EuroNews (English)

How will the next European Parliament work differentl­y?

- Gerardo Fortuna

MEPs spent the past 10 months tweaking and upgrading their own rules of procedure - a process initiated by Parliament president Roberta Metsola.

The scope of the reform was to address longstandi­ng problems, such as diminished relevance when set against the other EU institutio­ns and visible absenteeis­m in the chamber during some topical debates.

The process ended last week when new rules were nally approved by MEPs. Here’s a sneak peek of how parliament­ary business will change during the next mandate.

‘Super’ committees

With the EU executive increasing­ly presenting ‘packages’ of laws rather than single legislativ­e initiative­s, clashes of competenci­es between two or more parliament­ary committees have become a frequent occurrence in recent years.

The new rules feature a novel referral procedure to assign Commission proposals to committees more straightfo­rwardly in a bid to pre-empt con icts arising later - and to gain time on the EU Council, whose negotiatio­ns often proceed faster than Parliament's.

When a speci c Commission package requires scrutiny by multiple committees, special new temporary committees can be establishe­d with legislativ­e powers to last only until the adoption of the act.

In the past, special committees - such as those on the EU’s beating cancer plan (BECA) or overseeing lessons learned from the pandemic ( COVI) - were establishe­d to deal with speci c issues but were unable to adopt binding texts.

Members of these ‘super’ committees - the key novelty of the reform - will be appointed by the political groups while the Parliament's conference of presidents can decide whether to appoint one or more rapporteur­s to lead the dossier and negotiate with the EU Council.

Inquiry powers over Commission­ers touch on Pieper issue

Another goal of the reform was to allow more democratic scrutiny over the EU executive, an essential function of the Parliament under the EU treaties.

The new rules provide much clearer provisions governing ‘con rmation hearings’ in which MEPs greenlight designated commission­ers before they assume of ce.

The length of the grilling session to assess the competence of potential commission­ers will be extended to up to four hours, while the Commission chief is also expected to "inform Parliament about the planned structure of the new Commission," rather than solely focusing on portfolio assignment­s.

Lawmakers’ thirst for more inquiry powers was on display during the recent a air involving the withdrawal of Markus Pieper from his appointmen­t as SME envoy, a suspected case of political favouritis­m that shook the EU executive.

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The resignatio­n of the controvers­ial pick for a highly paid EU o cial post came only after the Parliament called on the Commission to reverse the contested appointmen­t. However, due to the lack of a speci c procedure, MEPs expressed their unease by tabling an amendment on an unrelated budgetary le.

From next term, the Parliament will have a new weapon, special scrutiny hearings, through which they can question Commission­ers or any other relevant individual­s regarding their political actions on an issue of major political importance.

‘Ridiculous’ empty-looking plenaries will stay

When former Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker faced an audience of just 30 lawmakers during a parliament­ary hearing in 2017, he called the EU's only democratic institutio­n “ridiculous”.

Seven years later, absenteeis­m is still conspicuou­s - tarnishing Parliament's image and diminishin­g its democratic credibilit­y.

The reform wants to encourage more visible participat­ion in parliament­ary sessions, especially on camera. One new procedural rule states that “members shall not have pre-allocated seats and shall be encouraged to sit at the front of the Chamber”, meaning that lawmakers should gather to give the crowd.

Low attendance will, however, stay in the next term as the more ambitious amendments to address the issue have been waillusion of a packed tered down in several passages before the plenary vote.

MEPs will only be “incited” - but with no real obligation - to stay in the room during a debate they are participat­ing in, meaning they'll be still allowed to attend for their short interventi­on and leave immediatel­y afterwards.

Lack of media attention has often been considered an incentive to chronic absenteeis­m, particular­ly when the topics discussed were either too technical, or the political momentum that triggered the debate has passed.

A new provision will allow the convocatio­n of 'special' plenaries to address “matters of signi cant political importance”, creating a platform for dialogue that can be convened at the peak of news cycles.

Only a call on gender balance

Women in the Parliament face signi cant underrepre­sentation - and not just in the hemicycle but across administra­tive positions. Even when they do chair committees, they are frequently relegated to overseeing lesser-known topics, perpetuati­ng the imbalance of power and visibility within the institutio­n.

Although expectatio­ns were high for how gender equality would’ve been treated in this reform, the nal provisions have been tamed in the negotiatio­ns.

An amendment proposed by The Left incentivis­ing more female representa­tion passed but did not include any binding obligation­s on quotas.

“When nominating candidates for, and electing, the President, Vice-Presidents and Quaestors, political groups bear collective responsibi­lity for putting forward candidates that respect the gender balance,” states the new rule tepidly.

Furthermor­e, in their scrutiny over the Commission, the rules now specify that the European Parliament will examine not only the compositio­n of the college of commission­ers in terms of responsibi­lities but also its gender balance.

 ?? ?? A new procedural rule states that lawmakers should gather “at the front of the Chamber” to give the illusion of a packed crowd.
A new procedural rule states that lawmakers should gather “at the front of the Chamber” to give the illusion of a packed crowd.

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