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A. Draft resolution
(open)
Report | Doc. 16128 | 12 March 2025
Interconnections between the Council of Europe and the European Political Community
Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy
A. Draft resolution 
(open)1. Following a proposal made by
the President of the French Republic on 9 May 2022 at the closing ceremony
of the Conference on the Future of Europe, leaders of the European
Union agreed at the European Council meeting in June 2022 to launch
the European Political Community, with the aim of bringing together European
Union and non-European Union countries on the European continent.
The ambition was to foster political dialogue and co-operation among
leaders to address issues of common interest to strengthen the security,
stability and prosperity of the European continent.
2. The launch of the European Political Community demonstrated
the willingness of European Union leaders to rapidly react and adapt
the multilateral architecture of Europe to a deeply challenging
geopolitical environment, marked, in particular, by the full-scale
war of aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine.
3. So far, five summits – one every six months – have been held,
hosted alternately by the European Union member State holding the
rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union and a non-European
Union country. Since the inaugural summit in Prague in October 2022,
summits held in the Republic of Moldova, Spain, the United Kingdom
and Hungary have focused on peace, prosperity, security, energy
resilience, connectivity, and most recently democracy and migration.
4. The non-institutionalised and flexible nature of the European
Political Community has created unique possibilities for dialogue
that would otherwise not be possible in other frameworks. The Parliamentary Assembly
notes that the European Political Community, a platform for political
co-ordination, does not replace any existing organisation, structure
or process, nor does it seek to create new ones. The Assembly also
notes that the European Political Community has no legal basis establishing
a formal membership. It underlines that the European Political Community
has remained an informal intergovernmental platform for political
dialogue between European leaders from European Union member States
and non-European Union member States, in the presence of European
Union institutions. Operational work is carried out by the host
country and the Secretariat of the Council of the European Union,
while continuity between European Political Community summits of
European leaders is ensured by the President of the European Council.
5. The Assembly welcomes the participation of the Council of
Europe in the last two summits of the European Political Community
in London and Budapest. To ensure synergies and complementarity
between the European Political Community and the treaty-based Council
of Europe (Statute of the Council of Europe, ETS No. 1), a pan-European
political community of 46 member States, the Assembly encourages
future hosts countries to maintain this invitation to the Organisation.
6. As the European Political Community is not meant to replace
the European Union's neighbourhood and enlargement policies, it
adds another circle to the already existing variable geometry of
European integration. In that respect, the European Political Community
has yet to prove that it can contribute to the further alignment of
non-European Union countries.
7. Although the nature and objectives of the Council of Europe
and the European Political Community are not the same, the question
of the links between the new European Political Community and the
long-standing Europe-wide political activity of the Council of Europe
was raised from the outset. Since then, the geographical scope of
participation in the European Political Community has come closer
to that of the Council of Europe membership and the wider range
of issues addressed by the European Political Community has highlighted the
need to seek co-operation, in line with the Reykjavik Declaration.
In addition, the support of the Council of Europe to Ukraine and
its efforts to hold the Russian Federation accountable for its war
of aggression against Ukraine make the Organisation a key partner
of the European Political Community.
8. In light of these considerations, the Assembly:
8.1. recalls that the Heads of State
and Government of the Council of Europe met at their Fourth Summit
in Reykjavik on 16 and 17 May 2023 to stand united against Russia's
war of aggression against Ukraine and to give further priority and
direction to the work of the Council of Europe. They reiterated
the pan-European role of the Council of Europe and confirmed that
it is uniquely placed to bring together, on an equal footing, all
the countries of Europe to protect democratic security in Europe
and to counter the undermining of human rights, democracy and the
rule of law;
8.2. stresses that the Council of Europe is a pan-European
political community of 46 member States;
8.3. believes that, at this pivotal moment for Europe, the
Council of Europe must be an ever stronger and more resilient pillar
of multilateralism. The Council of Europe should play a proactive
role in the discussions related to the European political architecture.
It should also maintain its leading intergovernmental role in all
matters relating to human rights, democracy and the rule of law
in Europe and its leading responsibility for the functioning of
its convention system.
9. Furthermore, in this rapidly shifting geopolitical landscape,
where the rules-based international order faces severe challenges,
the Assembly believes that European leaders should bring the European
Political Community and the Council of Europe closer together and,
in line with the Reykjavik Declaration, set an example of effective
and dynamic multilateralism that promotes shared values and underpins
security and stability in Europe.
10. Equally, the Assembly considers that the unprecedented challenges
currently facing Europe call for ever closer co-operation between
the Council of Europe and the European Union. As reaffirmed in the
Reykjavik Declaration, “the European Union is the main institutional
partner of the Council of Europe in political, legal, and financial
terms”. The Council of Europe should further strengthen its strategic
partnership with the European Union.
11. The Assembly also recalls the invaluable role of the Council
of Europe in the European Union enlargement process. In this context,
the Council of Europe, as the benchmark for human rights, the rule
of law and democracy in Europe, should increase its support to enhance
the level of preparedness of candidate and potential candidate countries
for European Union accession.
12. Consequently, as regards relations between the Council of
Europe and the European Political Community, the Assembly calls
on Council of Europe member States, in particular European Political Community
host countries and, when relevant, European Union leaders to:
12.1. ensure synergies and co-ordination
between the European Political Community and the Council of Europe,
notably by ensuring systematic participation of the Council of Europe
in European Political Community summits;
12.2. develop, during European Political Community summits,
a format for dialogue on strategic issues, with the Council of Europe,
on matters falling under its mandate;
12.3. make full use of the participation of the Council of Europe
in European Political Community summits for additional high-level
dialogue;
12.4. develop contact points through Senior Officials in the
Council of Europe Secretariat in Strasbourg, in close co-operation
with the Council of Europe Liaison Office in Brussels, and in the General
Secretariat of the Council of the European Union;
12.5. make full use of Council of Europe instruments and work,
notably on democracy through the new Democratic Pact under preparation;
12.6. consider developing a joint declaration to ensure complementarity
of respective activities and develop further synergies.
13. Regarding the role of the Council of Europe, the Assembly
calls on the Council of Europe member States to:
13.1. strengthen the position of the
Council of Europe as the leading intergovernmental organisation
in Europe promoting and safeguarding human rights, democracy and
the rule of law, in the evolving European and global multilateral
architecture as they committed to in Reykjavik;
13.2. further develop the role of the Council of Europe as a
resilient and robust political community and a platform for strategic
and political dialogue, diplomacy and multilateralism, where member
States can come together to address shared challenges and pursue
common goals, by:
13.2.1. enhancing
the political dimension of its work and bodies;
13.2.2. ensuring efficient co-ordination of functions and responsibilities
with other institutions and fora within the multilateral architecture;
13.2.3. convening summits of Heads of State and Government on
a more regular basis.
13.3. support the further development of Council of Europe work
in the area of democratic security and democratic resilience.
14. Finally, the Assembly resolves to continue to act as a dynamic
platform for pan-European political dialogue and parliamentary diplomacy.
B. Explanatory memorandum by Mr Zsolt Németh, rapporteur
(open)1. Introduction
1. In his speech to the European
Parliament in Strasbourg on 9 May 2022, the President of the French Republic
Emmanuel Macron introduced the idea of creating a “European Political
Community”.
He placed his proposal in the new
geopolitical context created by the full-scale war of aggression
launched by the Russian Federation against Ukraine on 24 February
2022, the unachieved enlargement of the European Union (EU) in the
Western Balkans and the emergence of new candidate countries in
2022, namely Ukraine, Georgia and the Republic of Moldova:

