1. The committee’s
terms of reference
1. At its meeting on 29 June 2018,
the Bureau of the Parliamentary Assembly took note of the report
of the Ad hoc Committee on the Role and Mission of the Parliamentary
Assembly
and
decided to transmit it to the Committee on Rules of Procedure, Immunities
and Institutional Affairs so that, when preparing a report to be presented
at the Assembly’s October 2018 part-session, it could examine “the
proposals aimed at maintaining, changing or supplementing the Rules
governing ratification or challenging of credentials and/or representation or
participation rights of national delegations for report” as well
as the “proposals regarding the voting rights of members or the
voting procedures of the Assembly”.
2. It will be recalled that the ad hoc committee was set up by
decision of the Bureau of 15 December 2017 with the aim of conducting
prior reflection involving as many stakeholders as possible in the
Assembly in order to prepare concrete proposals for the implementation
of paragraphs 16-18 of
Resolution
2186 (2017) on a call for a Council of Europe summit to reaffirm
European unity and to defend and promote democratic security in Europe.
The task
of the ad hoc committee was:
“ – to reflect on, and if possible prepare,
proposals aimed at harmonising the rules governing participation
and representation of member States in both statutory organs, while
fully respecting the autonomy of the two bodies;
to prepare proposals as regards
the role and mission of the Parliamentary Assembly as a statutory
organ of the Council of Europe and a pan-European forum for interparliamentary
dialogue which aims at having an impact in all Council of Europe
member States.”
2. Context for the drafting of this report
3. The committee’s deliberations
were summarised in a report which was approved virtually unanimously on
20 September 2018.
This
report was presented to the Assembly at its October 2018 part-session.
It included a draft resolution proposing to:
- enhance the consistency of the procedures for challenging
and reconsidering national delegations’ credentials on substantive
grounds, by merging the present Rules 8 and 9 of the Rules of Procedure
into a single rule, unifying the requirements for initiating these
procedures, and strengthening them;
- reinforce the legitimacy of the Assembly and the authority
of its decisions in cases where it decides on a challenge to or
reconsideration of the credentials of a national delegation, whether
on formal or substantive grounds, by stipulating that these decisions
require a quorum of Assembly members (namely one third of the representatives
or substitutes authorised to vote) and a two-thirds majority of the
votes cast;
- restrict the scope of sanctions incurred by members of
delegations whose credentials have been ratified but have had the
exercise of certain rights of participation or representation in
the activities of the Assembly suspended.
4. The report also included a draft recommendation, reiterating
the Assembly’s commitment to the mechanisms and procedures it had
developed to ensure respect by member States for the principles
and values of the Council of Europe, and inviting the Committee
of Ministers to engage in its own discussion on the effectiveness
of its procedures and its ability to respond effectively to violations
of the statutory obligations entered into by the member States,
in the spirit of the aforementioned
Resolution 2186 (2017).
5. The committee presented this report to the Assembly on 9 October
2018. Following an intense and lively debate, which included both
rational arguments and more emotional responses, the Assembly decided
to refer the report back to the committee, at the request of the
rapporteur, given the divisions in the Chamber and the absence of
a calm and depoliticised atmosphere in which to debate the committee’s
proposals. Since then, the committee has held two exchanges of views
on what it intended to do with the report and the proposals it contained,
during which a wide range of positions were expressed. However,
there was a very clear majority in the committee for not submitting
to the Assembly the same report as the one it had adopted in September 2018.
6. I believe that the initial report contained some useful and
relevant proposals, which dealt with problems of common interest
to all member States and national delegations to the Assembly, which
it would be a pity to lose. Nor can we ignore the contributions
made by national delegations and political groups in the ad hoc committee,
calling for improvements to the existing procedures. A new report
should therefore be submitted to the Assembly at an appropriate
time and in a calmer climate, picking up on those proposals which
seek to ensure greater consistency in the Assembly’s action.
7. The scope of this report has therefore been substantially
reduced to just those points on which there could still be consensus
in the committee, namely the question of restricting the scope of
the sanctions to be imposed on members of delegations whose credentials
have been challenged. It should be recalled in this connection that
the committee had been asked by the Bureau of the Assembly in November
2018 to “review the list of rights of participation and representation
whose exercise may be deprived or suspended in the context of a
challenge of credentials under Rule 10.1.c with respect to voting
rights in the procedure for electing personalities by the Assembly”;
in December 2018 the committee approved an opinion which clarified
the issue (see Chapter 3.4 below).
