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On 14 February 2017, the European Commission adopted a proposal amending Regulation (EU) No 182/2011 (the 'Comitology Regulation') in order to increase the transparency and accountability of the decision-making process leading to the adoption of implementing acts. The main elements of the proposal include amending the voting rules for the Appeal Committee (AC) in order to reduce the risk of a no opinion scenario and to clarify the positions of the Member States, providing for the possibility of a ...

Amending the Comitology Regulation

Накратко 10-12-2020

When adopting implementing acts, the Commission acts under the scrutiny of the Member States (represented in specialised committees and an appeal committee) following mechanisms set out in the Comitology Regulation. In 2017, the Commission proposed amendments to this Regulation, aimed at eliminating 'no opinion' deadlocks in the appeal committee and increasing transparency in the procedure. The European Parliament is expected to vote on the proposal during the December plenary session.

This briefing includes a series of quotes, which make reference to the oral commitments made during the hearing of Vice-President-designate for Interinstitutional Relations and Foresight Maroš Šefčovič.

This report analyses the increasing role played by the European Parliament (EP) in the EU decision-making process. In the first part (Sections 2, 3, 4 and 5), it describes how the EP acquired more power in legislation, comitology, in the appointment of the European Commission and in the budgetary field. In the second part (Sections 6 and 7), the report illustrates the EP’s role in two relevant policy fields: economic governance and external trade agreements. The report demonstrates that EP’s formal ...

The Lisbon Treaty represents a significant step in the evolution of the EP. It brings the EP closer to more familiar national models and poten­tially enhances both its democratic legiti­macy and popular acceptance. The EP’s legislative power has risen appreciably and it is now an equal co-legislator with the Council over the vast majority of areas of EU internal policy. In addition it has already shown the willing­ness and ability to extend its new competences in external policy to the fullest extent ...

The CAP and the Lisbon Treaty

Задълбочен анализ 15-10-2008

The changes on the CAP made by the Treaty of Lisbon are therefore essentially institutional and procedural. The substantive changes concern the statement in Article 38 (1) and (4). The provisions in the Lisbon Treaty relating to the CAP should, on the whole, prove to be very positive for the European Parliament.

The paper is an analysis of recent academic literature and of EP reports on the White Paper on European Governance, recently published by the Commission.