G European Parliament
G European Parliament
G European Parliament
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Subsequent Enlargements
When Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom joined the European Communities on 1
January 1973 (the first enlargement), the number of MEPs was increased to 198.
The first elections took place on 7 and 10 June 1979.
For the second enlargement, with the accession of Greece on 1 January 1981, 24 Greek
Members were delegated to the EP by the Greek Parliament, to be replaced in October 1981 by
directly elected Members.
The second direct elections were held on 14 and 17 June 1984.
On 1 January 1986, with the third enlargement, the number of seats rose from 434 to 518
with the arrival of 60 Spanish and 24 Portuguese Members, appointed by their national
parliaments and subsequently replaced by directly elected Members.
The third direct elections were held on 15 and 18 June 1989. Following German
unification, the composition of the European Parliament was adapted to demographic change.
In accordance with Parliament's proposals in a resolution on a scheme for allocating the
seats of its Members, the number of MEPs elected in June 1994 increased from 518 to 567. After
the fourth EU enlargement, the number of MEPs increased to 626, with a fair allocation of seats
for the new Member States, in line with the resolution
The Intergovernmental Conference in Nice introduced a new distribution of seats in the
European Parliament which was applied at the European elections in 2004. The maximum number
of Members (previously set at 700) is now 732. The number of seats allocated to the 15 old
Member States was reduced by 91 (from 626 to 535). The 197 remaining were distributed among
all old and new Member States on a pro rata basis.1
When Bulgaria and Romania accede to the European Union - which is expected to take
place during the 2004-2009 term - the number of seats in the European Parliament will
temporarily rise to 786 in order to accommodate MEPs from these countries.
1
Since 1 May 2004, with effect from 20 July 2004, membership of the European Parliament has been as Annex 1
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Electoral procedures
Common Rules
1. Principles
The founding Treaties stated that Members of the European Parliament would initially be
appointed by the national parliaments but made provision for election by direct universal suffrage,
based on a project drawn up by Parliament itself. It was only in 1976 that the Council decided to
implement this provision by the Act of 20 September2
In 1992, the Maastricht Treaty inserted a provision into the EC Treaty3 stating that
elections must be held in accordance with a uniform procedure in all Member States and
Parliament should draw up a proposal to this effect, for unanimous adoption by the Council.
However, the Council was unable to agree on a uniform procedure, in spite of the various
proposals presented by Parliament.
To resolve this deadlock, the Treaty of Amsterdam introduced into the EC Treaty the
possibility, failing a uniform procedure, of common principles with a view to enhancing the
democratic legitimacy of the EP and the feeling of being a citizen of the European Union.
2. Application: common provisions in force
a) Right of non-nationals to vote and to stand as a candidate - According to Article 19
of the EC Treaty, every citizen of the Union residing in a Member State of which he is not a
national shall have the right to vote and to stand as a candidate in elections to the European
Parliament in the Member State in which he resides.4
b) Electoral system - The elections must be based on proportional representation and use
either the list system or the single transferable vote.5
c) A person can vote only once
d) The elections take place in all the State Members in the same week, (Thursday and
Sunday)
e) The mininum age of voting is 18
National Rules
In addition to these common rules, the electoral arrangements are governed by national
provisions that are at times quite different.
a) Electoral system
Pursuant to the 2002 Council Decision, all of the Member States must now use a system
based on proportional representation. Lists failing to obtain 5% of the vote in Germany or France,
and 4% in Austria or Sweden, are excluded from the allocation of seats. Until the 1994 elections
the United Kingdom used the first-past-the-post system (except in Northern Ireland, where
proportional representation was already in use).
b)Constituency boundaries
Until 2003, in 11 Member States (Germany, Austria, Denmark, Spain, Finland, France,
Greece, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal and Sweden) the whole country formed a single
electoral area. In four Member States (Belgium, Ireland, Italy and the United Kingdom) the
national territory was divided into a number of constituencies.