8. This report will therefore not address the other points discussed
by the committee in September 2018.
9. Similarly, this report will not examine the question of harmonising
procedures between the Committee of Ministers and the Parliamentary
Assembly, or improving the dialogue between the two statutory organs
over existing mechanisms.
There is
therefore no longer any need to submit a draft recommendation to
the Committee of Ministers.
10. The report by the Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy
entitled “Role and mission of the Parliamentary Assembly: main challenges
for the future”
discussed
by the Assembly at its April 2019 part-session contains a detailed
analysis of the proposals made within the framework of the ad hoc
committee as regards enhancing the dialogue between the Assembly
and the Committee of Ministers.
Resolution 2277 (2019) and
Recommendation
2153 (2019) include in particular a proposal for the establishment,
in addition to existing procedures, of a joint procedure of reaction
of the Committee of Ministers and the Parliamentary Assembly, in
several steps, in situations where a member State violates its statutory
obligations or does not respect the fundamental principles and values
upheld by the Council of Europe. Moreover, in
Resolution 2277 (2019), the Assembly stressed that “Council of Europe membership
implies an obligation of all member States to participate in both
statutory organs”. At the same time, the Assembly “called on the
Russian Federation, in accordance with its statutory obligations,
to appoint a delegation to the Assembly and to resume obligatory payment
of its contribution to the Organisation’s budget”.
11. At its 129th Ministerial Session (Helsinki, 17 May 2019),
the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe took into consideration
Assembly
Recommendation
2153 (2019) and welcomed the Assembly's call for an enhanced political
dialogue between the Committee of Ministers and the Assembly, as
well as its proposal to set up this joint reaction procedure. Moreover,
the Committee of Ministers recalled that “all member States shall
be entitled to participate on an equal basis in the two statutory
organs of the Council of Europe, as long as Articles 7, 8 or 9 of
the Statute have not been applied”. Furthermore, “having regard
to the importance of the elections of the Secretary General and
of judges to the European Court of Human Rights, [the Committee of
Ministers] would welcome that delegations of all member States take
part in the next June part-Session of the Parliamentary Assembly”.
12. It is important for the Assembly to react to the decision
adopted by the Committee of Ministers at its 129th Session entitled
“A shared responsibility for democratic security in Europe – Ensuring
respect for rights and obligations, principles, standards and values”.
In this context, the Bureau of the Assembly, at its meeting on 23 May
last, instructed the Committee on Rules of Procedure to take the
Committee of Ministers’ decisions into account in the preparation
of the present report. Therefore, in the present report and in the
proposed new draft resolution, I will propose to the committee a
way to reflect these decisions in the Assembly’s Rules of Procedure
(Chapters 4 and 5 below). But, before doing so, I would like to
recall the legal and regulatory framework that governs the powers
and competences of the Assembly.
3. Powers
and competences of the Parliamentary Assembly – reminder
3.1. The
Statutory provisions
13. Article 10 of the Statute of
the Council of Europe (ETS No. 1) stipulates that “The organs of
the Council of Europe are: i. the Committee of Ministers; ii. the
Consultative (Parliamentary) Assembly”, and, in chapter V, sets
out in detail the prerogatives of the Assembly, “the deliberative
organ of the Council of Europe”.
14. Under Article 1 of the Statute, the Parliamentary Assembly
is, like the Committee of Ministers, the other statutory body responsible
for contributing to the achievement of the Council of Europe’s aim
(“The aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity
between its members [States] for the purpose of safeguarding and
realising the ideals and principles which are their common heritage
and facilitating their economic and social progress. This aim shall be pursued through the organs
of the Council, by discussion of questions of common
concern and by agreements and common action in economic, social,
cultural, scientific, legal and administrative matters and in the maintenance and further realisation of human
rights and fundamental freedoms”).
15. Under Article 28 of the Statute, the Assembly adopts its Rules
of Procedure and is free to amend them. The Rules of Procedure of
the Assembly derive from the Statute of the Organisation and, through
special provisions, serve to specify the general provisions it contains.
