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Introduction to EU Policies and Institutional Architecture

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Title: Introduction to EU Policies and Institutional Architecture


1
Introduction to EU Policies and Institutional
Architecture
  • European Commission
  • Lecture IV

2
Main characteristic
  • Representing Community interests supranational
    institution, reduction of govermental infuence
  • Guardian of the Treaties

3
Composition
  • Since 2004 - one member per MS 27 commissioners
  • Before 2004 20 members of the Commission (the
    big countries have two members)
  • Article 213 of the EC Treaty
  • The number of Members of the Commission may be
    altered by the Council, acting unanimously
  • Only nationals of Member States may be Members
    of the Commission.
  • The Commission must include at least one
    national of each of the Member States, but may
    not include more than two Members having the
    nationality of the same State.

RF Number of Commissioniers will be reduced to
15
4
Barroso Commission (2004-2009)
  • Margot Walltsröm (SV) Institutional relations
    and communication strategy
  • Gunter Verhagüen (DE) Enterprise and Industry
  • Jacques Barrot (FR) Transport
  • Siim Kallas (ET) Administrative Affairs, Audit
    and Anti-fraud
  • Franco Fraittini (IT) Justice, Fredom and
    Security
  • Viviane Reding (LUX) Information Society and
    Media
  • Stavros Dimas (EL) Environment
  • Danuta Hübner (PL) Regional Policy
  • Joaquím Almunia (ES) Economic and Monetary
    Affairs
  • Joe Borg (Malta) Fischeries and Maritime Affairs
  • Daria Gybauskalité(LT) Financial Programing and
    Budget
  • Janez Potocnik (SL) Research

5
  • Markos Kyprianou (Cyprus) Health
  • Jan Figel (SK) Education, Training and Youth
  • Olli Rehn (FI) Enlargement
  • Louis Michel (BE) Development and Humanitarian
    Aid
  • László Kovács (HU) Taxation and custom Union
  • Neelie Kroers (NL) Competition
  • Marian Fischer Borel (Denmark) Agriculture
  • Benita Ferrero-Waldner (A) External relations
  • Charlie McCreevy (Irleand) Internal Market
  • Vladimir Spidla (CZ) Employment, Social policy
  • Peter Mendelson (GB) Trade
  • Andris Piebals (LV) Energy
  • Meglena Kuneva (BG) Consumer Protection
  • Leonard Orban (RO) Multilingualism

6
Nomination procedure
  • Commission is chosen for 5 years
  • Council nominates the president of the Commission
  • EP accepts
  • Council accepts in the common agreement with the
    president of the Commission, the list of the
    proposed Commissioners (their list made with
    accordance with the MS)
  • The list of proposed Commission members is sent
    to the EP
  • EP accepts (or not) the whole Commission after
    the hearings of the candidates (but can block the
    whole commission when does not accept only one of
    the candidates (Buttiglione case))
  • Council approves

7
President
  • the political guidance
  • decides on internal organisation in order to
    ensure that it acts consistently, efficiently and
    on the basis of collegiality.
  •  shall allocate the responsibilities incumbent
    upon the Commission among Members, may reshuffle
    the allocation of those responsibilities during
    the Commission's term of office.
  • The Members of the Commission shall carry out the
    duties devolved upon them by the President under
    his authority.
  • shall appoint Vice-Presidents from among its
    Members, after obtaining the approval of the
    College,
  •  A Member of the Commission shall resign if the
    President so requests, after obtaining the
    approval of the College.
  • Jose Manuel Barroso
  • (born 1956, graduated in law (Lisbon, Geneva),
    academic career, in 1980 started his political
    career in Social Democratic Party, in 2002 Prime
    minister of Portugal)

8
Commissioners
  • Status
  • Privileges and immunities
  • Renewable term of office (e.g. Gunter Verhagüen)
  • Independency
  • Commissioners can not seek nor take instructions
    from any government or from any other body
  • shall refrain from any action incompatible with
    their duties
  • may not engage in any other occupation, gainful
    or not
  • entering upon their duties they shall give a
    solemn undertaking that, both during and after
    their term of office, they will respect the
    obligations arising therefrom and in particular
    their duty to behave with discretion.
  • In the event of any breach of these obligations,
    the Court of Justice may, on application by the
    Council or the Commission, rule that the Member
    concerned be, according to the circumstances,
    either compulsorily retired in accordance with
    Article 216 or deprived of his right to a pension
    or other benefits in its stead (Madame Cresson
    case, C-432/04, Commission vs. Edith Cresson)