“How can we organise Europe from a political perspective and with a broader scope than that of the European Union? It is our historic obligation to respond to that question today and create what I would describe here before you as “a European Political Community”. This new European organisation would allow democratic European nations that subscribe to our shared core values to find a new space for political and security co-operation, co-operation in the energy sector, in transport, investments, infrastructures, the free movement of persons and in particular of our youth. Joining it would not necessarily prejudge future accession to the European Union, and it would not be closed to those who have left the EU. It would bring our Europe together, respecting its true geography, on the basis of its democratic values, with the desire to preserve the unity of our continent and by preserving the strength and ambition of our integration”.
2. Within a few months, this vision of a European Political Community
(EPC) became a reality. The first meeting (summit) of the EPC took
place in Prague on 6 October 2022.
3. Since then, the mission of this new political forum and its
place in the current European institutional architecture have been
discussed and sometimes questioned, in particular its added value vis à vis the pan-European Council
of Europe, of 46 member States, whose mandate is to “achieve a greater
unity between its members”. The very similar geographical scope
of the EPC and the Council of Europe and the wide range of issues
addressed by the EPC highlighted the need to examine their interconnections.
2. The aims, nature and functioning of the European Political Community
4. The full-scale war of aggression
launched by the Russian Federation against Ukraine on 24 February 2022
changed the face of Europe. In addition, 2022 was marked by new
applications to join the EU: Ukraine applied for EU membership on
28 February 2022 and was granted EU candidate status on 23 June
2022. Georgia and the Republic of Moldova also applied for accession
to the EU on 3 March 2022.
5. Against this challenging background, President Macron proposed
the founding of the EPC on 9 May 2022 during the closing ceremony
of the Conference on the Future of Europe. The project was officially discussed
during the European Council meetings of 23 and 24 June 2022. EU
leaders held a strategic debate on the relations of the EU with
its partners in Europe as a whole and ultimately agreed to establish
the EPC. 