Article 28 of the Statute confers on the Assembly the exclusive
competence for enacting its own rules. The fact that the Statute
requires certain elements of procedure to be included in the Rules
of Procedure cannot limit the competences of the Assembly to adopt rules
that it considers necessary for its proper functioning.
3.2. Regulatory
provisions
16. The Statute of the Council
of Europe expressly provides for the competence of the Assembly
to verify the credentials of its members. The provisions of Rules
6 et seq. of the Rules of Procedure concerning the composition of
national delegations and the examination of credentials are based
on Articles 25, 26 and 28 of the Statute.
The Assembly is sovereign
as to the conditions of representation of national parliaments within
it.
17. It is on this whole statutory basis that the Assembly has,
since 1949, introduced a general procedure for the examination of
the credentials of its members at the opening of the annual session
(corresponding to Rules 6.3, 6.4, 7 and 8 of the Rules of Procedure
currently in force), as well as a procedure for challenging credentials during
a session (Rule 9), it being understood that it is on this same
statutory basis that the Assembly has devised special procedures
for challenging credentials since 1964.
18. Regardless of whether a challenge to a national delegation’s
credentials is based on formal grounds (Rule 7 of the Rules of Procedure)
or substantive grounds (Rules 8 and 9), Rule 10 of the Assembly’s
Rules of Procedure on Assembly decisions on a challenge or reconsideration
of credentials lists only three possible alternatives:
“10.1.a.
ratification of the credentials, or confirmation of ratification
of the credentials,
10.1.b. non-ratification of
the credentials, or annulment of ratification of the credentials;
10.1.c. ratification of the
credentials, or confirmation of ratification of the credentials
together with depriving or suspending the exercise of some of the
rights of participation or representation of members of the delegation
concerned in the activities of the Assembly and its bodies.”
19. The Assembly may decide to take collective measures against
its members by the deprivation or suspension of the exercise of
a number of participation and/or representation rights, based on
a breach or a violation of the provisions of its Rules of Procedure
or the Statute of the Council of Europe, in the context of a procedure,
that of a challenge to or reconsideration of the credentials of
national delegations for procedural or substantive grounds. There
is in the Rules of Procedure no “autonomous” sanctions procedure
with respect to a delegation or a member of the Assembly (with the
exception of the Code of Conduct for members of the Assembly in
the latter case).
20. The Assembly’s Rules of Procedure lay down no list of participation
and representation rights that may be withdrawn or suspended. Rule
10.1.c of the Rules of Procedure sets out a description of the sanctions
which may be imposed on the members of a delegation in general terms
only and it is up to the Assembly to determine the extent of the
“sanction” when it is called upon to decide, by resolution, on a
challenge to credentials.
3.3. Catalogue
of potential “sanctions” – the 2014 opinion of the Committee on
Rules of Procedure
21. For this reason, in April 2014
(in the context of the decision taken by the Assembly to suspend
certain rights of the delegation of the Russian Federation (
Resolution 1990 (2014)), the Bureau of the Assembly instructed the Committee
on Rules of Procedure – pursuant to its exclusive general competence
for interpreting the Rules of Procedure (Rule 70.2) – to clarify
the regulatory framework and to draw up a list of rights of representation
and participation of which members may be deprived in the context
of a challenge to or reconsideration of credentials.
22. To date, there is no other framework for the implementation
of Rule 10.1.c than the opinion to the Bureau of the Assembly that
the Rules Committee approved on 30 September 2014
and which is the
only basis for the Assembly’s decision when determining restrictive
measures against a delegation. This opinion of the Rules Committee:
- draws up a list of rights of
participation and representation of members in the activities of
the Assembly and its bodies that may be suspended or withdrawn in
the context of a challenge to credentials, while pointing out that
such a list cannot be exhaustive;
- also establishes a rigorous general framework to ensure
that the Assembly’s decision on the deprivation or suspension of
rights is clear, consistent, rational and understandable, namely
that any decision by the Assembly to adopt sanctions should retain
a degree of regulatory rationality and legal consistency so as to
meet the need for legal certainty which must apply to any decision
of this importance.