9
End of mandate
  • Principle
  • Apart from normal replacement, or death, the
    duties of a Member of the Commission shall end
    when he resigns or is compulsorily retired.
  • Demission
  • Commissioner can be dismissed by the ECJ
  • (article 216 of the EC Treaty)
  • If the Commissioner does not fulfils the
    conditions required for the performance of his
    duties or if he has been guilty of serious
    misconduct, the Court of Justice may, on
    application by the Council or the Commission,
    compulsorily retire him.
  • (article 217 (4) of the EC Treaty)
  • A Member of the Commission shall resign if the
    President so requests, after obtaining the
    approval of the College.
  • Political responsibility - Resignation of the
    whole Commission
  • (Santer Commission resignation in 1999)

10
Structure and organisation of work
  • Administrative and technical tasks
  • 27 DG
  • Administrative staff
  • (eurocrats)
  • Political responsibility
  • The College of
  • Commissioners

Commissioners cabinets
11
Directorates General a(at the head of DG General
Directors)
  • SANCO
  • INFSO
  • TREN
  • TRADE
  • DEV
  • ENLARG
  • RELEX
  • PRESS
  • BUDG
  • DIGIT
  • SCIC
  • ADMIN
  • IAS
  • DGT
  • ECFIN
  • AGRI
  • COMP
  • EAC
  • ENTR
  • ENV
  • TAXUD
  • JLS
  • MARKT
  • FISH
  • REGIO
  • RTD
  • JS

12
e.g.
  • Commissioner Siim Kallas ? DG IAS (Internat
    audit), ADMIN (Administration), DIGIT (Digital
    media)
  • Commissioner Olli Rehn ? DG ENLARG
  • DG TREN ? commissioner Jacques Barrot
    (transport)
  • ? commissioner Andris Pigbalis
  • (energy)

13
Eurocrats European civil servants
  • 25 000 of peoples working in European Commission
  • European civil servants
  • Temporary agents
  • Principle of national diversity
  • Working languages (DE, FR, EN)
  • Status
  • Reforming services
  • How to become a European civil servant ?
  • European Personnel Selection Office
  • Competition

14
Functions of the European Commission
  • Controle (I)
  • Takes part in decision making proces (II)
  • Executive (III)
  • External relations (IV)
  • Article 211 of the EC Treaty
  • In order to ensure the proper functioning and
    development of the common market, the Commission
    shall
  • ensure that the provisions of this Treaty and the
    measures taken by the institutions pursuant
    thereto are applied,
  • formulate recommendations or deliver opinions on
    matters dealt with in this Treaty, if it
    expressly so provides or if the Commission
    considers it necessary,
  •  have its own power of decision and participate
    in the shaping of measures taken by the Council
    and by the European Parliament in the manner
    provided for in this Treaty,
  • exercise the powers conferred on it by the
    Council for the implementation of the rules laid
    down by the latter.

15
Controlling function
  • MS (art. 226 of the EC Treaty)
  • Council and European Parliament
  • (e.g. Com. Vs. Council concerning penal
    sanctions for the breaches of the environmental
    law)
  • How?
  • Article 284
  • The Commission may, within the limits and under
    conditions laid down by the Council in accordance
    with the provisions of this Treaty, collect any
    information and carry out any checks required for
    the performance of the tasks entrusted to it.

16
European Commission the guardian of the
Treatiesarticle 211something in between ....
17
Types of violations when Member States fail to
fulfil the obligation under the Treaty ?
  • Failure to implement the directive (Francovich
    and Bonifraci 1991)
  • Forbidden measures protecting markets of Member
    States (Commission v. UK 1982. Commission v.
    Germany 1987)
  • State fails to respond to the Commission request
    for information (Commission v. Netherlands
    1982)
  • Member State acts in the field of the exclusive
    competences of the EC (Commission v. Ireland
    2006)
  • Failure of the legislative of Member State to
    enact the act prepared by the government
    (Commission v. Belgium 1970)
  • Local authorities breach the EC law (Fratelli
    Constanzo 1989)
  • National courts deliberately do not apply the EC
    law
  • State inaction in the face of illegal activity of
    the private parties (Commission v. Ireland
    1982,Commission v. France 1997)

