EU-wide lists for EP elections proposed
The Constitutional Affairs Committee of the European Parliament has proposed that an extra 25 MEPs should be elected to the parliament from EU-wide lists.
It has proposed that in European Parliament elections, each voter would have two ballots, one for national lists and the other for EU-wide ones. The proposals are to be put to a plenary vote in June.
The proposals were made even though additional MPs elected on the strength of the Lisbon Treaty (such as Malta's Joseph Cuschieri) have not taken their place in the parliament while wrangling over procedure continues.
"We are seeking to exploit for the first time the new powers we have as a result of the Lisbon Treaty, to improve the popular legitimacy of this House. We have a great chance to establish a coherent modernisation of the electoral procedure" said rapporteur Andrew Duff (ALDE, UK), in a debate. His draft report was approved in committee today with 20 votes in favour and four against.
Transnational lists
The EU political parties would be in charge of drawing up the transnational lists, with 25 candidates on each list. The candidates should come from at least one-third of the EU Member States, MEPs said. Each voter would have two ballots, one for the national lists and one for the transnational ones.
National authorities would be in charge of counting the EU-wide votes as well as national ones, and they would report the results to a new EU electoral authority that would have to be created to oversee the EU-wide elections. The 25 MEPs elected from the transnational lists would join the 751 MEPs chosen from national ones, so the number of MEPs would rise to a total of 776.
Other proposals
The committee also proposed bringing the timing of the European elections forward from June to May. This would give each new Parliament more time to prepare for the election of the President of the European Commission in July. An earlier date would also mean that the elections do not take place during the summer holidays in the northern Member States.
Furthermore, MEPs asked the Commission to propose ways to make it easier for EU citizens living outside their own countries to take part in European elections.
Mr Duff's original draft report also included a proposed mathematical formula for redistributing the seats in the European Parliament. This formula was dropped – instead, MEPs propose a dialogue with EU Member States at European Council level to assess whether such a formula can be found.
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Mr Joseph Grech
Apr 19th 2011, 21:55
Europe is falling to pieces - financially, culturally, socially....and all these well-paid MEPs think of is their salary and getting more and more of their ilk to share in the spoils.
Who cares that the common E.U. citizen is with his back against the wall having to find ways and means to keep up with the rising cost of living, unemployment, farcical justice systems, etc. etc.?
Europe will fail because there is no political union - it's every country following its own national agenda. Europe keeps churning out failed policy after policy, putting the interests of illegal immigrants before those of the E.U. citizen. A number of its commissioners (Reding, Malmstrom) have failed miserably. They need to resign. Help the immigrants in their native Africa...do not allow Europe to be torn to shreds as a result of the failed multiculturalism.
Mr Malcolm Seychell
Apr 19th 2011, 19:54
and the new ussr keeps on growing
Mr FRANS H SAID
Apr 19th 2011, 17:55
This suggestion smells. Those big countries that have lost a seat or two towards the smaller nations want to obtain their seats back in a round about way. Germans will vote for a German candidate, etc. This will be another Eurovision of friends voting for friends. I hope that the Maltese MPs will have enought foresight not to be tricked.
Let us see what PN and PL are going to comment about this. And then the big countries will become stronger and the small countries will be weaker.
I feel that EU is being starved and will succumb in the near future. There is no UNITY. It is each country taking care of its citizens and ignoring the rest.. This is not a union, it is bullying in the guise of supposed "democracy"
Mr Patrick Zammit
Apr 19th 2011, 15:27
More seats on the gravy train paid by the taxpayer...