23. In its opinion, the committee draws up the following list
of rights attached to the exercise of a member’s functions in the
Assembly, which are linked both to the activities of the Assembly
and to those of the committees, divided into two main categories:
i. Participation
rights include the following rights:
- right to vote (Rule 43)
- right to speak (Rule 35)
- right to speak in free debates (Rule 39)
- right of amendment (Rule 34)
- right to table motions for resolution or recommendation
(as main mover or signatory) (Rule 25)
- right to table written declarations (Rule 54)
- right to address questions to the Committee of Ministers
(Rule 59)
- right to be a committee member (Rule 44)
- right to be appointed rapporteur (Rule 50)
- right to request a debate under urgent procedure or a
current affairs debate (Rules 51, 52 and 53)
- right to be a candidate for the office of President of
the Assembly (Rule 15), chairperson or vice-chairperson of a committee
or sub-committee (Rules 46 and 49)
- right to be a member of an ad hoc committee on observation
of elections.
ii. Representation rights cover
the institutional representation in the Assembly bodies, on the
one hand, and that in Council of Europe bodies and external institutions,
on the other:
- representation
in the Assembly bodies: Presidential Committee, Bureau, Standing
Committee (Rules 14 and 15)
- representation in the Joint Committee (Rule 56)
- representation as an ex officio member
in Assembly committees (Rules 19.5 and 44.1)
- institutional representation of the Assembly (in Council
of Europe bodies, by Bureau decision)
- representation of the Assembly on an occasional basis
(by Bureau or committee decision) at events, meetings, conferences,
organised by Council of Europe bodies, international organisations
or interparliamentary assemblies.
3.4. Elections
by the Assembly and the right to vote of Assembly members – the
2018 opinion of the Committee on Rules of Procedure
24. The 2014 opinion was supplemented
by a second opinion of the committee, adopted on 10 December 2018,
at
the request of the Bureau of the Assembly, which had instructed
the committee to review the list of members’ participation and representation
rights which could be withdrawn or suspended when the Assembly takes
a decision on a challenge to the credentials of a national delegation,
“with respect to voting rights in the procedure for electing [senior
officials] by the Assembly”.
25. The right to vote was included in the 2014 opinion among the
rights of participation of members that may be deprived or suspended
by the Assembly (see paragraph 23). The committee was therefore
asked to determine whether the right to vote in the procedures for
elections by the Assembly of the highest officials of the Council
of Europe can be excluded from the list of possible “sanctions”.
26. The Assembly has the exclusive competence to elect the highest
officials of the Council of Europe: judges of the European Court
of Human Rights, the Commissioner for Human Rights, the Secretary
General and Deputy Secretary General of the Council of Europe, the
Secretary General of the Parliamentary Assembly. Various texts confer
on the Assembly this competence: Article 36.b of the Statute of
the Council of Europe, for the appointment of the Secretary General
and Deputy Secretary General of the Council of Europe and Secretary
General of the Parliamentary Assembly; Article 22 of the European
Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5), for the election of judges;
Article 9 of Resolution (99) 50 of the Committee of Ministers, for
the election of the Commissioner for Human Rights.
27. It should be noted that the above-mentioned texts establish
the competence of the Assembly, as a statutory organ, to elect these
senior officials. They do not confer on parliamentary delegations
or members of the Assembly – individually – the right to participate
in the election of the highest officials of the Organisation. This
responsibility is attached to an organ of the Council of Europe
– the Parliamentary Assembly – which exercises it through its members.
28. The Assembly’s Rules of Procedure, for their part and by specific
procedures, organise the election of these senior officials and
the participation of members of the Assembly in these elections.
Only
the Assembly’s Rules of Procedure (Rule 40.11, Rule 41.b, procedure
for elections by the Parliamentary Assembly) provide that it is
the members of the Assembly who are called upon to vote and take
part in the election of such senior officials. This explains why
the right to participate in such elections, because it is part of
the individual voting rights of Assembly members, was included among
the rights whose suspension or withdrawal could be considered pursuant
to Rule 10.1.c.
29. In its 2018 opinion, the committee found that a change of
approach was required because of the need to enhance the consistency
of rules applying to the Committee of Ministers and the Parliamentary
Assembly regarding the representation and participation of member
States in the two statutory organs. The committee observed that,
in accordance with the principle of the hierarchy of legal norms,
even though there was nothing in the Rules of Procedure which contradicted
either the Statute or the European Convention on Human Rights, the
application or interpretation of the Rules must not run counter
to the letter or spirit of the provisions in the Statute or the
Convention.