6. The aim was to provide a flexible platform for political co-ordination
for European countries across the continent. It would involve all
European countries with shared core values. The objective was to
foster political dialogue and co-operation to address issues of
common interest in order to strengthen the security, stability and
prosperity of the European continent.
7. It was emphasised that such a framework would not replace
existing EU policies and instruments, in particular enlargement,
and would fully respect the EU’s decision-making autonomy.
8. The EPC materialised into an informal platform for intergovernmental
co-operation and dialogue between European leaders from EU member
States and non-EU countries, holding regular meetings (summits) in
the presence of EU institutions. Operational work is carried out
by the host country and the Secretariat of the Council of the EU,
while continuity between EPC meetings of European leaders is ensured
by the President of the European Council. As it is not treaty-based,
there is no formal membership. Participants are invited to attend
the EPC meetings by the host countries.
9. It was agreed that EPC summits would be held twice a year
to ensure regular high-level discussion and effective follow-up
for EPC initiatives. The spring summit would be hosted by a non-EU
member State. The autumn summit would be hosted by the EU member
State holding the presidency of the Council of the EU at that particular
time.
10. The EPC aims to promote synergies and help develop concrete
co-operation projects in a number of areas of mutual interest: the
protection of critical infrastructure (health, food, transport,
energy and financial services), the fight against cyberattacks and
disinformation, energy resilience, co-operation on migration issues,
co-ordination of work on major regional issues, and support for
Ukraine’s reconstruction.
11. It has been argued that the EPC also aims to strengthen relations
with countries such as the United Kingdom and some States in the
Caucasus.
3. The European Political Community and the European Union enlargement
12. The EPC is not an alternative
to EU membership, and it cannot replace the existing EU policies
and instruments. However, it was also designed to assist the candidates
and potential candidates (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia,
the Republic of Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Türkiye,
Ukraine, and Kosovo*
) in a number
of areas on the inevitably long road to EU membership. It shall
provide a flexible policy co-ordination platform for European countries
and promote political dialogue and co-operation to find solutions
to shared issues. Participation in the EPC should also help the
participating countries to get to know each other better and gradually
grow closer together.

13. It has sometimes been argued that the exceptional and historic
situation on the European continent might call for the definition
of a new model, which would overturn or complete the approach adopted
so far -already partially revised recently. 

14. In its original form, the accession process, which is primarily
legal and economic, requires the candidate country to incorporate
the acquis communautaire into
its national legislation and to bring its economy up to standard
with a view to making it viable and able to compete on the internal
market. During the accession negotiations, the completion of these
steps leads to the opening and closing of thematic chapters, which
make up the future Accession Treaty to be ratified.
15. In order to enhance the credibility of the process, a revised
enlargement methodology was introduced in 2019, putting more emphasis
on reforms in key areas, such as the rule of law, fundamental freedoms,
the economy and the functioning of democratic institutions. The
accession methodology strengthens political governance, provides
for the possibility of halting or even reversing negotiations, and
encourages greater engagement from EU member States. The relevant
countries need to address the requirements in order to advance on
the path of EU integration. On the other hand, the EU needs to deliver
on its commitments.
16. The EU has a structured and credible offer of agreements with
States that wish and are able to participate in economic integration
without wishing to subscribe to the political dimension of the European project.
However, it does not have an instrument to satisfy the opposite
need: to respond to States that express the wish to join the political
project, but that do not have the capacity to become part of the
single market in the short and medium term, without endangering
their own economy and/or destabilising the single market. 

