a report, based on information received from the Member States, on the occurrence of double vote and double candidature after the first application of the amended Directive which would be a necessary and useful means to identify possible cases of double vote and double candidature in order to assess the extent of instances of such attempts. The Commission suggests that Member States undertake ex post checks in situations where there is a likelihood of double vote.Attestation to stand as candidate: the Commission proposes the abolition of the obligation for candidates to present the attestation that they have not been deprived of the right to stand as a candidate, and to replace it with the inclusion of a mention to that effect into the formal declaration that candidates must submit. It also proposes to introduce the obligation for the Member State of residence to check with the Member States of origin that the citizen concerned has not been deprived of his/her right to stand as a candidate by the notification of his/her declaration to the Member State of origin.The new provision laying down the obligation for the Member States to apply penalties for inaccuracy in formal declarations will apply also to the declaration by candidates that they are not deprived of the right to stand as a candidate.In order to guarantee to EU-non nationals the exercise of their electoral rights in accordance with the amended Directive in the next elections of June 2009, the Commission proposes that Member States transpose the provisions necessary to comply with the amended Directive by 30 June 2008 at the latest.Simplification:no more meetings with the Commission and Member States on the implementation of the information exchange system will be needed;abolishing the obligation of the Member States to exchange information would simplify administrative procedures and save the national administrations the costs related to this work;the introduction of a mention of not being deprived of the right to stand as a candidate in the formal declaration that potential candidates must already provide would be much less burdensome than the current obligation to provide a separate attestation to that effect.
- DG {'url': 'http://ec.europa.eu/justice/', 'title': 'Justice'}, REDING Viviane
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COM(2006)0791
summary
Documents
- Legislative proposal published: COM(2006)0791
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading: A6-0267/2007
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T6-0410/2007
- Amended legislative proposal for reconsultation published: 13634/2012
- Committee report tabled for plenary, reconsultation: A7-0352/2012
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T7-0417/2012
- : Directive 2013/1
- : OJ L 026 26.01.2013, p. 0027
History
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