Since the 2002 Council Decision, a number of national laws have been amended or are
being amended. France has abandoned the use of a single electoral constituency and has
established eight large regional constituencies: Northwest, West, East, Southwest, Southeast,
Massif Central, le-de-France and Overseas. In Great Britain the territory of Gibraltar, whose
2
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population does not vote in the European elections due to the disagreement on the issue between
the Spanish and British Governments, should be incorporated in one of the existing 12
constituencies. In Germany, although the electoral legislation will not be changed, parties are
allowed to present lists of candidates at either Land or national level. Similarly, in Finland parties
may present their lists at either constituency or national level.
c) Entitlement to vote
Vote of non-nationals in the host country
Voting age is 18 in all the Member States. Citizens of the Union residing in a Member
State of which they are not nationals now have the right to vote in elections to Parliament in the
Member State in which they reside6, under the same conditions as nationals of that state. However,
the concept of residence still varies from one national electoral system to another.
Some countries require voters either to have their domicile or customary residence on
electoral territory (Finland and France), or customarily to stay there (Germany, Luxembourg,
Belgium, Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy), or to be registered on the electoral roll (Austria,
Denmark, United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands and Sweden).
To be entitled to vote in Luxembourg, Community citizens must also prove a minimum
period of residence. This was reduced, however, with the entry into force of the new electoral law
on 18 February 2003. Since then, the obligatory period of residence in the territory of Luxembourg
has been five years, although this period does not apply to Community electors who do not have
the right to vote in that state because they are resident outside their Member State of origin or
because of the period of that residence.
Vote of non-resident nationals in the countries of origin
On the right to vote of citizens resident abroad, in the United Kingdom this is confined to
civil servants, members of the armed forces and citizens who left the country less than five years
before, provided they submit a declaration to the appropriate authorities. Austria, Denmark,
Portugal and the Netherlands only grant the right to vote to their nationals living in an EU Member
State. Sweden, Belgium, France, Spain, Greece and Italy grant their nationals the right to vote
whatever their country of residence. Germany grants this right to citizens who have lived in
another country for less than ten years. In Ireland the right to vote is confined to EU citizens
domiciled on the national territory.
d) Right to stand for election
Minimum age
18 in Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands and Portugal, 19 in
Austria, 21 in Belgium, Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg and the United Kingdom, 23 in France and
25 in Italy.
Residence
In Luxembourg, since the new electoral law of 18 February 2003, at least five years
residence is required (previously ten years) to enable a Community national to stand for election to
the European Parliament. Moreover, a list may not comprise a majority of candidates who do not
have Luxembourgish nationality.
Nominations
In five Member States (Denmark, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands and Sweden) only
political parties and political organisations may submit nominations. In the other countries
nominations may be submitted if they are endorsed by the required number of signatures or
electors, and in some cases (Ireland, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom) a deposit is also
required. In Ireland and Italy candidates may nominate themselves if they are endorsed by the
required number of signatures.
Election dates
In accordance with national traditions, the voting takes place on:
- Thursday in Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom,
6
Article 19 EC Treaty
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- Sunday in all the other countries.
The last elections were therefore held on 10 and 13 June 2004.
Voters' option to alter the order of candidates on lists
In five states (Germany, Spain, France, Greece and Portugal) voters cannot alter the order
in which candidates appear on a list. In eight states (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Italy,
Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Sweden) the order on the list may be changed using transferable
votes. In Luxembourg voters may vote for candidates from different lists. In Sweden, voters may
also add names to the lists or remove them. Elections in Ireland and the United Kingdom do not
use the list system.