17. A discussion on EU enlargement reform policy, to overcome
the deadlock in the accession negotiations in the Western Balkans
and address new applications for membership, resurfaced in 2022.
It called for a rethink of the accession process, suggesting making
it faster, and for “gradual, phased integration” of countries aspiring
to membership.
18. As the EPC is not meant to replace the EU's neighbourhood
and enlargement policies, it now adds another circle to the already
existing variable geometry of European integration. However, the
EPC has yet to prove that it can contribute to the further alignment
of non-EU countries. Success will largely depend on whether and
how the EPC succeeds in establishing its relevance and integrating
itself into the EU’s enlargement policy. Much will also depend on
the evolution of the EU and the progress it achieves in engaging with
the associated and candidate countries, which might imply restructuring
and reorganising the accession processes, with the EPC as a tool
in the European toolbox. The EPC has yet to prove also that it can
keep and deliver on the promise of the wider Europe that does not
exclude but integrates.
4. The geographical participation
19. The EPC has no legal basis
for formal membership. The first EPC meeting in Prague in 6 October
2022 brought together the leaders of European countries on an equal
footing and in a spirit of unity. 44 were invited. In addition to
the EU27, there were:
- the Western Balkans (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia and Kosovo);
- the countries of the Associated Trio (Georgia, the Republic of Moldova, Ukraine);
- Armenia and Azerbaijan;
- the four European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries (Norway, Switzerland, Iceland and Liechtenstein);
- the United Kingdom and Türkiye.
20. Subsequent meetings were then held in the Republic of Moldova
in June 2023, in Spain in October 2023, in the United Kingdom in
July 2024 and in Hungary in November 2024. The next EPC meetings
are reportedly planned to take place in Albania in spring 2025 and
then in Denmark.
21. 42 Heads of State or Government, including from 24 EU member
States, attended the fifth (and to date the last) EPC meeting held
in Budapest on 7 November 2024.
The geographical
scope of participation in the EPC meeting was again close to that
of the membership of the Council of Europe.