30. The committee therefore concluded that the Assembly was not
competent to interfere with the application of the Statute of the
Council of Europe or the European Convention on Human Rights and
that, accordingly, when deciding on the deprivation or suspension
of certain rights of representation or participation in the activities
of the Assembly and its bodies (Rule 10.1.c of the Rules of Procedure),
the Assembly could not breach the rights of its members to take
part in the election of judges to the European Court of Human Rights, the
Commissioner for Human Rights, the Secretary General and the Deputy
Secretary General of the Council of Europe, and the Secretary General
of the Parliamentary Assembly.
4. Suspension
or deprivation of some rights of representation or participation
– reminder of the committee’s proposal
31. In the (initial) report which
it presented to the Assembly at the October 2018 part-session on “Strengthening
the decision-making process of the Parliamentary Assembly concerning
credentials and voting”, the committee, with this specific legal
and regulatory framework in mind, had called on the Assembly to
decide that the deprivation or suspension “of certain rights of
participation or representation in the activities of the Assembly
and its bodies, as set out in Rule 10.1.c of the Rules of Procedure,
does not affect the rights of Assembly members to take part in the
election of judges to the European Court of Human Rights, the Commissioner
for Human Rights, the Secretary General and Deputy Secretary General
of the Council of Europe and the Secretary General of the Parliamentary
Assembly” (paragraph 9 of the draft resolution).
32. The explanatory memorandum to this report underlines the point
that “[w]hile the Assembly’s electoral competence derives in fact
from texts of differing legal value (from the Statute of the Council
of Europe for the Secretary General and Deputy Secretary General
of the Council of Europe and the Secretary General of the Parliamentary
Assembly, from the European Convention on Human Rights for the election
of judges, and from a Committee of Ministers resolution for the
Commissioner for Human Rights), the fact that the procedures for selecting
and electing candidates fall within a remit that is exercised jointly (or at least
shared) with the Committee of Ministers should
prompt the Assembly to exclude the right to elect these figures
from the scope of participation rights that could be suspended”.
33. In its previous discussions, the committee had concluded that
it was not necessary to formally introduce a catalogue of “sanctions”
into the Rules of Procedure. By the committee’s own admission, the
list of members’ rights of representation and participation in the
activities of the Assembly and its bodies that could be suspended
or withdrawn following a challenge to credentials cannot be exhaustive.
Nevertheless, the committee could, in the draft resolution, set
out the principle that the Assembly cannot introduce any additional sanctions
to those mentioned in this 2014 opinion, as supplemented by the
2018 opinion.
34. However, since then the Committee of Ministers adopted, at
its 129th Ministerial session, a decision referred to above, stipulating
in particular that the member States of the Council of Europe are
“entitled to participate on an equal basis in the two statutory
organs of the Council of Europe”. This decision supports the Assembly’s
own approach in
Resolution
2277 (2019), where it decided that “Council of Europe membership implies
an obligation of all member States to participate in both statutory
organs” (see paragraphs 10 and 11 above).
35. In order to ensure the coherence of the Organisation’s internal
legal framework, the Assembly, in its decisions, should continue
to comply with the Statute of the Council of Europe and to take
into due consideration relevant decisions taken by the Committee
of Ministers. Therefore, taking into account the Committee of Ministers’
Decision on “A shared responsibility for democratic security in
Europe – Ensuring respect for rights and obligations, principles,
standards and values” and in order to ensure that the member States’
right and obligation to be represented and to participate in both
statutory bodies of the Council of Europe are respected, the committee
could decide to propose to the Assembly to include in its Rules
of Procedure a formal stipulation in Rule 10.1 that the members’
rights to vote, to speak and to be represented in the Assembly and
its bodies shall not be suspended or withdrawn in the context of
a challenge to or reconsideration of credentials.
36. I should like to note that the above proposal reflects a number
of contributions made within the framework of the reflections of
the Ad hoc Committee of the Bureau (paragraph 2) pointing out that
the Assembly is a common area for dialogue between parliamentarians
from the Council of Europe's member States, and that the Assembly
could only remain a forum for open and constructive dialogue by
guaranteeing that all representatives have equal rights as regards
participation in meetings, the right to speak and the right to vote.
37. In the light of the above considerations and in order to take
into account the Assembly’s own decisions as well as the Helsinki
decision of the Committee of Ministers, I would like to ask the
committee to support the introduction of this option in the proposed
draft resolution.
