Parts of the rights and duties of members of the European Parliament are covered by the Statute laying down the regulations and general conditions governing the performance of the duties of MEPs, finally approved and set to enter into force after the European Parliamentary elections on 4 to 7 June 2009.
How much the Statute cleans up the unsavoury practices concerning MEPs’ expenses depends on detailed rules set by the European Parliament and the control exercised by the EP in the future.
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Current treaty
Article 190(5) of the Treaty establishing the European Community (TEC) gives the European Parliament some autonomy in devising the rules governing the performance of the duties of its Members (MEPs).
The EP’s initiative is subject to checks and balances. The Commission issues an opinion and the approval of the Council is needed.
Article 190(5) TEC as published in the latest consolidated version of the treaties, OJEU 29.12.2006 C 321 E/132:
Article 190(5) TEC
5. The European Parliament, after seeking an opinion from the Commission and with the approval of the Council acting by a qualified majority, shall lay down the regulations and general conditions governing the performance of the duties of its Members. All rules or conditions relating to the taxation of Members or former Members shall require unanimity within the Council.
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Consolidated Lisbon Treaty
The substance remains the same if the Treaty of Lisbon enters into force. Taxation of MEPs and former MEPs still requires unanimity within the Council.
Article 223(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) takes over and rephrases paragraph 5 of Article 190 TEC, OJEU 9.5.2008 C 115/149:
Article 223(2) TFEU
2. The European Parliament, acting by means of regulations on its own initiative in accordance with a special legislative procedure after seeking an opinion from the Commission and with the approval of the Council, shall lay down the regulations and general conditions governing the performance of the duties of its Members. All rules or conditions relating to the taxation of Members or former Members shall require unanimity within the Council.
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Problems
The lack of a common Statute for the members of the European Parliament has led to gross iniquities between MEPs from different member states, with huge differences in remuneration tied to salaries of national parliamentarians.
On the other hand, reimbursement of travel and other expenses based on theoretical flat-rate amounts in combination with poor control resulted in a murky culture of MEPs lining their pockets and those of family members.
Cleaning the Augean stables proved to be a long and arduous task. Only after protracted efforts were the European Parliament and the Council able to reconcile their views.
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Statute
Finally the Decision of the European Parliament 2005/684/EC, Euratom of 28 September 2005 adopting the Statute for Members of the European Parliament was able to introduce uniform rules concerning some aspects of the rules and general conditions applicable to the exercise of MEPs’ mandates.
The old rules apply until the end of the present term of the EP. The Statute enters into force only after the June 2009 European elections, on the first day of the European Parliament parliamentary term beginning in 2009 (Article 30), but there are transitional provisions for old members who might lose out (Articles 25 to 29).
The MEPs’ s Statute is much less than a comprehensive act on the rights and duties of members. Article 1 gives the scope of the Statute:
Article 1
This Statute lays down the regulations and general conditions governing the performance of the duties of Members of the European Parliament.
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Overview
Many of the provisions refer to the EP’s Rules of Procedure (which will be presented in a later blog post). Here is a ‘telegraphic’ list of the contents of the Articles of the Statute:
Article 2: Freedom and independence of MEPs; agreements on resignation void.
Article 3: Individual and personal vote; binding mandate prohibited.
Article 4: Only tabled documents regarded as EP documents.
Article 5: Right to table proposals for Community acts.
Article 6: Right to inspect EP files (but not personal files and accounts).
Article 7: Translation of documents and speeches into all official languages.
Article 8: Forming political groups.
Article 9: Right to appropriate salary, transitional end-of-service allowance and pension. Survivor’s pension.
Article 10: Salary 38.5 % of the basic salary of a judge at the Court of Justice of the European Communities.
Article 11: Salary from another parliament is offset against EP salary.
Article 12: Salary subject to Community tax, but abatements not. National tax takes Community tax into account.
Article 13: Amount of transitional allowance at the end of office.
Article 14: Amount of old-age pension from the age of 63.
Article 15: Invalid pension.
Article 16: Choice between transitional allowance and invalid pension.
Article 17: Survivor's pension for the spouse and dependent children.
Article 18: Reimbursement of the costs incurred as a result of sickness, pregnancy or the birth of a child.
Article 19: Insurance cover.
Article 20: Reimbursement for expenses subject to rules laid down by the EP.
Article 21: Right to personal staff and expenses met by the EP.
Article 22: Right to the EP's office facilities, telecommunications equipment and official vehicles.
Article 23: All payments from EU budget.
Article 25: Old system optional for re-elected members.
Article 26: Notification of choice of old system.
Article 27: Voluntary pension fund remains for old members.
Article 28: Old national pension entitlements remain in force.
Article 29: Member states’ transitional rules.
Article 30: Entry into force on the first day of the parliamentary term 2009.
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Allowances paid to MEPs
The European Parliament offers information about the current Allowances paid to Members of the European Parliament, including the general expenditure allowance (4,052 euros per month), the flat-rate travel allowance, the annual travel allowance (EUR 4,000) for other than official meetings, the subsistence allowance (EUR 287 per day) for participation in official business and remuneration of MEPs’ assistants (EUR 16,914 per month plus costs):
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/parliament/expert/staticDisplay.do?id=39&pageRank=1&language=EN
The web pages also refer to the coming detailed rules based on the Statute.
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Detailed rules
The coming detailed rules concerning the amounts, payment and control of expenses are only referred to in the Statute, but the ingrained practices have been an eyesore for too long.
According to the web page referred to above the work on the new rules is unfinished.
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EP Rules of Procedure
For those who want to look at the conduct of EP business the European Parliament’s Rules of Procedure (16th edition, October 2008) are available here:
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//NONSGML+RULES-EP+20081022+0+DOC+PDF+V0//EN&language=EN
But it is somewhat bewildering to find that Eur-Lex refers to the European Parliament ─ Rules of Procedure 16th edition July 2004 (OJEU 15.2.2005 L 44/1), which seems to be the last version officially published and I failed to find the 2008 version through the Publications Office.
Clarifications from readers are invited. We are going to return to the EP’s Rules of Procedure in a later blog post.
Ralf Grahn
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