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European Union legislative procedure

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The legislative procedures of the European Union are the ways in which the European Union enacts legislation. The procedure used for any given legislative proposal depends on the policy area in question. The rules governing which procedure applies to which policy area are laid down in the Treaties of the European Union.

Whenever the Council is involved in legislating it either votes by unanimity or by qualified majority which like the choice of procedure depends on the policy areas in question.

Contents

Main legislative procedures

There are three main decision-making procedures currently in use. These are codecision, assent and consultation.[1]

Codecision procedure

Main article: Codecision procedure

The Codecision procedure (also known as the Article 251[2] procedure) is the main legislative procedure by which directives and regulations are adopted.[3] The Council of the European Union and the European Parliament jointly adopt legislation based on a proposal by the European Commission. Both Parliament and Council — the latter acting by a qualified majority[4] — are required to agree on an identical text before a proposal can be adopted, however Parliament is deemed to have adopted a proposed law if it fails to either reject or propose amendments to it, by an absolute majority, within three months of its adoption by the Council.[5]

The procedure was introduced with the Maastricht Treaty[6] and was initially intended to replace the Cooperation procedure (see below). The codecision procedure was amended by the Treaty of Amsterdam[7] and the number of legal bases where the procedure applies was greatly increased by both the latter treaty and the Treaty of Nice.

The Treaty of Lisbon replaces all references to the "procedure referred to in Article 251" with references to the "ordinary legislative procedure".[8]

Assent procedure

Main article: Assent procedure

Under this procedure, the Council can adopt legislation based on a proposal by the European Commission after obtaining the consent of Parliament. Thus Parliament has the legal power to accept or reject any proposal but no legal mechanism exists for proposing amendments. Parliament has however provided for conciliation committee and a procedure for giving interim reports where it can address its concerns to the Council and threaten to withhold its consent unless its concerns are met.[9]

The procedure is used for issues concerning Union membership (Article 49 of the Treaty on European Union), economic and social cohesion (Article 161) and amendments to the Statute of the European Central Bank (Article 107(5)).

Consultation procedure

Main article: Consultation procedure

Before the Single European Act the Consultation procedure was the most widely used legislative procedure in the then European Community. Under this procedure the Council, acting either unanimously or by a qualified majority depending on the policy area concerned, can adopt legislation based on a proposal by the European Commission after consulting the European Parliament. While being required to consult Parliament on legislative proposals, the Council is not bound by Parliament's position. In practice the Council would frequently ignore whatever Parliament might suggest and even sometimes reach an agreement before receiving Parliament's opinion. [10] In order to obtain some leverage against proposals it disliked, Parliament would filibuster by delaying giving its formal opinion, thereby stalling the legislative process.

Consultation is still used for legislation concerning:

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