1. Origin and aim of the report
1. The Code of Good Practice on
Electoral Matters and the Code of Good Practice on Referendums are reference
documents of the Council of Europe, drafted and adopted by the European
Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), approved
by the Parliamentary Assembly and the Congress of Local and Regional
Authorities and supported by the Committee of Ministers. They are
widely referred to in Venice Commission opinions and in reports
of other international organisations as well as in judgments of
the European Court of Human Rights. They have a significant impact
on national legislation and its implementation, in Europe and beyond.
Indeed, the fact that several non-European countries have become
full members of the Venice Commission and that co-operation programmes
have been developed with other countries, in particular in Central
Asia, Southern Mediterranean and Latin America, has contributed
to spreading the standards and expertise of the Venice Commission
all over the world.
2. In June 2022, the Venice Commission adopted the
Revised
Code of Good Practice on Referendums (“Revised Code”). This text followed
up
Resolution 2251 (2019) “Updating guidelines to ensure fair referendums in Council
of Europe member States” in which the Parliamentary Assembly, taking
note that the process of revision of the guidelines had already
started, asked the Venice Commission to take into account the increasing
use of referendums, the rise of digital media and the changed nature
of political campaigning.
3. The Revised Code responds to the Assembly’s concerns and takes
into account developments with respect to a number of referendums
which have been held by Council of Europe member States in recent years.
4. The motion for a resolution
which is at the origin of the present
report recommends that the Assembly should welcome the adoption
of the Revised Code and share it with the parliaments of Council
of Europe member States. The Assembly should also seek to promote
the Revised Code beyond its national delegations, reaching out to
other parliaments, in Europe and beyond, which share its commitment
to strengthening democracy, the good functioning of democratic processes
and the respect for the rule of law. I fully subscribe to the proposals
set out in the motion for a resolution
5. Furthermore, the Assembly should formally endorse the Revised
Code. This is in line with existing practice as regards a number
of documents emanating from the Venice Commission, including the
Codes of Good Practice in Electoral Matters and on Referendums,
and more recently the Rule of Law Checklist.
6. Finally, the Assembly should continue to review, in co-operation
with the Venice Commission, the issues raised in the Revised Code,
with a view to developing it further if required.
7. In the present document I shall describe the process which
led to the adoption of the Revised Code and its content.
2. Background
8. The guidelines on the organisation
of referendums (
CDL-AD(2006)027rev) were adopted by the Council for Democratic Elections
at its 18th meeting (Venice, 12 October 2006) and by the Venice
Commission at its 68th plenary session (Venice, 13-14 October 2006).
These guidelines are accompanied by an explanatory memorandum which
was adopted by the Council for Democratic Elections at its 19th
meeting (Venice, 16 December 2006) and by the Venice Commission
at its 70th plenary session (Venice, 16-17 March 2007). The Code
of Good Practice on Referendums (
CDL-AD(2007)008rev-cor) adopted at the same meeting of the Venice Commission
includes these guidelines and the explanatory memorandum.
9. On 23 November 2007, with
Recommendation 1821 (2007), the Standing Committee, acting on behalf of the Assembly,
asked the Committee of Ministers to adopt a recommendation to member
States endorsing the Code of Good Practice on Referendums. In its
Resolution 1592 (2007), the Assembly decided to forward the Code of Good Practice
on Referendums to national delegations and parliaments so that it
could be applied in Council of Europe member States without delay.
10. At its 14th plenary session (Strasbourg, 30 May - 1 June 2007),
the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of
Europe approved the Code of Good Practice on Referendums.
11. On 27 November 2008, at the 1042bis meeting of the Ministers’
Deputies, the Committee of Ministers adopted a Declaration on the
Code of Good Practice on Referendums for the purpose of inviting
public authorities in member States to take it into account.
12. In October 2016, the Venice Commission addressed recurring
concerns with respect to a number of referendums in member States,
relating both to the procedure for launching referendums and to
the substance of the proposed changes.
