1. Introduction
1. At its meeting on 8 March 2012, the Bureau of the
Assembly instructed the Committee on Rules of Procedure, Immunities
and Institutional Affairs to examine, in the context of a report
on the evaluation of the implementation of the reform of the Parliamentary
Assembly, “the expectations of national parliaments as regards the
Assembly’s work and activities, as well as … the impact of adopted
texts on the work of parliaments and national governments and the
impact of participation of Assembly members in the work of the Assembly and
its committees”.
2. The decision follows on from the studies carried out by the
committee as part of the implementation of
Resolution 1822 (2011) on the reform of the Parliamentary Assembly, which resulted
in the adoption of
Resolution
1841 (2011) on the amendment of various provisions of the Rules
of Procedure of the Parliamentary Assembly and
Resolution 1842 (2011) on the terms of reference of Parliamentary Assembly
committees. It also follows on from the committee’s work on evaluating
the participation of the national delegations in the activities of
the Assembly and its committees – with the conduct of its annual
exercise on follow-up to
Resolution
1583 (2007) on improving the participation of members in Assembly
plenary sessions and committee meetings.
1.1. The reform of the
Parliamentary Assembly – background
3. The reform carried out in 2011
was the
outcome of a wide-ranging consultation in which all the players of
the Parliamentary Assembly took part: the Assembly members whether
individually or collectively, as members of political groups or
national delegations, the Assembly’s Bureau, the ad hoc committee
set up in this connection, and the Assembly Secretariat.
4. In this context, the Assembly set itself the objectives of
strengthening its political effectiveness and relevance, making
itself more visible and increasing its members’ involvement, as
well as reinforcing the interaction between the Assembly and national
parliaments and strengthening inter-parliamentary co-operation.
5. To achieve these objectives, it adopted measures that mainly
affect its organisational structure, its mode of operation and its
means of action,
in
particular:
- overhauling the
structure of the committees, reduced from ten to eight, and their
terms of reference;
- refocusing motions for resolutions and recommendations
on the lines of action defined at the 3rd Summit of Heads of State
and Government;
- making more flexible the conditions of referral to committees,
and the possibility for committees to table motions;
- implementing follow-up to the reports by the committees,
and creating the office of general rapporteur;
- reorganising plenary session debates with tighter agendas,
the lengthening of each debate, the introduction of a slot for “free
debate” and a reduction of speaking time;
- improving the planning and grouping of committee meetings
outside part-sessions;
- improving the Assembly’s communication tools;
- diversifying the funding of the Assembly’s activities.
1.2. The need to carry
out an assessment of the reform
6. The Assembly reform undertaken in 2011 was conducted
in the overall context of refocusing the Council of Europe’s activities
against a background of budgetary restrictions and the economic
and financial crisis which has prompted many member States to cut
back their participation in the organisations of European co-operation
since 2008. Regardless of the structural reform carried out, the
Assembly must be able to take a clear-sighted and resolute stance
vis-à-vis the challenges to be embraced, both internally (future
of the Organisation) and externally (the problems facing European
society as a whole). The declared objectives of the reform may have
been to make the Assembly more politically relevant, more effective
and more visible, but there must nonetheless be a means of determining
whether the objectives have been achieved. It also remains to be
determined whether the measures taken and implemented have resulted
in national parliaments taking a greater interest in participating
in the Assembly’s work and in their taking better account of the
Assembly’s decisions.
7. When it comes to assessing the impact of the reform on the
level of participation by the national delegations, it should be
borne in mind that the committee recently examined the relevant
statistics for 2013, in the annual report which it traditionally
submits to the Bureau early the following year.
8. In order to carry out a precise assessment of the reform,
the Rules Committee approved a questionnaire for the national delegations
and members of the Assembly at its meeting on 4 October 2012, in
order to identify their expectations concerning the activities of
the Assembly and its committees. A total of 62 replies were received:
25 from delegations,
and
37 individual replies from Assembly members. A detailed analysis
of the replies can be found in an information memorandum drawn up
by the rapporteur,
of which the committee
took note at its meeting on 18 March 2013. The questions asked concerned
the following points:
- the
national parliaments’ perception of the Parliamentary Assembly’s
role;
- the national parliaments’ expectations regarding the Assembly’s
activities and the issues that the Assembly should discuss first
and foremost;
- the impact of the Assembly’s decisions on the work of
the national parliaments, the initiatives taken by the delegations
to promote these decisions, and the initiatives that could be developed
to do more to promote the Assembly’s visibility;
- the level of the national parliaments’ satisfaction with
regard to the Assembly’s mode of operation following the implementation
of the 2011 reform measures, including the organisation of the plenary sessions.
9. Lastly, the rapporteur also wished to find out the position
of the Assembly’s committees on the measures implemented since 2012
in respect of the impact they had had on their mode of operation
and their activities. Committees were therefore consulted on a number
of issues in February 2014.
10. The rapporteur would like to thank all those – chairs and
members of committees, chairs and members of national delegations,
secretariats – who played an active part in that survey.
2. Information
on the follow-up to the decisions taken by the Assembly in connection
with the reform
2.1. Initiatives taken
to increase the Assembly’s visibility and modernise the Assembly’s communication
tools
11. In its reform, the Assembly decided it was necessary
to review its communication tools, especially its website, “with
a view to making them more user-friendly and interactive, and thus
more useful to members and to Europeans”. The Assembly, which opened
a Facebook account in February 2013 and has since December 2011
had a fairly busy Twitter account which operates on a daily basis
and has almost 1 200 subscribers, as well as a specific YouTube
video site, inaugurated a new website in October 2013.
The development of the Assembly
towards a Web 2.0 environment will therefore enable it to interact
with its members, member States’ parliamentarians, non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), other international organisations, journalists
and, of course, European citizens, as well as ultimately to optimise
all the possibilities offered by the social media. The committees
benefit from special communication areas on those media. Some Assembly
members have now set out a very ambitious vision and indicated their
desire to use these social networks to put up subjects for discussion,
on which the Assembly’s subsequent work could build.
12. So it is a veritable communication platform that has been
devised for Assembly members, who can make full use of the tools
placed at their disposal (Twitter, YouTube and the “media box”,
a mobile multimedia resources studio
which enables interviews, statements and reactions to be recorded
during part-sessions in the form of short video clips).