Allocating seats
Of the 14 Member States that use proportional representation, eight have adopted the
dHondt rule for allocating seats (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Spain, Finland, France, the
Netherlands and Portugal). Germany uses the Hare-Niemeyer method and Luxembourg a variant
of this method, the Hagenbach-Bischoff method. In Italy seats are allocated by the whole
electoral quota and largest remainder method, in Ireland by the single transferable vote method, in
Greece by the weighted method of proportional representation known as Eniskhimeni Analogiki,
and in Sweden by the Sainte-Lagu
Verification of the result and rules on election campaigns
There is provision for the EP to verify the election results in Denmark, Germany and
Luxembourg, and for the courts to do so in Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Italy, Ireland and
the United Kingdom, while both are provided for in Germany. In Spain the result is verified by the
Junta Electoral Central; in Portugal and Sweden a verification committee does so.
Contrary to the practice in national elections, no special rules on election campaigns have
been laid down, except for a restriction on campaign expenditure. Political parties receive no
government allowances for election campaigns. However, the Council and the EP recently agreed
to establish a system for the funding of political parties from 2004 which will include election
campaign expenditure (resolution of 19 June 2003 on European political parties: statute and
financing).
e) Filling of seats vacated during the electoral term
In eight Member States (Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands and Portugal) seats falling vacant following open resignation are allocated to the
first unelected candidates on the lists (possibly after permutation to reflect the votes obtained by
the various candidates). In Belgium, Ireland, Germany and Sweden vacant seats are allocated to
substitutes. In Spain and Germany, if there are no substitutes account is taken of the order of
candidates on the lists. In the United Kingdom by-elections are held. In Greece vacant seats are
allocated to substitutes on the same list; if there are not enough substitutes, by-elections are held.
Incompatibilities
The office of member of the European Parliament is incompatible with:
- member of the Commission,
- judge, advocate-general or registrar of the Court of Justice,
- member of the Court of Auditors,
- member of the Economic and Social Committee,
- member of committees or other bodies set up pursuant to the Community Treaties for the
purpose of managing the Communities funds or carrying out a permanent direct administrative
task,
- member of the Board of Directors, Management Committee or staff of the European Investment
Bank,
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- active official or servant of the institutions of the European Communities or of the specialised
bodies attached to them.
The 2002 Council Decision added further incompatibilities:
- member of the Court of First Instance,
- member of the Board of Directors of the European Central Bank,
- Ombudsman of the European Communities
- member of a national parliament.
Article 199 EC
Article 198
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At the Edinburgh European Council of 11 and 12 December 1992 the Member States'
governments reached agreement on the seats of the Institutions, whereby:: Parliament
should
have its seat in Strasbourg, where the 12 monthly part-sessions, including the budget session,
should be held. Additional plenary part-sessions should be held in Brussels; the parliamentary
committees should meet in Brussels; the Parliament's Secretariat and departments should
remain in Luxembourg.
This decision was criticised by Parliament. However, the Court of Justice (judgment of 1
October 1997 - C 345/95) confirmed that it had determined the seat of Parliament in accordance
with Article 289 EC. The substance of this decision was included in the Treaty of Amsterdam in a
protocol annexed to the Treaties, which Parliament regretted.
Parliament draws up its annual calendar of part-sessions on the proposal of the
Conference of Presidents. In 2004 Parliament had 11 one-week part-sessions in Strasbourg and 5
two-day part- sessions in Brussels and in 2005, 12 part-sessions in Strasbourg and 6 two-day partsessions in Brussels.
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assent to acts relating to the electoral procedure (since the Maastricht Treaty). Since the
Amsterdam Treaty, its assent is further required if the Council wants to declare that a clear danger
exists of a Member State committing a serious breach of the European Union's fundamental
principles, before addressing recommendations or penalties to this Member State.
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Annex 1
Belgium
Czech
Republic
Denmark
Germany
Estonia
Greece
Spain
France
Ireland
Italy
Cyprus
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Hungary
Malta
Netherlands
Austria
Poland
Portugal
Slovenia
Slovakia
Finland
Sweden
United
Kingdom
Total
24
24
14
99
6
24
54
78
13
78
6
9
13
6
24
5
27
18
54
24
7
14
14
19
78
732 (absolute
majority: 367)