13. Regarding the procedure, the Venice Commission emphasised
the need for referendums to respect the rule of law and, in particular,
to comply with the legal system as a whole, especially with the
procedural rules on constitutional revision. It also warned against
the use of referendums to bypass important constitutional safeguards,
such as the requirement for a qualified majority in parliament.
As regards the substance of the proposed changes, the Venice Commission
was concerned that most of these referendums were aimed at concentrating
powers and reducing democratic control by parliament. On that basis,
the Venice Commission initiated the process of revision of the Code
of Good Practice on Referendums.
14. In 2017, the Council for Democratic Elections and the Venice
Commission adopted a questionnaire (
CDL(2017)022rev2) asking for information on recent developments in member
States in the field of referendums. The replies to the questionnaire
can be found in the “Study on Referendums – Replies to the Questionnaire”
(
CDL(2018)042).
15. The final version of the Revised Code of Good Practice on
Referendums, including the explanatory memorandum, was approved
by the Council for Democratic Elections at its 73rd meeting (Venice,
16 June 2022) and adopted by the Venice Commission at its 131st
Plenary Session (Venice, 17-18 June 2022). It was endorsed by the
Committee of Ministers (7 September 2022) and by the Congress of
Local and Regional Authorities (25 October 2022).
3. Previous
work of the Assembly
16. While the Council for Democratic
Elections and the Venice Commission were working on the revision
of the Code, the Assembly worked on a report entitled “Updating
guidelines to ensure fair referendums in Council of Europe member
States” (
Doc. 14791) which led to
Resolution
2251(2019), adopted on 22 January 2019.
17. Through this text, the Assembly wished to provide an input
to the work of the Venice Commission, having taken note that, in
recent years, the process and/or the fairness of the outcome in
a number of national referendums had been questioned and that, in
other cases, important innovations had been introduced, the knowledge
of which could benefit legislators in all member States.
18. In
Resolution 2251
(2019), the Assembly “welcome[d] the fact that a process for
updating the 2007 Code ha[d] been initiated by the Venice Commission
and invite[d] it to take into account, in the revised Code, the following
general principles:
- referendums
should be embedded in the process of representative democracy and
should not be used by the executive to override the wishes of parliament
or be intended to bypass normal checks and balances;
- proposals put to a referendum should be as clear as possible
and subject to detailed prior scrutiny, including by parliament,
to ensure that they reflect voters’ concerns and express their wishes;
- the campaign should ensure a balance between the different
sides and allow voters access to balanced and quality information
in order to be able to make an informed choice.”
19. These principles were fully incorporated in the Revised Code.
4. The
Revised Code of Good Practice on Referendums – the approach
20. The Revised Code declares that
“it does not intend to determine whether and under which circumstances
recourse to referendums is desirable as such. The answer to this
question varies according to the nature of the constitutional system
and tradition. It belongs to national constitutional law to establish whether
referendums are at all foreseen, what their scope is, and what procedure
must be followed to hold them. However, a number of guarantees are
necessary to ensure that they genuinely express the wishes of the
electorate and do not go against international standards in the
field of human rights, democracy and the rule of law”.
21. In the constitutional systems of Council of Europe member
States, decision-making ordinarily occurs through mechanisms of
representative democracy, whereas recourse to referendums tends
to complement such decision-making processes. This is true even
in countries where legislation is generally open to referendum.
In view of the foregoing, referendums and representative democracy
should be harmoniously combined. In particular, recourse to direct
democracy should not exclude the involvement of the representative bodies
in the process. Furthermore, recourse to a referendum should not
be used to upset constitutional checks and balances, for example
used by the president or the government in order to circumvent parliamentary
amendment procedures.
22. Participatory democracy and, in particular citizens’ assemblies,
are also complementary to representative democracy; they are not
addressed in the Revised Code. The introduction of such assemblies does
not exclude nor imply referendums, and vice versa: they can be a
step in a process which will lead to a referendum.
23. The Revised Code applies to referendums at the different levels
of the State structure (national, regional, local). However, it
is mainly focused on national referendums. Its general rules are
to be adapted to the reality of local and regional referendums,
in conformity with national constitutional traditions.