13. In the context of the reform, the Assembly also wished to
firmly strengthen the committees’ role regarding the follow-up given
to adopted texts, both vis-à-vis the Committee of Ministers and
national parliaments. Increasing the Assembly’s political impact
by monitoring the implementation of its decisions is indeed crucial
for the Assembly, so the fact that most of the committees have fully
embraced the need for follow-up to their reports is to be welcomed.
In
addition, texts adopted at each part-session, which were traditionally
forwarded directly to the secretaries general of parliaments and
to the Assembly’s institutional partners, are now sent to the chairs
of the Assembly’s counterpart committees via the chairs of the national delegations.
14. The post of committee general rapporteur – set up to make
the Assembly’s actions and decisions in a given area more visible
vis-à-vis the Committee of Ministers, the intergovernmental committees,
other international institutions and the media – has unquestionably
been welcomed by the committees.
The general rapporteurs,
who were appointed in 2012, have proved very active, but it is regrettable
that the term of office of six of the seven general rapporteurs
has been limited, by decision of the Bureau, to a single renewable period
of a year. These general rapporteurs will therefore have to cease
their work two years after their appointment, in the course of the
year 2014. As they are particularly experienced parliamentarians
with a high profile for many years in the areas concerned, this
situation could undermine the continuity of the follow-up to the
Assembly’s actions and decisions.
2.2. Increasing the
interest and participation of members of the Assembly
15. The figures for the attendance of Assembly members
at plenary sessions and committee meetings, as analysed in the aforementioned
Rules Committee’s annual report to the Bureau, clearly show an improvement in
Assembly members’ participation in plenary sessions, in voting during
plenary sessions and in committee meetings.
On this last
point, it is indisputable that the reform, by deciding to reduce
the number of committees and to limit membership of committees as
full members, has resulted in a mathematical increase in participation.
16. The provision at each part-session of a slot for free debate
is also a measure much appreciated by Assembly members.
At
this stage of the discussion, and in the light of the opinion of
the delegations and members ascertained by the Rules Committee’s
survey, there is no plan to increase the time allocated for this purpose
or to grant an additional slot during the same part-session.
17. The reform, which called for quality over quantity – “do less
but better” –, has undeniably led to a significant fall in the number
of adopted texts (during the 2013 session, the Assembly adopted
84 texts, compared with 74 in 2012, 115 in 2011, 143 in 2010 and
109 in 2009). There has been a dramatic fall in the number of recommendations
addressed to the Committee of Ministers (25 in 2013 and 16 in 2012,
compared with 42 in 2011; a peak was reached in 2010 with 56 recommendations).
It is also important to note that several Assembly reports presented
in 2012 and 2013 obtained a much larger number of votes than in
the past, indicating the Assembly members’ increased interest in
matters relating to the honouring of obligations and commitments
by member States, current affairs and controversial issues.
2.3. Strengthening the
capacity for inter-parliamentary co-operation and diversifying the
funding of Assembly activities
18. The Assembly, taking note of the increasingly restrictive
budgetary situation in which it carries out its activities, decided
as part of its reform to increase its capacity for co-operation
by trying to diversify the funding of those activities. A Parliamentary
Projects Support Division tasked with drawing up a structured and
targeted co-operation programme, strengthening synergies with other
inter-parliamentary organisations,
especially the European Parliament and the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE),
and seeking extra-budgetary resources was set up in January 2012.
For example, €164 000 was received in 2012 and €321 000 in 2013
from certain member States and private foundations in the form of voluntary
contributions. Those voluntary contributions have made it possible
to finance activities relating in particular to the parliamentary
dimension of the One in Five campaign to combat sexual violence
against children and of the campaign to promote the Convention on
Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence
(CETS No. 210).
19. When the Rules Committee conducted its survey, however, parliaments,
which were asked about their wish to see the Assembly carry out
specific co-operation activities (by organising conferences or seminars
on specific themes or training seminars on good practices) said
they were not prepared to become involved in funding such activities.
This is an interesting
indicator for the Assembly at a time when it is trying to develop its
inter-parliamentary co-operation activities, especially those aimed
at non-member States.
2.4. Exploiting the
Assembly’s strengths
20. It very clearly emerges from the survey conducted
among the delegations by the Rules Committee that the Assembly members
regard the Assembly as an institution which is one of its kind in
Europe for promoting fundamental values in the fields of human rights,
democracy and the rule of law, holding 47 States to account on an
equal footing by assessing their situation in these areas and monitoring
compliance with their obligations and promoting standards through
the implementation of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5)
and other conventions.
21. Members also view the Assembly as the largest pan-European
forum in which specific topical issues in the most diverse areas
– and of interest to the greatest possible number of Europeans –
are discussed. The Assembly is in step with the political, economic
and social situation in Greater Europe and members praise its technical
expertise and its ability to conduct serious and substantive debates,
give rise to in-depth and sound discussions and promote exchanges
of information and good practices.
22. There is no doubt that the reform that has been implemented
for over two years has shown positive results, but there is a strong
expectation among delegations that more should be done to exploit
the Assembly’s strengths. Efforts should therefore continue to be
made, especially in order to maintain the interest of parliaments
in the Assembly’s work. This means that the committees’ work programmes,
supported by motions for resolutions and recommendations, should
be refocused on future-oriented subjects that are of interest to national
parliaments and meet the expectations of European citizens in a
more immediate and more substantive way.
The
possibility which has been open since 2012 for committees to table
motions on the basis of a simplified and speedier procedure is one
measure which takes us in this direction.
3. Points for discussion
on new initiatives
23. The survey conducted in 2012 amongst national delegations
and members of the Assembly enabled a number of questions to be
raised which have come up regularly over recent years, but which
had not been considered in depth at the time of the discussion on
reform in 2011.
3.1. Improving the Assembly’s
visibility
3.1.1. Increasing the
impact of the Assembly’s decisions on the work of national parliaments
24. One aim of the Assembly’s reform was to strengthen
the interaction between the Assembly and national parliaments. Most
parliaments publicise the Assembly’s work mainly by drafting a delegation
activity report or a report on the Assembly’s activities, either
annually or after each part-session. In some parliaments, a report may
also be issued after each meeting of a committee of the Assembly
in which members have participated. In some cases, all this information
is published and made available to the public on the parliament’s
website.
