After the elections - now what happens?

Published: 9 June 2009 y., Tuesday

Europos parlamento rūmai Strasbūre (Prancūzija)
The 736 newly elected Members of the European Parliament will meet for the first time on 14 July in Strasbourg. Their first job will be to form themselves into trans-national political groups and then to elect a President and 14 Vice-presidents who will serve for the next two and a half years. New Members may also probably have to vote on whether to give José Manuel Barroso another 5 year term as president of the European Commission.
Discussions about which group each national party will enter will have already started in earnest as soon as the election results became clear. For some parties they already have a natural home in the Parliament although others have decided to shift allegiances - the most notable being the 25 British Conservatives who are leaving the European People's Party.
 
To form a recognised political group - with all the access to the parliament's agenda that goes with it - requires 25 Members from 7 different countries. The Strasbourg sitting of 14-16 will see Members take their seats from the very first day.

The opening session also sees the formation of the Parliament's Bureau which comprises the President, the 14 Vice-presidents and 6 Quaestors who look after financial matters concerning Members.
 
Commission President Barroso - will MEPs back a second term?
 
Leaders of EU countries will next week hold their first summit on 18-19 June since the voters gave the centre-right a clear mandate on the European elections. At that summit they must divide who to nominate for the key position of European Commission President.
 
The incumbent, former Portuguese Prime Minister José Manuel Barroso, is already the favourite having secured the verbal backing of many European leaders.
 
However, to be appointed a majority of MEPs must vote to support his nomination. Although the liberals and Greens have publicly opposed Barroso the victory of the centre-right at the European elections has also strengthened his position. The vote for Mr Barroso's candidacy is provisionally scheduled to take place on 15 July.
 
The rest of the college of Commissioners will be chosen later in the autumn. Parliament's 20 Committees - on everything from Foreign Affairs to Fisheries - will meet in the weeks after 20 July.
 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Italian women rally against Berlusconi

Thousands of Italian women rallied throughout Italy on Sunday, incensed by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's sex scandal allegations. more »

Europe must show Tunisia that democracy pays

Unconditional solidarity with the Tunisian people, more support for civil society, and a call for strong EU assistance in dealing with the many challenges of Tunisia's transition to democracy, were the key messages voiced by MEPs after the first European Parliament delegation visit to Tunisia (3-6 February), following the "Jasmine revolution", at a joint meeting of the Foreign Affairs Committee and the Human Rights Sub-committee on Monday. more »

Anti-Berlusconi protest turns violent

A weekend of protests against Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi came to an end on Sunday night with violent scuffles between demonstrators and police outside the premier's villa in Milan. more »

EU transport ministers meet to discuss future of European infrastructure

The European Union's 27 transport ministers are meeting today and tomorrow in Godollo, Hungary, for an informal Council meeting hosted by the Hungarian Presidency to discuss the review of the trans-European transport network (TEN-T) policy. more »

Australia bush fires destroy homes

Dozens of homes have been destroyed by bush fires sweeping through parts of Western Australia. more »

Troubles close pyramids

Egypt's most iconic tourist site is unusually deserted - yet another casualty of the political unrest which has dominated Egypt's agenda for the past 13 days. more »

Japan volcano causes damage

Shinmoe peak errupts in southern Japan causing damages to buildings, one person injured. more »

Conference on China and Climate Change

The European External Action Service (EEAS) will host an international expert roundtable conference on the topic of “Engaging China on Climate Change: Crossroads of 21st-century Foreign Policy” on 2 February 2011 in Brussels. more »

Iran: fresh EU sanctions needed to combat human rights abuses

Iran's execution of Dutch-Iranian citizen Sarah Bahrami was firmly condemned by Foreign Affairs Committee MEPs in a resolution voted on Tuesday. more »

Vice-President Siim Kallas presents road safety awards

At the Excellence in Road Safety Awards ceremony held today in Brussels, Siim Kallas, Vice-President of the European Commission responsible for transport, presented awards to seven organisations which have undertaken specific commitments to reduce the number of road fatalities in their communities more »