The Parliament forms one half of the European Unions legislature. With the Council, it shares power to draft and pass legislation proposed by the Commission, mostly using co-decision. There are 2 readings or debates for each act of legislation. This procedure, which produces Regulations and Directives, will extend to many new areas under the proposed Treaty of Lisbon, and hence increase the power and relevance of the Parliament. The European Parliament is intended to be the political driving force of the EU.
The Parliament also has the power to reject or censure the Commission and the EU budget. With the Council, it is the budgetary authority for the EU. Parliament can also set up committees of enquiry, examine citizen petitions, and develop policy initiatives.
Although MEPs are elected on a national basis, they sit according to political groups rather than their nationality. Each country has a set number of seats. The current numbers were set in the Treaty of Nice. The Lisbon Treaty would reduce the number of MEPs.
The President of the European Parliament carries out the role of speaker in parliament and represents it externally. The president and vice presidents are elected by MEPs in a secret ballot every two and a half years.
The President, the Chairmen of Political groups, along with independent representatives without voting rights, form the Conference of Presidents. It organizes all work of the Parliament and parliamentary bodies. The Conference can be questioned by any MEP.
Conference decisions are by consensus or a weighted vote based on the number of MEPs in a political group. It meets fortnightly, in camera. But minutes are distributed to all members of the Parliament.
Back to top of pageThere is a lot of work involved in running a continuous Parliament, both in Brussels and Strasbourg.
The 20 standing committees prepare Parliament Plenary sessions, prepare reports on legislative proposals referred to Parliament, and consider and propose amendments to directives and regulations drawn up by the Commission, which are also referred to the Council.
The Chairmen and 4 vice chairs are elected for 2.5 years. The committees meet in public once or twice a month, following plenary sessions.
Back to top of pageMEPs in Parliament are organized into seven different parliamentary groups. MEPs are seated in Parliament by group, rather than by country. The two largest groups are the European People's Party-European Democrats (EPP-ED) and the Party of European Socialists (PES). These two groups have dominated the Parliament for much of its life, continuously holding between 50 and 70 percent of the seats together. No single group has ever held a majority in Parliament.
The current groupings are:
| EPP-ED | 286 | European People's Party-European Democrats |
| PES | 217 | Party of European Socialists |
| ALDE | 100 | Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe |
| UEN | 44 | Union of Europe for the Nations |
| G-EFA | 43 | European Greens – European Free Alliance |
| GUE-NGL | 41 | European United Left–Nordic Green Left |
| ID | 22 | Independence/Democracy Group |
For a group to be recognized, it needs 20 MEPs from six different countries (this will rise to 25 MEPs from seven different countries from June 2009). Recognised groups receive financial subsidies from the parliament and guaranteed seats on Committees, creating an incentive for the formation of groups.
There are over 30 MEPs who are not attached to any group and they form the so called non-attached group.
Back to top of pageFor more information visit the European Parliament's official site.
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