Some
delegations disseminate and publicise the texts adopted by the Assembly
(and also have them translated) and implement its decisions by forwarding
the resolutions to the relevant parliamentary committees or by organising
a presentation or statement by members of the delegation in the
relevant committees.
25. It is clear that asking national delegations to provide a
better “after-sales service”, especially by more effectively promoting
texts adopted by the Assembly, presupposes that these texts deal
with issues of relevance to current national policy priorities and
future national challenges as well as matters of interest to citizens,
so that the Assembly’s recommendations can be formally taken on
board by the national parliaments under their regulatory and legislative
powers.
26. Several delegations gave specific examples of Assembly resolutions
that had directly influenced the proceedings of their parliament
or had a direct impact on their work. Two main topics emerged:
- resolutions that directly affect
the country, primarily those relating to the monitoring of obligations
and commitments either general or specific (for example, in the
areas of combating corruption or freedom of the media), and to the
execution of the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights;
- implementation of the Council of Europe conventions, in
particular on violence against women and domestic violence, on the
protection of children against sexual exploitation and sexual abuse,
and on trafficking in human beings.
27. As part of the follow-up to the Assembly reform, the delegations
showed a very keen interest in promoting direct discussions between
the Assembly committees and their counterparts in the parliaments
of member States. The Assembly committees could therefore consider
developing relations with their counterpart committees in national
parliaments:
- through a direct
exchange of information on matters of mutual interest;
- through joint meetings between the committees in Strasbourg
or in the national parliaments;
- by setting up networks of “contact” parliamentarians or
correspondents for certain issues;
- by organising a meeting, for instance every two years,
of chairs of parliamentary committees on a given topic (based on
the model of the conferences of specialised ministers).
28. The committees of the Assembly clearly indicated their wish
to consolidate exchanges with counterpart committees, but with priority
being given to the holding of ad hoc meetings on subjects of common
interest, according to need, and not of an automatic nature. Two
committees – the only two concerned – welcomed the smooth operation
and effectiveness of the networks of contact parliamentarians, which
have helped to bring about a considerable increase in the impact
of the decisions and measures advocated by the Assembly.
29. Finally, with regard to making the Assembly more visible,
it should be noted that the proposal to enhance the representational
role of the President of the Assembly, who could be regularly invited
by the national parliaments to report on the Assembly’s activities,
was met with some interest among delegations and members of the
Assembly.
3.1.2. Enhancing the operational
synergies with the national delegations
30. Since April 2012, the President of the Parliamentary
Assembly has brought the heads of the national delegations together
for a meeting at each part-session.
This decision cannot but meet with
the delegations’ full support since the survey conducted by the
Rules Committee revealed that all the delegations consider it worthwhile
holding regular meetings of the chairs of the national delegations,
in any event once every part-session (100% of delegations) and,
to a lesser extent, on the occasion of the meetings of the Standing Committee.
3.2. Improving the Assembly’s
mode of operation
31. It clearly emerges from the survey conducted among
the national delegations and parliamentarians that the functioning
of the Assembly based on its
current mode of operation inherited from the 2011 reform – whether
it be the timetable of Assembly business, the organisation of plenary
sittings or the committees’ mode of operation – almost unanimously
meets with their satisfaction. However, some proposals with a view
to further improving this mode of operation were mentioned during
the survey and merit consideration.
3.2.1. Introducing the
possibility of replacement by a substitute for a specific debate
32. Assembly members with the status of representative
are currently able to arrange to be replaced by a substitute during
a sitting (Rule 11.1 of the Rules of Procedure). Some national delegations
repeatedly ask for a representative to be able to be replaced by
a substitute for a specific debate rather than for the entire duration of
a sitting. Although such a possibility is feasible from a technical
point of view, its implementation remains complicated. Moreover
it should be kept in mind that a single debate may be held over
two sittings. The organisation of Assembly debates may therefore
loose clarity and become more complicated if such a measure were
to be adopted. The Rules Committee therefore decided not to take
consideration of this point any further.
3.2.2. Grouping together
the votes on texts in plenary session
33. For several years now, and when the committee was
reviewing the Rules of Procedure in the course of the successive
reforms of the Assembly’s mode of operation,
the
idea of grouping together the votes on texts in plenary session
at fixed time slots has been regularly raised (supported by 100%
of the delegations and 72% of the parliamentarians who replied to
the committee’s survey).
34. It is easy to understand the justification for this proposal
and the arguments put forward: better organisation of parliamentarians’
planning, improving the attendance statistics of the members (who
it is hoped would take part in votes in greater numbers), etc. However,
it should be borne in mind that, according to the procedure in force
in the Assembly (and contrary to other national or pan-European
forums), the final vote on a text is preceded by, and is inextricably
linked to, the discussion of and voting on amendments tabled by members
in the sitting. As regards the examination of and voting on the
amendments in plenary sitting, delegations and parliamentarians
unequivocally support the existing procedure (preliminary consideration
of amendments by committees and examination and vote in plenary
sitting).
35. The arguments against such a measure are equally valid. As
each Assembly debate forms a whole – which means rapporteurs, speakers,
committee chairs and other Assembly members and the media are present
throughout its duration – it makes little sense to separate in a
plenary sitting the debates on reports presented by the committees
from the examination of and vote on amendments tabled and the text
proposed. That could only be detrimental to a proper understanding
of the issues raised by the committee and to the continuity of the
discussion, and perhaps to the attendance of members in the chamber
during the presentation of reports by the rapporteurs and speakers’
contributions.
Mention might be
made here of the situation in the European Parliament, which sometimes
suffers from the images, which some media enjoy conveying, of an empty
chamber during the presentation of reports. Furthermore, unlike
the European Parliament and the national parliaments, the Assembly
is composed of as many substitutes as representatives: if the votes
were grouped together, members who participated in a debate would
not necessarily be those who subsequently voted. Finally, the main
problem lies in establishing during a part-session the slot(s) allocated
to the grouped voting on texts: it is clearly not a solution that
could be seriously considered to provide for the votes of the day’s two
sittings to be grouped together in the evening or for all the week’s
texts to be grouped together at the end of the part-session, on
the Friday morning.