5. Introducing
a procedure for challenging the credentials of individual members
38. The question of challenging
the credentials not of a delegation as a whole but of one or more
individual members, was again recently raised at the meetings of
the Committee on Rules of Procedure.
39. The committee has had occasion in recent years to discuss
the expediency of amending the Rules of Procedure regarding follow-up
to a request to challenge the still unratified credentials, on formal
grounds, of Assembly members, taken individually, in the context
of Rule 7, and more specifically with a view to sanctioning the
actions or words of members seriously and persistently violating
the principles and values upheld by the Council of Europe.
40. When dealing with a challenge to credentials made in January
2013,
the
Committee on Rules of Procedure pointed out the limits of the current
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 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”.
41. The Committee on Rules of Procedure had previously examined
the question of challenging the credentials of individual members
in a 2005 report, analysing 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
.
42. In
Resolution 1443
(2005) on the challenge of credentials of individual members
of a national delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly on substantive
grounds, 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) on the obligation of new members of the Assembly relating
to the aims and basic principles of the Council of Europe added
Rule 6.2.b to this effect).
43. In 2005-2006, the Committee on Rules of Procedure 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 “the Assembly cannot have
an interest in becoming the forum for political infighting”.
44. The Committee on Rules of Procedure may wish to once again
examine the possibility of amending the Rules of Procedure in order
to introduce a procedure for challenging the credentials of representatives
and substitutes on an individual basis.
However,
it should be recalled that the code of conduct for members of the
Parliamentary Assembly and its sanctions mechanism are applicable
to members whose conduct, actions or statements breach their obligations
in this respect (paragraph 7 of the Code of Conduct).
6. Temporary
derogation from the application of certain provisions of the Rules
of Procedure
45. If the Assembly wishes to take
into account the decision of the Committee of Ministers in Helsinki,
as well as the exceptional context which led to it, it should then
invite the parliaments of Council of Europe member States which
are not represented by a delegation to the Assembly to present the
credentials of their representatives and substitutes during the
Assembly's June 2019 part-session. To this end, taking into account the
provisions of the Statute of the Council of Europe and its own Rules
of Procedure, which stipulate that the credentials of national parliamentary
delegations must be transmitted before the opening of the Ordinary Session
for ratification, the Assembly must decide to derogate from the
application of certain rules: Rules 6.1 (last sentence) and 6.3,
relating to the transmission of credentials of national delegations
to the President of the Assembly and their ratification by the Assembly,
and Rule 11.3 on the appointments following parliamentary elections.
46. In the past, the Assembly has taken such ad hoc decisions,
which departed from its Rules of Procedure, in exceptional political
circumstances. This was the case with Greece's reintegration into
the Council of Europe in November 1974: after seven years of absence
from the Assembly (since April 1967), following the military coup
and the establishment of the Regime of the Colonels, and on the
basis of the opinion adopted by the Assembly at the request of the
Committee of Ministers (
Opinion
69 (1974)), the Assembly ratified the credentials of a new Greek
delegation in January 1975 (at the 3rd part-session). The same was
true for Turkey, whose delegation was suspended in May 1981 and
returned in January 1984 (during the 3rd part-session). In a very
different context, the Assembly had on many occasions derogated
from the conditions for the presentation of credentials at the opening
of its Ordinary Session, in order to integrate as soon as possible
the parliamentary delegations of new member States.
7. Conclusions
47. The Committee on Rules of Procedure
is invited to consider the issues raised in the present report and give
thought to whether:
- the parliaments
of Council of Europe member States which are not represented by
a delegation to the Assembly should be invited to present the credentials
of their representatives and substitutes at the June 2019 part-session
of the Assembly, by way of derogation from Rules 6.1 (last sentence)
and 6.3 of the Rules of Procedure, relating to the transmission
of credentials of national delegations to the President of the Assembly
and their ratification by the Assembly, and Rule 11.3 on the appointments
following parliamentary elections;
- Rule 10 of the Rules of Procedure should be amended, so
as to clarify the scope of sanctions to be applied to members of
delegations whose credentials have been ratified but whose exercise
of certain rights of participation or representation in the Assembly’s
activities has been suspended or withdrawn;
- a procedure for challenging the credentials of individual
members should be introduced.