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EU Parliament



         


The European Parliament is the parliamentary body of the European Union.

Other organisations of European countries such as NATO, the OSCE, the Council of Europe, and the Western European Union have parliamentary assemblies as well, but the European Parliament is unique in that it is directly elected by the people and has legislative power. The members of the parliamentary assemblies of the OSCE, the Council of Europe, and the Western European Union are appointed by national parliaments.

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Location

Although the two institutions of the EU's executive, the European Commission and the European Council, both have their seats in Brussels, a protocol attached to the Treaty of Amsterdam requires the European Parliament to have monthly sessions in Strasbourg. For practical reasons, however, all preparatory legislative work and committee meetings of the parliament take place in Brussels. The parliament only spends four days per month in Strasbourg in order to take the final, plenary votes. Additional plenary meetings are held in Brussels. On several occasions parliament has expressed a wish to choose itself the location of its seat, but in the successive treaties, including the newest Treaty of Nice, European governments keep reserving this right for themselves.

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History

The European Coal and Steel Community established a Common Assembly in September, 1952, its members drawn from the six national Parliaments of the ECSC's constituent nations. This was expanded in March 1958 to cover also the European Economic Community and Euratom, immediately adopted the name European Parliamentary Assembly, and used the name European Parliament from 1962. In 1979 it was expanded again with its members being directly elected. Thereafter it was simply expanded whenever new nations joined, and the membership was adjusted (upwards) in 1994 after German Reunification, until the Treaty of Nice set a cap on membership at 732.

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Growth of membership


 Sep
1952
Mar
1957
Jan
1973
Jun
1979
Jan
1981
Jan
1986
Jun
1994
Jan
1995
May
2004
Jun
2004
Jan
2007
Jun
2009
Germany183636818181999999999999
France183636818181878787787872
Italy183636818181878787787872
Belgium101414242424252525242422
Netherlands101414252525313131272725
Luxembourg466666666666
United Kingdom  36818181878787787872
Denmark  10161616161616141413
Ireland  10151515151515131312
Greece    2424252525242422
Spain     60646464545450
Portugal     24252525242422
Sweden       2222191918
Austria       2121181817
Finland       1616141413
Poland        54545450
Czech Republic        24242420
Hungary        24242420
Slovakia        14141413
Lithuania        13131312
Latvia        9998
Slovenia        7777
Cyprus        6666
Estonia        6666
Malta        5555
Romania          3333
Bulgaria          1717
TOTAL78142198410434518567626788732782732


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Party Groups in the European Parliament

At the commencement of Parliament's sixth term (2004-2009), there were seven groups, plus Non-Inscrits (non-aligned members). As of July 21, 2004 the composition of the Parliament was:

The makeup of Parliament's groups is fairly fluid, and delegations (or indeed individual Members) are free to switch allegiances as they see fit.

European Parliament party groups are distinct from the corresponding political parties, although they are intimately linked. Usually, the European parties also have member parties from European countries which are not members of the European Union.

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Representation


Relative influence of voters from different countries
according to the Treaty of Nice after new member countries joined (Source: ):
Country pop. (mio.)  MEPs  pop./MEP  rel. influence

Luxembourg 0.4     6 66667 12.42
Malta 0.4     5 80000 10.53
Cyprus 0.8     6 133333 6.21
Estonia 1.4     6 233333 3.54
Slovenia 2.0     7 285714 2.89
Latvia 2.4     9 266667 3.10
Ireland 3.7     13 284615 2.91
Lithuania 3.7     13 284615 2.91
Finland 5.2     14 371429 2.22
Denmark 5.3     14 378571 2.18
Slovakia 5.4     14 385714 2.14
Austria 8.1     18 450000 1.84
Sweden 8.9     19 468421 1.76
Portugal 9.9     24 412500 2.00
Hungary 10.0     24 416667 1.98
Belgium 10.2     24 425000 1.94
Czech Republic 10.3     24 429167 1.92
Greece 10.6     24 441667 1.87
Netherlands 15.8     27 585185 1.41
Poland 38.6     54 714815 1.15
Spain 39.4     54 729630 1.13
Italy 57.7     78 739744 1.11
France 59.1     78 757692 1.09
United Kingdom 59.4     78 761538 1.08
Germany 82.1     99 828283 1.00

Total 450.8     732 615846 1.35
Romania 21.6     33 654545 1.26
Bulgaria 7.6     17 447058 1.85


The European Parliament represents 450 million citizens of the European Union. Since 13 June 2004, there are 732 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs), with a proportionally larger representation for smaller member states. This number was temporarily raised to 788 to accommodate representatives from the ten states that joined the EU on 1 May 2004, but will remain fixed at 732 even after the accession of Romania and Bulgaria in 2007.

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Elections

Elections to the parliament are held using various forms of proportional representation, as selected by the member states. These forms include regional and national lists and Single Transferable Vote.

The most recent elections were held on 10-13 June 2004. Following the enlargement of the Union on 1 May, they were the largest simultaneous transnational elections ever held in the world, with nearly 400 million citizens eligible to vote.

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See also

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