Summary
In
‘European
Union Intergovernmental Conference’ (HC 1014), the European Scrutiny
Committee sets out their conclusions on the EU Constitution Reform Treaty.
The European Union Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) opened on 23
July 2007 and was initiated following a report originally produced by the
German Presidency entitled
'Treaty
Establishing a Constitution for Europe: Including the Protocols and Annexes,
and Final Act with Declarations, Rome, 29 October 2004' (Cm. 6429).
This led to a Draft IGC Mandate setting out a detailed prescription on
issues raised by the above report, circulated by the Presidency of the European
Council. The Report itself recommended a 'Reform Treaty' that would amend
existing treaties and so required an intergovernmental conference.
In
this Report, ‘European
Union Intergovernmental Conference’ (HC 1014), the European Scrutiny
Committee has set out a number of conclusions.
These include:
- The Committee questioned the aims of the European Council in engaging with
EU citizens on the EU Constitution whilst setting out changes to the
constitution in an essentially secretive manner.
- The substance of the
Reform Treaty is substantially equivalent to the Constitutional Treaty itself.
- The Committee is concerned about the UK's position under the Charter.
- The UK opt-outs that were previously arranged under the Constitutional
Treaty will still be retained under the Reform Treaty.
- The proposals in the Reform Treaty raise a serious difficulty of a
constitutional order, appearing to impose a legal duty on national parliaments
to the European Union itself. The Committee calls such a legal duty on
Parliament objectionable and states that as a matter of principle it should be
resisted.
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