The Council of the European Union (French: Le Conseil de l'Union Européenne, German: Rat der Europäischen Union) forms, along with the European Parliament, the legislative arm of the European Union (EU).
The Council of the European Union contains ministers of the governments of each of the European Union member states. It is sometimes referred to in official European Union documents simply as the Council or the Council of Ministers.
Working languages of the Council are English, French and German.
The Council has a President and a Secretary-General. The President of the Council is a Minister of the state currently holding the Presidency of the Council of the European Union; while the Secretary-General is the head of the Council Secretariat, chosen by the member states by unanimity. The Secretary-General also serves as the High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP). The Council is assisted by the Committee of Permanent Representatives (COREPER) , which consists of the ambassadors or their deputies from the diplomatic representations of the Member States to the European Communities. COREPER generally prepares the Council agenda, and negotiates minor and non-controversial matters, leaving controversial issues for discussion, and other issues for formal agreement, by the Council. Below COREPER, civil servants from the member states negotiate in Council working groups, often reaching de facto agreement which is formalised through COREPER and the Council of Ministers. The Council and its preparatory bodies are supported by European career civil servants (approximately three thousand as of July 2005) providing general advice, qualified legal advice, translation services and impartial negotiation assistance.
The Council of the European Union should be distinguished from the European Council, which meets four times a year in what is informally known as the 'European Summit' (EU summit), and is a closely related but separate body, made up with the heads of state and government of the member states, whose mission is to provide guidance and high level policy to the Council. It is also to be distinguished from the Council of Europe which is a completely separate international organisation (at present 46 states), not a European Union institution.
In effect, the Council performs the following functions:
Legally speaking, the Council is a single entity, but it is in practice divided into several different councils that meet in Brussels, each dealing with a different functional area. Each council is attended by a different type of minister. Thus, for example, meetings of the Council in its Agriculture and Fisheries formation are attended by the agriculture ministers of each member state. There are currently nine formations:
Countries of the EU hold different numbers of votes in the Council. The number of votes held by each country is based indirectly on the size of the country's population, but smaller countries are granted a greater number of votes than their population would strictly merit. This concept is aimed at balancing the voices of larger countries with those of smaller countries.
On 1 November 2004, modified voting weights from the Treaty of Nice came into effect (this date was revised by the Treaty of Accession 2003 from the originally intended date of 1 January, 2005). The Nice Treaty also provides for qualified majority voting to require a 'double majority' of both population and number of countries. Further revisions to the voting system are made in the proposed Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, which was signed on 29 October, 2004 but has yet to be ratified by all member states.
Almost all of the leaders and ministers of each member state belong to political parties at the national level. Many of these national parties belong to pan-European political parties. However there are no formal political groups or alliances in the Council, and countries led by similar political parties are often not in agreement on questions that come before the body.
Nonetheless the table below describes the current breakdown of party affiliations in the European Council, as of 4 July 2006, in terms of the European political alliances with which the leader of each member state is indirectly associated.
Consell de la Unió Europea | Rada Evropské unie | Cyngor Gweinidogion Ewrop | Rådet for Den Europæiske Union | Rat der Europäischen Union | Euroopa Liidu Nõukogu | Consejo de la Unión Europea | Konsilio de la Eŭropa Unio | Conseil de l'Union européenne | Consello da Unión Europea | Dewan Uni Eropa | Consiglio dell'Unione Europea | מועצת אירופה | ევროპის კავშირის საბჭო | Conseil vun der Europäescher Unioun | Európai Unió Tanácsa | Совет на Европската Унија | Raad van de Europese Unie | 欧州連合理事会 | Rådet for Den europeiske union | Rada Unii Europejskiej | Conselho da União Europeia | Consiliul Uniunii Europene | Совет Европейского Союза | Rada Európskej únie | Svet Evropske unije | Савет Европске уније | Euroopan unionin neuvosto | Europeiska unionens råd
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Council of the European Union".
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