22. The EPC meetings were all held in the presence of invited
EU institutions. The Council of Europe was invited to participate
in the last two EPC Summits in London and Budapest and was represented
by its Secretary General.
5. Thematic areas covered by the European Political Community summits
23. The five summits held so far
have focused on peace, prosperity, security, energy resilience,
connectivity, and most recently democracy and migration.
24. The first summit of the EPC took place on 6 October 2022 in
Prague under the Czech Presidency of the Council of the EU (July
to December 2022). The leaders mainly discussed peace and security
issues, in particular the full-scale war of aggression of the Russian
Federation against Ukraine and the energy crisis, with the aim of
sending a clear message of unity in a context dominated by the full-scale
war of aggression. The Heads of State and Government reaffirmed
their unfailing support for Ukraine and discussed the need to build a
new space for political dialogue and co-operation in Europe.
25. Four roundtables were organised in the framework of the summit,
each focusing on one of the two main topics: peace and security
on the one hand, and climate, energy and the economy on the other.
The summit aimed to improve co-ordination of foreign policy and
security in Europe; to develop stronger partnerships in the fields
of energy, transport, trade, research and education; and to bring
together civil society and young people from almost all European
countries.
26. At the following summit in Chisinau, in June 2023, leaders
discussed joint efforts for peace and security, energy resilience
and connectivity, as well as mobility in Europe. In Granada, in
October 2023, they discussed how to make Europe more resilient,
prosperous, and geostrategic. In London, they discussed defending
and securing democracy, migration, energy, and connectivity. In
Budapest, European leaders addressed the key security challenges
facing Europe in the context of ongoing conflicts, including the
Russian Federation’s war of aggression against Ukraine and the escalation
in the Middle East. Breakout sessions also focused on migration
(including irregular migration and its instrumentalisation) and
economic security, as well as connectivity-related issues, such
as energy, transport, IT, and global trade. The EPC summit consisted
of an opening plenary session, four thematic breakout sessions,
a closing plenary session and bilateral meetings.
27. The EPC summits have the advantage of providing, in their
margins, the opportunity to hold high-level bilateral meetings and
“mini-lateral” talks, which prove to be an added value of these
summits.
6. The European Political Community and the Council of Europe: different and complementary
28. Presently, the EPC is not an
international organisation, and it has no permanent secretariat.
Reportedly, EU member States would generally prefer to avoid institutionalising
the EPC, which should remain a flexible platform for political co-ordination.
However, some would see an advantage in institutionalisation with
a dedicated secretariat, and it appears that this issue has not
yet been fully settled. There are also different views on the use
and the purpose of the EPC. Beyond the issues addressed, EPC summits
provided useful opportunities for high-level meetings. The non-institutionalised
and flexible nature of the EPC has created unique possibilities
for dialogue that would otherwise not be possible in other frameworks.
29. Although the nature and objectives of the Council of Europe
and the EPC are not the same, the question of the links between
the new EPC and the Council of Europe’s long-standing Europe-wide
political activity was raised from the outset. The geographical
scope of participation in the EPC is close to that of the membership of
the Council of Europe, and the wide range of issues addressed by
the EPC highlighted the need to seek complementarity.
30. Since its foundation, the Council of Europe has been the leading
intergovernmental organisation in Europe in promoting and safeguarding
democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Its member States committed
to achieving greater unity in order to safeguard and realise the
ideals and principles which are their common heritage. Whilst being
the guardian of human rights, democracy and the rule of law, the
Council of Europe is also a political community, as recalled by
the Reykjavik Declaration and the Parliamentary Assembly. 

31. Therefore, the invitation to a summit of the EPC immediately
raised the question of the interconnections of the EPC with the
Council of Europe’s longstanding Europe-wide political activity.
Discussions about possible interference or duplication increased
when it emerged that neither the Council of Europe, nor the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) were invited to the first
meetings of the EPC held in Prague in 2022 and in Chisinau in 2023,
although the Presidents of the European Parliament, the European
Commission and the European Council were present.
32. At the Council of Europe’s Reykjavik Summit held in May 2023,
President Macron described the relevance of the EPC as a European
forum to discuss security issues and related armed conflicts, highlighting the
difference with the Council of Europe as the largest European organisation
dedicated to strengthening democratic security. 

33. When examining the interconnections, one should start with
the reasons for creating the EPC, which are clearly multi-layered:
- to show and develop the European unity and co-operation in the context of the Russian aggression against Ukraine;
- to address the new requests for EU membership but also the “enlargement fatigue”;
- to provide a flexible forum for informal discussions among European leaders on European security and energy policy for all European countries.
34. Neither of these raison d’être could
jeopardise the field of action of the Council of Europe.
35. The EPC aims for more integration among EU member States as
well as candidate countries. This community has its roots in the
idea of “Europe à deux vitesses”.
It is also known as “core Europe” and “two-speed Europe”. It means
having different levels and paces of integration in different parts
of Europe depending on the political situation of each country.
36. It should again be stressed that the Council of Europe and
the EPC do not have the same goals. The main objective of the Council
of Europe is to promote democracy and protect human rights and the
rule of law in Europe while the EPC has a wider range of objectives,
as mentioned above (security policy, energy resilience, energy infrastructure
development etc).
37. The EPC has, in particular, the potential to contribute to
concrete policy proposals in three areas: energy, connectivity and
security.
EPC summits offer a real opportunity
to begin the task of deepening and broadening the issue of energy
security across the continent. EPC countries could also work together
to secure critical raw material supply chains. Moreover, it could
aim to focus the interest of European industry, especially in the
battery value chain, to get a better sense of the opportunities.

