Do MEPs get to vote on Treaty changes?
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Can EU Treaties (eg. Rome, Amsterdam, Nice, Lisbon) be said to contain laws?
If so, do MEPs get to vote on these?
european-union
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up vote
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Can EU Treaties (eg. Rome, Amsterdam, Nice, Lisbon) be said to contain laws?
If so, do MEPs get to vote on these?
european-union
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
Can EU Treaties (eg. Rome, Amsterdam, Nice, Lisbon) be said to contain laws?
If so, do MEPs get to vote on these?
european-union
Can EU Treaties (eg. Rome, Amsterdam, Nice, Lisbon) be said to contain laws?
If so, do MEPs get to vote on these?
european-union
european-union
asked Nov 18 at 21:52
Ben
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1 Answer
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The documents you list are all multilateral treaties between the EU member states (the Inner 6 for Rome, the EU15 for Amsterdam & Nice, the EU27 for Lisbon). As such they form a major portion of international law between the signatories and it is definitely fair to call the content "law". Calling it "laws" is open to misinterpretation as applying directly to individuals rather than between countries (you wouldn't be sent to prison for contravening the Lisbon Treaty).
The European parliament voted in favour of a non-binding resolution endorsing the Lisbon Treaty by 525 votes to 115. However, this had absolutely no power, and the treaty would have still gone into force without the parliament provided all of the EU27 ratified it. In general, every member state has veto power over the amendment of EU Treaties, except in a very small number of areas.
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
2
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
The documents you list are all multilateral treaties between the EU member states (the Inner 6 for Rome, the EU15 for Amsterdam & Nice, the EU27 for Lisbon). As such they form a major portion of international law between the signatories and it is definitely fair to call the content "law". Calling it "laws" is open to misinterpretation as applying directly to individuals rather than between countries (you wouldn't be sent to prison for contravening the Lisbon Treaty).
The European parliament voted in favour of a non-binding resolution endorsing the Lisbon Treaty by 525 votes to 115. However, this had absolutely no power, and the treaty would have still gone into force without the parliament provided all of the EU27 ratified it. In general, every member state has veto power over the amendment of EU Treaties, except in a very small number of areas.
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
2
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
The documents you list are all multilateral treaties between the EU member states (the Inner 6 for Rome, the EU15 for Amsterdam & Nice, the EU27 for Lisbon). As such they form a major portion of international law between the signatories and it is definitely fair to call the content "law". Calling it "laws" is open to misinterpretation as applying directly to individuals rather than between countries (you wouldn't be sent to prison for contravening the Lisbon Treaty).
The European parliament voted in favour of a non-binding resolution endorsing the Lisbon Treaty by 525 votes to 115. However, this had absolutely no power, and the treaty would have still gone into force without the parliament provided all of the EU27 ratified it. In general, every member state has veto power over the amendment of EU Treaties, except in a very small number of areas.
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
2
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
The documents you list are all multilateral treaties between the EU member states (the Inner 6 for Rome, the EU15 for Amsterdam & Nice, the EU27 for Lisbon). As such they form a major portion of international law between the signatories and it is definitely fair to call the content "law". Calling it "laws" is open to misinterpretation as applying directly to individuals rather than between countries (you wouldn't be sent to prison for contravening the Lisbon Treaty).
The European parliament voted in favour of a non-binding resolution endorsing the Lisbon Treaty by 525 votes to 115. However, this had absolutely no power, and the treaty would have still gone into force without the parliament provided all of the EU27 ratified it. In general, every member state has veto power over the amendment of EU Treaties, except in a very small number of areas.
The documents you list are all multilateral treaties between the EU member states (the Inner 6 for Rome, the EU15 for Amsterdam & Nice, the EU27 for Lisbon). As such they form a major portion of international law between the signatories and it is definitely fair to call the content "law". Calling it "laws" is open to misinterpretation as applying directly to individuals rather than between countries (you wouldn't be sent to prison for contravening the Lisbon Treaty).
The European parliament voted in favour of a non-binding resolution endorsing the Lisbon Treaty by 525 votes to 115. However, this had absolutely no power, and the treaty would have still gone into force without the parliament provided all of the EU27 ratified it. In general, every member state has veto power over the amendment of EU Treaties, except in a very small number of areas.
answered Nov 18 at 22:50
origimbo
9,89922339
9,89922339
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
2
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
add a comment |
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
2
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
Thank you: are permits for states to accede to the EU similarly agreed?
– Ben
Nov 18 at 23:21
2
2
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
Post Lisbon, the European Parliament actually does get a meaningful vote on accession treaties (see article 49), along with the member states and the council. So far, this has only applied to Croatia. lisbon-treaty.org/wcm/the-lisbon-treaty/… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Accession_2011
– origimbo
Nov 19 at 0:19
add a comment |
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