36. Moreover, if the Rules Committee were to examine in greater
detail the idea of modifying the Assembly’s procedure for voting
on texts in plenary sittings, it would then have to consider at
the same time the possibility of modifying the procedure for examining
amendments so that they are no longer voted on in plenary sitting and
only the committees would be entitled to examine them in the first
and last instance. The Rules committee has so far considered all
the aforementioned arguments sufficiently relevant not to proceed
any further with the proposal.
3.2.3. Introducing the
possibility of secret ballots
37. In adopting
Resolution
1529 (2006) on open and transparent voting in the Parliamentary
Assembly, the Assembly decided to publish information about members’
votes, thus taking account of the growing public and media interest
in knowing how parliamentarians vote within the Assembly on societal
issues and their views on certain countries’ failings where the
Council of Europe’s standards are concerned.
38. The Rules Committee examined the subject of lobbying in its
report entitled “Code of conduct of members of the Parliamentary
Assembly: good practice or a core duty?” (
Doc. 13000). The Code of conduct of members of the Parliamentary
Assembly, adopted by the Assembly in
Resolution 1903 (2012), stipulates among the general principles of conduct
that members of the Parliamentary Assembly shall “take decisions solely
in the public interest, without being bound by any instructions
that would jeopardise members’ ability to respect the present code”.
39. In this context, some members of the Assembly recognised that
they were being subjected to increased pressure, during plenary
debates, within their national delegation or their political group.
National media also regularly reported instances of political pressure
brought upon members of national delegations in relation to major
Assembly debates or particularly crucial decisions. It might therefore
prove necessary to meet the need for the protection of voting, a
crucial part of the functioning of the democratic system, in order
to guarantee the free expression, without supervision, pressure
or coercion, of personal beliefs, whatever they may be. Parliamentarians
are mandated by their electorate to act in the public interest,
in accordance with the political values that their party embodies,
and to oppose policies which they regard as damaging.
40. In pursuance of the Assembly’s Rules of Procedure, secret
ballots exist only for the appointments made by the Assembly (elections).
Consequently, the possibility of amending Rule 39 on methods of
voting so as to add to it the possibility of secret ballots when
a certain number of members so request could be considered, with
a view to ensuring members’ freedom of thought and freedom of political
belief.
41. However, a majority of the members of the Rules Committee
considered that transparency should remain the rule where voting
in the plenary Assembly was concerned, and that there was consequently
no reason to change the voting arrangements set down in the Rules
of Procedure.
3.2.4. Setting up a more
regular exchange of views with the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe
42. At present, the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe formally addresses the Assembly once a year, when he delivers
his communication during the January part-session.
He
is also present (or represented) at the meetings of the Bureau of
the Assembly, where he reports on his activities and, sometimes, at
meetings of the Standing Committee. Several members of the Assembly,
drawing a parallel with the procedure for asking their government
questions or with the right to ask questions in the national parliament, think
that the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, as the Organisation’s
“executive”, should be able to reply to members’ questions on a
more regular basis. The committees could lend themselves to this
if the Secretary General were to agree.
Some committees
considered in this respect that this could help to get the Assembly’s
recommendations better taken into account when the Secretary General
defines the Organisation’s priorities.
3.2.5. Reviewing the structure
of the Assembly organs
43. At the moment, the Rules of Procedure recognise the
following organs: the Presidential Committee, the Bureau, the Standing
Committee and the Joint Committee. Since October 2012 at initiative
of the then President of the Assembly, Jean-Claude Mignon, a “Conference
of Presidents”, which brought together the Presidential Committee
and the chairs of the Assembly committees, has been convened before
each part-session. Moreover, as already mentioned, the President
of the Assembly convenes a meeting of the heads of the delegations
during each part-session.
44. The Rules Committee has regularly examined the role and functions
of these various organs.
At the time
of the 2011 reform, some contributions, in the interests of rationalisation,
called for a review of the structure, role and composition of the
Assembly organs. More recently, some Assembly members have once again
addressed these questions and expressed the view that the organs
should be simplified, especially in order to enhance the role of
the committee chairs on the one hand and the heads of the delegations
on the other.
However, it shall be rightly mentioned that the institutionalisation
of new ad hoc bodies is not desirable in the current budgetary context.
3.2.6. Organising a “mini-session”
during the meeting of the Standing Committee
45. On the initiative of the President of the Assembly,
the Bureau of the Assembly, at its meeting on 29 June 2012, revisited
the question of the organisation of the meetings of the Standing
Committee raised in 2011 in the report on the reform of the Assembly.
The President proposed that all Standing Committee meetings be held
in Paris. The Bureau did not take up this proposal, stating that
it continued to be in favour of the practice, followed since 2002,
to hold one Standing Committee meeting in May and another in November
in the country holding the rotating chairmanship of the Committee
of Ministers, as well as a meeting in Paris in March.
46. The question of the format and frequency of Standing Committee
meetings comes up regularly. The Bureau’s position reiterated above
is, however, not an obstacle to a new proposal being made. For example, some
delegation heads have voiced their reservations about travelling
to Paris in March to participate in a meeting now often lasting
only half a day, especially in the light of the budgetary restrictions
in force in their country.
47. It is therefore suggested, in the current tight budgetary
situation, to hold future March meetings of the Bureau and the Standing
Committee in Strasbourg from 2015, and to group together during
the same week the committee meetings normally held in Paris at this
time. As part of its reform, the Assembly also took the view that
committee meetings should be grouped together “at specific times
fixed one year in advance” and that the Palais de l’Europe provides
the infrastructure needed to hold the meetings in question, including
two simultaneous committee meetings on the same day.
4. Other questions
involving amendment of the Rules of Procedure
48. The Rules Committee must now consider, in the context
of this report, in addition to the proposals from national delegations
already mentioned above (section 3), whether other provisions of
the Rules of Procedure ought also to be amended, those concerned
being the rules and procedures that no longer correspond to parliamentary
practice.
4.1. Revising the procedure
for challenging still unratified credentials on procedural grounds (Rule
7 of the Rules of Procedure)
49. Rule 7.1 of the Assembly’s Rules of Procedure provides:
“Credentials may be challenged
by at least ten members of the Assembly present in the Chamber, belonging
to at least five national delegations, on stated procedural grounds
based upon:
a. one or more of the relevant provisions of the Statute
(in particular Articles 25 and 26);
b.the principles in Rule 6.2, that national parliamentary
delegations should be composed so as to ensure a fair representation
of the political parties or groups in their parliaments and should
include in any case one member of the under-represented sex, appointed
as a representative;
c.the absence of a solemn statement as mentioned in Rule
6.2.b.