38. Concerning the mandate of the Council of Europe, while national
defence is explicitly excluded from its scope of responsibility,
the Organisation has focused on protecting democratic security.
Security is a wider concept than national defence, and is largely
based on respect for democratic processes, human rights and the
rule of law. The concept of democratic security, first endorsed
by the Council of Europe’s Heads of State and Government at the
1993 Vienna Summit, is more relevant than ever.
39. Furthermore, the Heads of State and Government of the 46 member
States of the Council of Europe met at their Fourth Summit on 16
and 17 May 2023 to stand united against Russia's war of aggression
against Ukraine and to give further priority and direction to the
work of the Council of Europe. They reiterated the pan-European
role of the Council of Europe and confirmed that it is uniquely
placed to bring together, on an equal footing, all the countries
of Europe to protect democratic security in Europe and to counter
the undermining of human rights, democracy, and the rule of law.
They also stressed that the Council of Europe is a pan-European political
community and committed to strengthening the role of the Council
of Europe in the evolving European multilateral architecture and
in global governance by enhancing its external dimension.
40. The Reykjavik Summit also confirmed the strategic partnership
between the Council of Europe and the European Union and reaffirmed
that “the European Union is the main institutional partner of the
Council of Europe in political, legal, and financial terms”. In
that respect, the European Parliament Resolution on the institutional
relations between the EU and the Council of Europe,
adopted on 18 April 2023, had already underlined
the invaluable role of the Council of Europe in the EU’s enlargement
process “since it cooperates with the EU in supporting candidate
and potential candidate countries in carrying out reforms and helping
them meet the EU accession criteria on the stability of institutions
guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect
for and protection of minorities and monitoring progress in these
areas”. It had also stressed “that cooperation between the EU and
the Council of Europe in the area of enlargement should be further strengthened
in order to become more formal, structured and systematic.”

41. In addition, on 17 May 2024, the Committee of Ministers of
the Council of Europe,
in the context of EU enlargement,
recalled “the Council of Europe’s unique set of instruments to provide
full support and to raise the level of preparedness of candidate
countries and potential candidates for EU accession”. It also recalled
“the key benchmarking role of the Council of Europe in the areas
of human rights, the rule of law and democracy in Europe, based
on the 2007 Memorandum of Understanding”, “bearing in mind the ongoing
progress in the Western Balkans, as well as the developments of
December 2023, in particular the opening of accession negotiations
with Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova, and granting candidate
status to Georgia, as well as the opening of accession negotiations
with Bosnia and Herzegovina in March 2024”.

7. Building further synergies and interconnections
42. In line with the Reykjavik
Summit, the Council of Europe was invited to participate in the
EPC summits in London and Budapest and was represented by its Secretary
General.
43. In this context, it should also be stressed that the support
of the Council of Europe to Ukraine and its efforts to hold the
Russian Federation accountable for its war of aggression against
Ukraine make the Organisation a key partner of the EPC.
44. As regards the relationship between the Council of Europe
and the EPC, it is therefore necessary to develop synergies and
co-ordination, notably by ensuring the systematic participation
of the Council of Europe in the EPC summits.
45. There should also be a format for dialogue on strategic issues,
with the Council of Europe, on matters falling within its mandate.
Meetings with representatives of the Council of Europe should also
be organised.
46. Contact points could also be established through senior officials
in the Council of Europe Secretariat in Strasbourg, in close co-operation
with the Council of Europe Liaison Office in Brussels, and in the
General Secretariat of the Council of the EU.
47. In addition, the EPC should make full use of the instruments
and work of the Council of Europe, notably in the field of democracy
through the new Democratic Pact under preparation.
48. On the other hand, the Council of Europe should take a proactive
role in the discussions related to the European political architecture.
It should also maintain its leading intergovernmental role in all
matters relating to human rights, democracy and the rule of law,
as well as its leading responsibility for the good functioning of its
unique Convention system.
49. Finally, let us recall the words of Nataša Pirc Musar, President
of Slovenia, during her speech at the third part session of the
Assembly in 2023: “Maybe I can say only one thing: the Council of
Europe is 75 years old. So, there is a lot of knowledge, a lot of
history here. Each new community, new platform is welcome if they discuss
topics which are in [the] common [interest] of the states which
are gathering around the platform. The more the better – but let
us not forget: the Council of Europe is the heart and soul of Europe.
Nobody can replace the Council of Europe.” 