18
ProcedureProcedure initiated by the Commission
- article 226 of the EC Treaty
  • Informal administrative stage
  • Formal administrative stage (letter of formal
    notice, then reasoned opinion)
  • Judicial stage (Commission may apply for interim
    measures)
  • e.g. Polish Rospuda case

19
Decision taking
  • Important role in the co-decision procedure
    (inter institutional trilogue)
  • Some legislative powers
  • (article 86 (3) of the EC Treaty state aid to
    the undertakings providing services of general
    economic interest)
  • The exclusive direct legislative iniciative
  • important role in the pre-legislative
    procedure
  • initiating public debate (how? Green books,
    even blogs of the commissioners)
  • informing the national parliaments

20
Legislative iniciative
Adoption of the proposal by the college
Resume
Inter-DG consultations
Consultations DG-level
21
Executive
  • Every day execution of EC measures (art. 211 )
  • Commitology procedure (article 202 of the EC
    Treaty)
  • Exercice by the Commission its task to implement
    the EC law on the EC level
  • Three kinds of the committees (all composed with
    representative of the MS and Commission)
  • Advisory committees (give opinions)
  • Management committees (if measure adopted by the
    Com. Is not in acordance with the opinion of the
    mc it have to be refered to the Council )
  • Regulatory committees ( if measures is not in
    accordance with the committees opinion, Com. Must
    refer it to the Council and EP)
  • Regulatory committees with scrutiny (only for the
    acts adopted in co-decision, Council can oppose
    the adoption of a measure and EP keep informed
    and can use the power of veto )

22
  • Execution of the bugdet
  • Articles 274 and 280 of the EC Treaty
  • Commission prepares the project of the budget for
    the EU
  • Commission is responsible for the execution of
    the bugdet, it the final rapport after the
    execution of the budget
  • Commission is responsible to fight with the fraud
  • OLAF antifraud office within Commission
    controlling how money are spent

23
External functions
  • Negotiation of the treaties in the name of the EC
    (art. 300)
  • EC competences to conclude international
    agreements
  • Multilateral treaties
  • Bilateral treaties
  • Mixed treaties (association agreements)
  • Mandate from the Council

24
  • External services of the EC
  • EC as an International organization has ius
    legationis
  • Background
  • originally set up essentially to represent the
    European Commission in trade negotiations (GATT)
    and in some industrialized countries
  • and to undertake development co-operation
    activities under the Yaoundé and Lomé Conventions
    (trade preferences with former colonial
    countries),
  • has evolved over time to reflect the growing
    ambition and capacity of the European Union in
    external relations.

25
History
  • first diplomatic mission in London in late 1955
  • entry into force in 1967 of the treaty merging
    the executive institutions ? the new single
    Commission took over the existing delegations
  • in the course of the following decades set up
    delegations in all the major capitals and seats
    of International Organisations in the world
  • a network of delegates was created to implement
    co-operation and partnership agreements concluded
    with countries or groups of countries
  • recently, most of them received the full status
    of diplomatic mission
  • the growing importance of external representation
    the increasing number of tasks conferred upon
    delegations the Commission in 1994 decided to
    establish a Unified External Service, a single
    management system for all its Delegations

26
Structure
  • Delegations of the External Service, are
    hierarchically a part of the Commission
    structure, (DG RELEX) but in practice serve all
    European Union
  • There are 118 Delegations in third countries and
    5 Delegations (in Geneva, New York, Paris, Rome
    and Vienna) at centres of international
    organisations (OECD,OSCE,UN and WTO)
  • Interactions with the embassies of MS there
    shall be no competition, their respective roles
    and responsibilities are generally well defined
  • The task of the Delegations, beyond the
    representation of Community interests, is one of
    co-ordination and co-operation in the interests
    of projecting the image of a Union, which is
    active, imaginative and truly united.

27
Staff(about 4.900 officials, contractual staff
and local agents)
  • Mainly eurocrats
  • Training policy
  • Career planning
  • Mobility within European institutions

28
Tasks
  • presenting, explaining and implementing EU policy
    (trade, external aid)
  • analyzing and reporting on the policies and
    developments of the countries to which they are
    accredited  and
  • conducting negotiations in accordance with a
    given mandate.

29
Seminar
  • Commission experts or politicians?
  • Commission discretionary power and real
    influence on the integration
  • Case study
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