The authors shall state the reasons for the challenges.”
4.1.1. Clarifying the
procedure for challenging individual members’ still unratified credentials
50. At the opening of its January 2013 part-session,
the Assembly had to deal with a motion contesting the still unratified
credentials of two of its members on procedural grounds.
In
this connection, the Bureau of the Assembly, taking into consideration
the concerns of Assembly members, asked the Rules Committee to examine,
the “[p]ossibility of sanctioning, in the context of Rule 7, the
actions or words of a member where these seriously and persistently
violate the principles and values defended by the Council of Europe”
and “to examine the issue of the right to speak of a member whose
still unratified credentials are challenged in accordance with Rule
7 of the Rules of Procedure”.
51. Rule 7, which has been in force in its current wording since
2000 (
Resolution 1202
(1999)), provides for the challenging of the credentials of
a delegation or an individual member. At the time, a distinction
was clearly made depending on whether the challenge was based on
technical – procedural – grounds (Rule 7) or on political – substantive
– grounds (Rules 8 and 9). It was determined that, in the case of
a challenge on political grounds, only the credentials of a delegation
as a whole could be challenged and solely the procedure provided for
in Rules 8 and 9 would be applicable.
52. Challenging the credentials of individual members must meet
the criteria strictly laid down by the Rules of Procedure: Rule
7.1 provides for only three procedural grounds on which a challenge
may be based, and a challenge to the credentials of an individual
member clearly cannot be based on Rule 7.1.a (one
or more of the relevant provisions of the Statute, relating to procedural
obligations) or Rule 7.1.b (failure
to comply with the principles that delegations should be composed
so as to ensure fair political representation and representation of
both sexes). A challenge to the credentials of a delegation may
only be based on paragraphs a and b of Rule 7.1, Rule 7.1.c (absence of a solemn statement)
being inoperative.
53. Consequently, when credentials were challenged in January
2013, the Rules Committee held that “the current wording of Rule
7.1.
c does not make it possible
to challenge the credentials of individual members in an effective
manner, particularly so as to sanction the actions or words of a
member where these seriously and persistently violate the principles
and values defended by the Council of Europe”.
54. Before that, the Assembly had had occasion in 2005 to examine
the question of challenging the credentials of individual members,
especially parliamentarians whose actions or statements did not
comply with the standards required. The report presented at the
time by the Rules Committee analysed in detail the arguments both
for and against the introduction of a procedure with a view to preventing
members of national parliaments who have expressly identified themselves
with the activities and programmes of parties opposing the values
of the Council of Europe from becoming Assembly representatives
and substitutes.
55. In
Resolution 1443
(2005), the Assembly held that “if new Rules of Procedure were
introduced allowing ... to challenge credentials of individual members
of national parliaments who are accused of activities or statements
persistently violating the basic principles of the Council of Europe,
there would be a danger of abuse. The Assembly cannot have an interest
in becoming the forum for political infighting”. It then decided
to insert into its Rules of Procedure a provision stating that the
credentials of members of a national delegation can be accepted
only after each of them has signed a solemn statement affirming
that they subscribe to the aims and basic principles of the Council
of Europe (
Resolution
1503 (2006) added Rule 6.2.
b to
this effect).
56. In 2005-2006, the Rules Committee considered that “a challenge
to credentials in an individual capacity, on political grounds,
could entail a risk of misuse for the pursuit of political battles,
whether internal – between political parties represented in the
national parliament, and even for settling personal scores – or
at the level of the Assembly, by opening up the possibility of pursuing
at a procedural level political controversies (between political
groups or representatives of different delegations, and so on)”.
The committee considered that “[t]he Assembly cannot have an interest
in becoming the forum for political infighting”.
57. However, the challenge to credentials in January 2013 clearly
shows the limits to the present Rules of Procedure, since, in practice,
only the refusal of a member to sign a solemn statement would result
in a challenge to his or her credentials on an individual basis.
The Rules Committee thus considered the possibility of amending
Rule 7 of the Rules of Procedure and deciding:
- to draw a clear distinction
between the procedure for challenging the credentials of individual representatives
or substitutes from that for challenging on procedural grounds the
still unratified credentials of a delegation as a whole;
- to lay down as a basis for challenging the credentials
of individual representatives or substitutes the existence of actions
or statements which seriously and persistently conflict with the
aims and basic principles of the Council of Europe, set out in the
Preamble to the Statute of the Council of Europe (ETS No. 1) and
in Articles 1.a and 3 thereof;
- to align the conditions for challenging individual credentials
with those provided for in Rule 8 (30 members belonging to at least
5 national delegations).
58. At its meeting on 15 May 2014, the Rules Committee decided,
by a narrow majority, not to propose to establish such a procedure
in the Rules.
4.1.2. Enabling the Committee
on Equality and Non-Discrimination to be seized for an opinion in
the event of a challenge to the still unratified credentials of
a delegation on procedural grounds
59. Challenging the credentials of a delegation may be
grounded on the lack of respect for the condition laid down in Rule
7.1.b following which any
delegation should include one member of the under-represented sex, appointed
as a representative. In the event of a challenge based on this ground,
it sounds logical to enable the Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination
– whose members are most vigilant in monitoring the respect of this
condition when credentials are submitted to the Assembly for ratification
– to be seized for an opinion, the Committee on Rules of Procedure
remaining seized for a report.
– Proposal
60. The Rules Committee supported the proposal to amend Rule 7
of the Rules of Procedure in order to enable the Committee on Equality
and Non-Discrimination to be seized for an opinion in the event
of a challenge to the still unratified credentials of a delegation
on procedural grounds related to the representation of the sexes.
4.2. Making some minor
changes of wording in Rules 6, 7, 8 and 9 of the Rules of Procedure relating
to credentials
61. A subsidiary question is the need to standardise
the wording of certain provisions relating to credentials and challenges
to them. It is proposed to amend the following provisions:
- In Rule 7.2, replace the words
“Any credentials so challenged at a meeting of the Assembly or of
the Standing Committee shall be referred” by “Credentials challenged
on procedural grounds at the start of a part-session or of a Standing
Committee meeting shall be referred” (the point being to align the
wording of Rule 7.2 with that of Rule 8.3, its counterpart provision
on challenges to credentials on substantive grounds);
- In Rule 9.2, include the stipulation that the motion for
a resolution to annul ratification of credentials shall be referred
“without debate” to the appropriate committee for report;
- Combine Rules 7.3, 7.4, 8.5, 8.6, 9.4 and 9.5 in a new
single rule on the proposed Assembly conclusions where it is seized
of a challenge to still unratified credentials on procedural or
substantive grounds or reconsideration of credentials on substantive
grounds.