24. National law may provide for referendums:
- on specifically worded draft
amendments to a legal text or a specific proposal to abrogate existing provisions
of this text;
- on a question of principle;
- on a concrete proposal which does not have the form of
specifically worded amendments, known as a “generally-worded proposal”.
25. Issues submitted to referendum may be of a constitutional,
legislative or even administrative nature (especially at the local
level). They may concern (the ratification of) a treaty. They can
also address territorial issues, such as the creation or merger
of subnational entities as well as secession, in the rare cases
where it is allowed by the national constitution.
26. Distinctions also have to be made between mandatory referendums
(imposed by the constitution or legislation) and optional referendums
(at the request of an authority, a minority in parliament or part
of the electorate) as well as, according to the effect of the referendum,
between legally binding and consultative referendums. Consultative
referendums binding the executive – in the sense that it has to
introduce a draft in parliament – are an intermediate category.
5. The
Revised Code of Good Practice on Referendums: Guidelines and Explanatory
Memorandum
27. The Revised Code includes the
Guidelines on the Holding of Referendums as well as an Explanatory Memorandum,
which refers, when necessary, to the various items of the Guidelines
in order to elaborate on their content and background.
28. The Guidelines contain the Principles of Europe’s electoral
heritage and the conditions for implementing these principles; furthermore,
rules specific to referendums are also included in the Guidelines.
The explanatory memorandum is intended to elaborate on those aspects
of the guidelines that are specific to referendums. Accordingly,
it does not comment on the principles and general rules applicable
to both elections and referendums.
29. The Principles of Europe’s electoral heritage are universal,
equal, free and secret suffrage. The following issues may be underlined:
30. The conditions for according the right to vote are normally
the same for both referendums and elections. The right to vote in
referendums should not be more onerous than those applying to elections,
including for citizens residing abroad.
31. It is worth emphasising that – as in the case of elections
– there may sometimes be grounds for taking account of the specific
circumstances of national minorities and to make an exception to
the normal vote-counting rules. In particular, this would apply
to a referendum on self-government for a territory with a relatively high
concentration of a minority population: a double majority of electors
within that territory and throughout the country may be required.
The principle of proportionality must be respected.
32. In the case of elections, intervention by the authorities
in support of a list or a candidate is unacceptable: their duty
of neutrality is absolute. An authority must not use its position,
or public funds, to stay in power; nor must it do so on behalf of
its supporters in another organ. The situation is however different
in the case of referendums since it is legitimate for the different
organs of government to convey their viewpoint in the debate for
or against the text put to the vote.
33. The revised guidelines make it clear that, while secret suffrage
is not only a right, but also a duty, this duty does not extend
outside the polling station, as it does not restrict the voters’
right to express their view outside the polling station.
34. The conditions for implementing these principles as above
are the following: the rule of law, respect for fundamental rights,
the stability of referendum law and procedural guarantees. The principle
of the rule of law, which is one of the three pillars of the Council
of Europe along with democracy and human rights, applies to referendums
just as it does to every other area of law. Concerning the stability
of the law, the organisation of referendums should preferably be
provided for by national constitutions and laws enacted well in
advance. The procedural guarantees include the organisation and
supervision of the referendum by an impartial body, an effective
system of appeal and rules on funding. General rules on both public
and private funding of political parties and election campaigns
must also be applicable to referendum campaigns, including the rules
on transparency and limitation of spending and individual donations.
35. Among the rules specific to referendums, there are requirements
concerning the effects of the referendum. Where a referendum concerns
a question of principle or a generally-worded proposal, it may be difficult
for voters to know the consequences of their vote. Voters should
therefore be informed about the proposed follow-up in advance of
the vote. In the case of a legally-binding referendum on a question
of principle or a generally-worded proposal, it is up to parliament
to implement the people’s decision. Parliament may be obstructive,
particularly where its direct interests are affected (reducing the
number of members of parliament or the allowances paid to them,
for example). In order to avoid such obstruction, the procedure
for follow-up to binding referendums on questions of principle or
generally-worded proposals should be laid down in specific rules.
It should be possible to appeal before the courts in the event that
the parliament fails to act.