Intergovernmental Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

European Union

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the European Union


Three pillars
I: European Community
II: Common Foreign and Security Policy
III: Police and Judicial Cooperation
Political institutions
Commission
President  (José Barroso)
Barroso Commission
Council of Ministers and European Council
Presidency  (Germany)
Parliament
President  (Hans-Gert Pöttering)
MEPs
Constituencies
Elections
2009 (EU–27)
2007 (Bulgaria and Romania)
2004 / by country (EU–25)
Political groups
Committees
Judiciary
Court of Justice
List of members
Court of First Instance
Civil Service Tribunal
Finance auditing
European Court of Auditors
Financial bodies
European Central Bank
European Investment Bank
European Investment Fund
Advisory bodies
Economic and Social Committee
Committee of the Regions
Decentralised bodies
Agencies of the EU
Law
Acquis communautaire
Procedure
Treaties
Regulations · Directives · Decisions
Recommendations · Opinions
EU-related topics
Economic and monetary union
Enlargement
Foreign relations
Pan-European political parties
Table of affiliated parties by country
Party affiliations on the Council

Other countries · Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

An Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) is the formal procedure for negotiating amendments to the founding treaties of the European Union. Under the treaties, an IGC is called into being by the European Council, and is composed of representatives of the member states, with the Commission, and to a lesser degree the Parliament also participating.

An IGC will conclude with a meeting of the European Council, at which any political issues requiring resolution at the level of Heads of State or Government will be resolved, and final political agreement will be reached. A final treaty text in each of the community languages (and also Irish) will then be prepared by the legal and linguistic experts of the member states, before being presented to the member states for signature and ratification.

There was much criticism of the functioning of this process in the negotiation of the Treaty of Nice in 2001, especially in regard to the Nice European Council which concluded the IGC. The next IGC, due to meet in October, 2003, was prepared for by the Convention on the Future of Europe, which was modelled after the Convention which negotiated the Charter of Fundamental Rights. One of the recommendations of the Convention is that a convention be used to prepare for future IGCs; whether this recommendation is adopted by the member states will depend on their judgement of the Convention process.

Versions of the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe in the English language, published by the European Union for the general public.  From left to right: the draft by the European Convention; the full Intergovernmental Conference version (text as signed by plenipotentiaries to be ratified) with the protocols and annexes; the abridged version with the European Parliament's resolution of endorsement, but without the protocols and annexes, for visitors to the European Parliament.  Versions in other European languages were also published.
Versions of the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe in the English language, published by the European Union for the general public. From left to right: the draft by the European Convention; the full Intergovernmental Conference version (text as signed by plenipotentiaries to be ratified) with the protocols and annexes; the abridged version with the European Parliament's resolution of endorsement, but without the protocols and annexes, for visitors to the European Parliament. Versions in other European languages were also published.

[edit] External links