4.3. Clarifying the
procedure for voting on amendments
62. On two occasions during its last two sessions, the
Assembly has had to examine amendments which, were they to be adopted,
would have the effect of converting a resolution into a recommendation
– one relating to the report on the progress of the Assembly’s monitoring
procedure (June 2012) was rejected, while the other, relating to
the report on the functioning of democratic institutions in Bosnia
and Herzegovina (October 2013) was adopted. Amendments of this kind
also have the effect of substituting for the simple majority vote
required for a resolution a vote by a majority of two thirds of
the votes cast, the requirement for the adoption of a recommendation.
63. The current Rules of Procedure provides that “an amendment
which would tend to delete, replace or render inoperative the whole
of a draft text is not in order” (Rule 33.4). That is not the case
for an amendment intended to add to the text under discussion a
request for the Committee of Ministers to take action or a decision which
is not within the responsibility of the Assembly. But it is easy
to understand that the tabling of such an amendment to a draft resolution
may prove to be a successful tactic in opposing a text whose rejection
is desired, which, while it might indeed obtain a simple majority
during the final vote as a resolution, would probably not obtain
a two-thirds majority.
– Proposal
64. The Rules Committee therefore proposed the amendment of Rule
33.4 in order to include therein a provision stating that an amendment
is also inadmissible if it seeks to change a draft resolution into
a draft recommendation.
4.4. Encouraging a larger
number of members to become rapporteurs and members of the bureaux
of the committees and sub-committees
65. In its aforementioned report of 2007 on “Improving
the participation of members in Assembly plenary sessions and committee
meetings”, the Rules Committee looked at a number of measures which
could increase the motivation of members to participate in the committees’
work.
This report could be the opportunity
for the committee to reopen the discussion on this subject and consider
the following new measures in order to foster better rotation of
posts of responsibility within the Assembly.
4.4.1. Limiting the number
of reports produced by the same parliamentarian
66. In
Resolution
1583 (2007), the Assembly called on the committees “to strive for
increased variety in rapporteurs” and “to avoid the appointment
of members as rapporteurs when they are already responsible for two
reports simultaneously within the same committee”. The committees
have clearly complied fairly closely with this measure, but there
is a tendency for parliamentarians to take on more than one role
of rapporteur in the committees of which they are members. This
is inconsistent with the aim that it is hoped to achieve.
67. Most of the committees consulted by the rapporteur were in
favour of the proposal of setting a maximum limit to the total number
of Assembly reports (for all committees) for which a single member
may be responsible. The Committee on Social Affairs, Health and
Sustainable Development said that it already limits the number of
its members’ mandates (a maximum of one report and one opinion per
member), as does the Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy
(two reports or opinions).
68. The Rules Committee could therefore propose to limit the total
number of reports for which any one member is simultaneously responsible
to three reports or opinions for all committees, subject to a maximum
of two reports or opinions per committee, and amend Rule 49.1 accordingly.
– Proposal
69. At its meeting on 15 May 2014, the Rules Committee decided
to propose that any Assembly member who is simultaneously rapporteur
for five reports or opinions being prepared in one or more committees
may not be appointed rapporteur for a sixth report or opinion.
4.4.2. Ban on combining
the duties of rapporteur of an Assembly committee with those of
chair of a committee or of a political group
70. At the moment, and since January 2010, there is a
para-regulatory provision that states that the position of chair-rapporteur
of an ad hoc election observation committee is incompatible with
that of rapporteur of the Committee on the Honouring of Obligations
and Commitments by Member States of the Council of Europe (Monitoring
Committee). This measure was introduced in order preserve the independence
and impartiality of the chair of an ad hoc committee, a principle
that must apply to the position in all circumstances.
71. The Rules Committee could therefore consider whether it would
be worthwhile extending this incompatibility of the position of
rapporteur, for the same reasons, to include other key Assembly
positions, namely chair of a committee or chair of a political group.
The chairs of the political groups have considerable responsibilities
and act as the spokespersons of their group on issues under discussion
and formally set out the group’s position. The same applies to the
committee chairs, who are expected to preside over debates in complete
neutrality.
72. The exercise of the duties of rapporteur by committee chairs
– some of them have been appointed before becoming chair but others
have been appointed by their committee during their term of office
– leads to sometimes absurd situations during committee debates,
since it is generally (but not always) customary for chairs/rapporteurs
to have themselves replaced pro forma in
the chair by a vice-chair when they speak in committee on the subject
for which they are rapporteur.
73. It is the practice in most committees for the chair to be
appointed rapporteur in the case of reports which will have to be
dealt with in an extremely short period of time (challenges to credentials,
debates under the urgent procedure), or in order to take over from
a rapporteur who has left the Assembly or is no longer able to be
present on health grounds, when the report is at the finalisation
and presentation to the Assembly stage, or when the subject is extremely
controversial and needs to be dealt with impartially. Consequently,
the committees have largely replied negatively to the proposal that
the functions of rapporteur and committee chair should not be allowed
to be combined. On the other hand, none has dismissed the proposal
in respect of the chairs of political groups, one committee even
regarding this as a case of conflict of interest.
74. With regard to the chairs of political groups, we would point
out, by way of comparison, that Rule 12 of the Rules of Procedure
of the Council of Europe Congress of Local and Regional Authorities
states that “[a] president of a political group may not at the same
time … be a chair of a committee, or act as rapporteur or head of
delegation during election observation exercises”. In the European
Parliament, the chairs of the political groups are not members of
the committees (and therefore never rapporteurs).
– Proposal
75. The Rules Committee therefore considered the advisability
of prohibiting the combining of the functions of rapporteur and
chair of a political group. In view of the fact that members were
not unanimously in favour of the proposal, it finally agreed not
to make any recommendation to the Assembly on this issue.
