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Council of Ministers Rui Sasaki Hikariko Yazaki

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Council of Ministers. Rui S asaki Hikariko Yazaki. Responsibilities and functions. Legislation Executive Mediator. legislation. The principal responsibility Working with the commission and the EP. Decided by QMV or Unanimity. The ordinary legislative procedure. Limitation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Council of Ministers

Council of MinistersRui Sasaki

Hikariko Yazaki

Page 2: Council of Ministers

Legislation Executive Mediator

Responsibilities and functions

Page 3: Council of Ministers

The principal responsibility

Working with the commission and the EP.

Decided by QMV or Unanimity

legislation

Page 4: Council of Ministers

The commissi

on

Council The EP

The act is adopted

The ordinary legislative procedure

Page 5: Council of Ministers

1. only developing proposal of commission

2. The EP has important power about legislation

Limitation

•Before the Lisbon treaty•After the Lisbon treaty

•15•30

directive

•150•50regulatio

n

•50•5

decision

Page 6: Council of Ministers

Commission the principal institution of EU working with committees.

Council foreign and defense policy

executive

Page 7: Council of Ministers

In the national representatives meet, council has served the function of developing mutual understanding.

The ability to compromise in negotiation is prerequisite

Mediator

Page 8: Council of Ministers

Meeting in many different formations.

The number of formations

composition

December 1999

Over20 June 200216 9

Page 9: Council of Ministers

GAERC (the General Affairs and External Relations Council) foreign policy and eternal trade policy initiation and coordination Operation of the EC

composition

General Affairs

Foreign Affairs

Page 10: Council of Ministers

General Affairs Foreign Affairs Economic and Financial Affairs Justice and Home Affairs Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer

Affairs Competitiveness Transports, Telecommunication and Energy Agriculture and Fisheries Environment Education, Youth and Culture

composition

Page 11: Council of Ministers

formal meeting in an average year 100 (117 in 2008) normally held in Brussels but only April, June, October→Luxembourg Foreign Affairs and General Affairs meet the most

frequently →one meeting per month start at 10:00 a.m., finish at 6:00 p.m. or

7:00p.m. Informal meeting 50

meetings

Page 12: Council of Ministers

The Committee of Permanent Representatives Co-ordinator of Council business, fixer and

trouble-shooter COREPER I political agendas COREPER II techinal policy

COREPER

Page 13: Council of Ministers

they assists and prepares the work of Council of Ministers and COREEPER.

Council Committees composed of national officials have as task providing advice to the Council working parties carry out detailed analyses of commission proposal for legislation

Committees and working parties

Page 14: Council of Ministers

Administratively supports work of the council

3500 staffs

responsibility serve council machinery

works closely with council presidency

General Secretariat

Page 15: Council of Ministers

Council Presidency Hierarchical Structure Decision Making Procedures

Operation of the Council

Page 16: Council of Ministers

The Rotation System Task of Presidency Advantages & Disadvantages

Operation of the Council-1Council Presidency

Page 17: Council of Ministers

Rotation SystemUp to Lisbon Treaty, 6-month rotation system

is used which is called troika Lisbon Treaty supports and strengthens this

system

Operation of the Council-1Council Presidency

Page 18: Council of Ministers

Presidency is held for 18 months by groups of 3 member states, with each of the states assuming the lead for 6 months. The groups are assembled and the states assume the lead position with this order.

Page 19: Council of Ministers

Task of Presidency1. To Arrange and to chair most council

meetings2. To build a consensus for initiative3. To offer leadership4. To ensure continuity and consistency of

policy development

Operation of the Council-1Council Presidency

Page 20: Council of Ministers

1. To Arrange and to chair most council meetings

2. To build a consensus for initiativeIt negotiated with member states, Commission

and EP.Sometimes they use QMV.

Page 21: Council of Ministers

3. To offer leadershipIt can also involve attempting to prioritize new issues.4. To ensure continuity and consistency of policy

development The important mechanism used for this purpose is

troika.5. To represent the council dealings with outside

bodiesOutside bodies sometimes mean outside of EU.

Page 22: Council of Ministers

Advantages and disadvantagesAdsPrestigePresidency can do more things than othersThere’s leeway for bringing council positions

closer to positions of presidency

Operation of the Council-1Council Presidency

Page 23: Council of Ministers

DisadsHeavy administrative burdens that are

attatched to the job.Presidency can bring issues closer to own

positionThe blow to esteem and standing that is

incurred when it is a poor presidency

Page 24: Council of Ministers

Ministers •Foreign Affairs•Ecofin Council

COREPER •COREPER1•COREPER2

Working Parties •Committees

Operation of the Council-2Hierarchical Structure

Page 25: Council of Ministers

The First stage; working parties and CommitteesInitial examination of the text.70 % of issues are solved The second stage; reference of working party

documents to COREPER15-20% are resolved The third stage; Ministerial level, and formal

adoption5% are resolved

Operation of the Council-2Hierarchical Structure

Page 26: Council of Ministers

2 types of items in Ministerial level meeting; A-pointItems that are agreed in working parties or COREPER. B-pointItems that are not agreed in neither of parties.

Operation of the Council-2Hierarchical Structure

Page 27: Council of Ministers

Observation of Ministerial meetings Variation Some items are general, while others are

specialized Most items fall thanks to competence of

ministers Some items include administrative matters

Operation of the Council-2Hierarchical Structure

Page 28: Council of Ministers

Taking decisionsBy Unanimity (foreign, defense, enlargement,

tax) 90% Qualified Majority Voting 10~15% Simple Majority Voting

Operation of the Council-3Decision Making Procedures

Page 29: Council of Ministers
Page 30: Council of Ministers

The Conduct of meeting; Working party: 100 people COREPER: 150 people Ministerial level: 150 people, sometimes

Chaotic Presidency has key roles in fixing agenda

Operation of the Council-3Decision Making Procedures

Page 31: Council of Ministers

Informal process and relationship Lunch/Dinner (Ministers and translators) Requested breaks Between meetings (Mails, letters, phones)

Operation of the Council-3Decision Making Procedures

Page 32: Council of Ministers

Why does EU need Council of ministers in its organization?

Do you think power of the council will increase or decrease in the future?

What do you think of informal meetings?

http://www.consilium.europa.eu/homepage?lang=en

Question