4.4.3. Introduction of
a waiting period at the end of a term as chair or vice-chair
76. Finally, and always with the same aim in mind of
encouraging an increase in interest and input among a larger number
of members with regard to the committees’ activities, the Rules
Committee could consider whether it might be advisable to introduce
a waiting period to apply to outgoing committee chairs and vice-chairs
before they stand for election again to these positions on whatever
committee it may be. In practice, it sometimes appears that the
same parliamentarian carries on the position of chair and/or vice-chair
from one committee or sub-committee to another.
77. On the other hand, former chairs or vice-chairs of committees
or sub-committees should be allowed to stand for election to those
same positions, subject to compliance with a waiting period.
78. The committees are in favour of introducing greater flexibility
in the rules relating to membership of their bureaux. In this context,
it has been pointed out that the Rules of Procedure were amended
in May 2013 so as to allow a former committee chair, ineligible
according to the provisions in force at the time, to stand for election to
the vacant chairmanship of a committee, in order to complete the
current term of office.
– Proposal
79. The Rules Committee proposes the amendment of Rules 45.7 and
48.7 in order to set a waiting period of two years before the outgoing
chair or vice chair of a committee or a sub-committee may stand
again for election to such positions in another committee. That
waiting period should be increased to four years before the outgoing
chair or vice-chair of a committee or a sub-committee may stand
again for election to those same positions in the same committee.
4.5. Status of immediate
past presidents of the Parliamentary Assembly
80. On 11 April 2014, the Assembly referred a motion
for a resolution on the “Status of immediate past presidents of
the Parliamentary Assembly in the Committee on Political Affairs
and Democracy” (
Doc.
13487) to the Committee on Rules of Procedure to be taken into
account in the preparation of the present report.
81. Under Rule 19.3 of the Rules of Procedure of the Assembly,
the immediate past President, as long as he or she remains a representative
or substitute in the Assembly without interruption, shall be an
ex officio member of the Committee
on Political Affairs and Democracy, “but may not take part in votes,
nor be appointed rapporteur, nor be elected to the Bureau of that
committee and its sub-committees”. The signatories to the afore-mentioned
motion ask for the status of the immediate past president to be
aligned with that of the chairs of political groups, who are
ex officio members of the Committee
on Political Affairs and Democracy and since January 2013 have had
the same rights as the other members of that committee (right to
vote, right to be a member of the committee’s bureau, right to be
a member of the sub-committees and their bureaux).
82. The rules on granting the status of member of the Political
Affairs Committee to the immediate past president were incorporated
into the Rules of Procedure in 2002 by
Resolution 1284 (2002).
They originated in a proposal by
the Presidential Committee, approved by the Bureau, and were based
(solely) on a reference – also made in
Resolution 1284 – to the political experience of the outgoing president
from which the Assembly could benefit through his/her participation
in the work of the Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy.
83. In 2012, on the occasion of the aforementioned review of Rule
18 with regard to the rights of chairs of political groups, the
Rules Committee also examined briefly the situation of other ex officio members of certain committees,
and in particular that of the outgoing president, though the committee
did not see fit at the time to re-examine the latter’s status.
84. It may be useful to point out that the Assembly’s decision
in 2002 was by way of an ad hoc measure benefiting the then outgoing
president. All the outgoing Assembly presidents between 2004 and
2013 sat on the Political Affairs Committee – while still members
of the Assembly – as representatives of their national delegations.
85. Moreover, no similar rule exists in the other inter-parliamentary
assemblies granting the outgoing president a particular dispensatory
status. The outgoing president of the Assembly may be granted the
title of honorary president of the Assembly, to which a number of
prerogatives attach.
86. Lastly, underlying the granting of membership of the Political
Affairs Committee to the outgoing president of the Assembly is the
idea that the latter adopts a neutral stance. It is for this reason
that he/she does not have the right to vote. Amending the Rules
of Procedure on this point would be tantamount to allocating an
extra seat on the committee to the national delegation from which
the outgoing president comes, and would thus lead to imbalance in
the representation of delegations.
– Proposal
87. The Rules Committee was asked to take position on the opportunity
to grant additional rights to the immediate past president of the
Assembly as ex officio member
of the committee on Political Affairs and Democracy. Having regard
to the above factors, it may consider either that there is no reason
to amend the present provisions of Rule 19.3, or that the ad hoc
status of outgoing president shall be aligned with that of chairpersons
of political groups in the Political Affairs Committee. At its meeting
on 15 May 2014, the Rules Committee followed the proposal made by
the rapporteur and clearly opted for the latter approach.
4.6. Inclusion of a
condition governing representation of the under-represented sex
in observer delegations (Rule 60)
88. The Rules of Procedure require that a partner for
democracy delegation “include at least the same percentage of the
under-represented sex as is present in the parliament and in any
case one representative of each sex”, “insofar as the number of
its members allows” (Rule 61.4) – with reference of course to the
identical condition which applies to the composition of national
delegations to the Assembly (Rule 6.2.
a).
No such condition applies to observer delegations to the Assembly.
This absence is due to the fact that this status dates from an earlier
time (having been instituted in 1961 by
Resolution 195 (1961)) compared with the very recent partner for democracy
status, which consequently comprises more modern and more comprehensive
criteria. There is therefore good reason to amend Rule 60.2 of the
Rules of Procedure in order to standardise the rules on composition
of delegations from non-member States of the Assembly.
4.7. Creation of a Committee
on the Election of Judges to the European Court of Human Rights
89. At the Standing Committee meeting on 8 March 2013,
there was an exchange of views with the chair of the Sub-Committee
on the Election of Judges to the European Court of Human Rights,
in the course of which the idea was raised of creating a Committee
on the Election of Judges to the European Court of Human Rights to
replace the present sub-committee, which would strengthen the Assembly’s
decision-making process in this area, give it greater importance
and improve the Assembly’s political visibility. In particular,
it was pointed out that the 34 members of the sub-committee (17
full members and 17 alternates) were appointed by the political groups,
but from among the members of the Committee on Legal Affairs and
Human Rights, who were themselves appointed by the national delegations,
which could considerably limit the actual choice of the political
groups.
90. The Rules Committee should therefore study the proposal to
set up a full committee to replace the present sub-committee. Such
a committee might consist of members appointed by the political
groups according to the D’Hondt system, chosen from their members
with a high level of legal knowledge (while increasing the membership
to 20 members and 20 alternates). The chairpersons of the Committee
on Legal Affairs and Human Rights and the Committee on Equality
and Non-Discrimination should be
ex officio members
of that new committee.
91. If the creation of a new full committee of the Assembly were
decided (even beyond the difficult budgetary context which requires
the reduction of the operating costs of Assembly committees), by
way of exception, interpretation at its meetings should be only
in the official languages, insofar as the interviews of candidates for
the office of judge to the Court are conducted in English and French,
in order to assess their knowledge of both languages, as required.
4.8. Amendment of the
terms of reference of the Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced
Persons
92. The committees concerned by the amendment of their
terms of reference in 2012 have all expressed a positive opinion
as regards the coherence of their terms of reference in the light
of the implementation of their work programme in the past two years.
However, the Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced Persons
indicated (in a letter from its chair to the President of the Assembly
in October 2012) its wish to extend its terms of reference to include
“issues relating to population, nationality and stateless persons”,
which, in its view, would fit better within its field of responsibility.
– Proposal
93. The Rules Committee proposes the amendment of the terms of
reference of the Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced
Persons in order to include therein issues relating to population,
demography, nationality and stateless persons.
4.9. Modification of
the arrangements for publication, in an addendum to the official
report, of speeches which were not delivered
94. Rule 30.2 provides that speakers who were present
during a debate but who were unable to speak for lack of time may
submit the text of their speech for publication in the official
report. That provision, together with specific complementary texts
on the organisation of Assembly debates, deserves updating. As the
rules now stand, a speech that is not delivered is equivalent to
a delivered speech of 4 minutes (yet speaking time in the Assembly
chamber is limited to 3 minutes most of the time), and has to be
submitted within 24 hours after the list of speakers is interrupted
(this time-limit being scarcely compatible with current practice
for publication of reports of debates).
– Proposal
95. The Rules Committee proposes amending Rule 30.2 and the corresponding
complementary texts to provide that non-delivered speeches must
be sent electronically within four hours of the closure of the sitting concerned,
and not exceed 400 words where speaking time in the Chamber was
reduced to three minutes.
4.10. The addition of
a rule on the minutes of committee meetings
96. The Rules of Procedure of the Assembly currently
contain no provision on the minutes of committee meetings. It would
therefore be desirable for the following provision to be included
at the end of Rule 47: “The draft minutes of each committee meeting
shall be distributed to all members of the committee, in the conditions stipulated
in Rule 46.5, and shall be presented for the committee’s approval
at the beginning of the following meeting.”
4.11. Clarification of
the rules governing dissenting opinions when a draft report is examined
in committee
97. The Assembly’s Rules of Procedure stipulate, in Rule
49.4, that “[a]ny dissenting opinions expressed in the committee
shall be included therein at the request of their authors, preferably
in the body of the explanatory memorandum, but otherwise in an appendix
or footnote”. Committee practice in recent years shows some disparity
in actual modes of application of this provision, whether the length
of the dissenting opinion or the time-limit for its submission.
Several delegations have therefore requested clarification on the
interpretation of this rule.
– Proposal
98. It would be desirable to include a footnote to Rule 49.4 giving
the requisite clarification: “A dissenting opinion shall be included
in the report in the form laid down in Rule 49.4 as approved by
the committee when adopting the report. The text, drafted in one
of the Assembly’s two official languages and no longer than 500 words,
shall be tabled by the committee member who expressed his/her dissenting
opinion during the meeting, within 48 hours after the meeting.”
5. Conclusion
99. The Rules Committee considered all of the proposals
relating to amendments which might be made to the Rules of Procedure
presented by national delegations, committees and members of the
Assembly. With regard to the following points, it decided to propose
that the Assembly:
- revise
the procedure for challenging still unratified credentials on procedural
grounds – Rule 7 (see paragraphs 49 to 60), and:
. enable the Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination
to be seized for an opinion in the event of a challenge to the still
unratified credentials of a delegation on procedural grounds related
to the representation of the sexes;
. do not establish a procedure for challenging the credentials
of individual representatives or substitutes (based on actions or
statements which seriously and persistently conflict with the aims
and basic principles of the Council of Europe), distinct from that
for challenging on procedural grounds the still unratified credentials
of a delegation as a whole;
- amend
the conditions for the admissibility of amendments (Rule 33.4),
in order to include therein a provision stating that an amendment
is inadmissible if it seeks to change a draft resolution into a
draft recommendation (see paragraphs 62 to 64);
- encourage the involvement of a larger number of members
as rapporteurs and members of the bureaux of the committees and
sub-committees (see paragraphs 65 to 79);
. limit
the total number of reports, for all committees, for which a single
member is responsible to five reports or opinions, subject to a
maximum of two reports or opinions per committee (Rule 49.1);
. set a waiting period of two years before the outgoing chair
or vice chair of a committee or a sub-committee may stand again
for election to such positions in another committee. That waiting
period should be increased to four years before the outgoing chair
or vice-chair of a committee or a sub-committee may stand again
for election to those same positions in the same committee (Rules
45.7 and 48.7);
- modify the
status of the immediate past president of the Assembly as ex officio member of the Committee
on Political Affairs and Democracy (Rule 19.3), which shall be aligned
with that of chairpersons of political groups in this committee
(paragraphs 80 to 87);
- set up a general Committee on the Election of Judges to
the European Court of Human Rights to replace the present sub-committee,
which would consist of 20 full members and 20 alternates appointed
by the political groups according to the D’Hondt system, chosen
from their members with a high level of legal knowledge, as well
as the chairs of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights
and the Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination as ex officio members (see paragraphs
89 to 91);
- amend the terms of reference of the Committee on Migration,
Refugees and Displaced Persons in order to include therein issues
relating to population, demography, nationality and stateless persons
(see paragraphs 92 and 93).
- include a condition governing representation of the under-represented
sex in observer delegations (see paragraph 88).
- amend the provisions on the publication in an addendum
to the official report of speeches which were not delivered (see
paragraphs 94 and 95).
- include in the Rules of Procedure (Rule 47) a provision
relating to the minutes of committee meetings (see paragraph 96).
- include in the Rules of Procedure (Rule 49.4) an explanatory
footnote on the procedure for including a dissenting opinion in
a report (see paragraph 98).