Treaties of the European Union

Treaties
of the European Union

Front page of an official document containing the consolidated treaties and documents which comprise the EU constitution
Location Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Purpose Establishing the laws and principles under which the European Union is governed

The Treaties of the European Union are a set of international treaties between the European Union (EU) member states which sets out the EU's constitutional basis. They establish the various EU institutions together with their remit, procedures and objectives. The EU can only act within the competences granted to it through these treaties and amendment to the treaties requires the agreement and ratification (according to their national procedures) of every single signatory.

There are two core functional treaties that lay out how the EU operates and a number of satellite treaties which are interconnected with them. The treaties have been repeatedly amended by other treaties over the 60 years since they first began. The modern amended versions are known as the "consolidated treaties".

Contents

Content

The two principal treaties on which the EU is based are the Treaty on European Union (TEU; Maastricht Treaty, effective since 1993) and the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU; Treaty of Rome, effective since 1958). These main treaties (plus their attached protocols and declarations) have been altered by amending treaties at least once a decade since they each came into force, the latest being the Treaty of Lisbon which came into force in 2009. Lisbon also made the Charter of Fundamental Rights legally binding, though that is not a treaty per se. The troubled ratification of Lisbon has meant there is little climate for further reform in the next few years beyond accession treaties, which merely allow a new state to join.

Treaty on European Union

Following the preamble the treaty text is divided into six parts.

Title 1, Common Provisions

The first deals with common provisions. Article 1 establishes the European Union on the basis of the European Community and lays out the legal value of the treaties. The second article states that the EU is "founded on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities." The member states share a "society in which pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity and equality between women and men prevail".

Article 3 then states the aims of the EU in six points. The first is simply to promote peace, European values and its citizen's well-being. The second relates to free movement with external border controls are in place. Point 3 deals with the internal market. Point 4 establishes the euro. Point 5 states the EU shall promote its values, contribute to eradicating poverty, observe human rights and respect the charter of the United Nations. The final sixth point states that the EU shall pursue these objectives by "appropriate means" according with its competences given in the treaties.

Article 4 relates to member states' sovereignty and obligations. Article 5 sets out the principles of conferral, subsidiarity and proportionality with respect to the limits of its powers. Article 6 binds the EU to the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights. Article 7 deals with the suspension of a member state and article 8 deals with establishing close relations with neighbouring states.

Title 2, Provisions on democratic principles

Article 9 establishes the equality of national citizens and citizenship of the European Union. Article 10 declares that the EU is founded in representative democracy and that decisions must be taken as closely as possible to citizens. It makes reference to European political parties and how citizens are represented: directly in the Parliament and by their governments in the Council and European Council - accountable to national parliaments. Article 11 establishes government transparency, declares that broad consultations must be made and introduces provision for a petition where at least 1 million citizens may petition the Commission to legislate on a matter. Article 12 gives national parliaments limited involvement in the legislative process.

Title 3, Provisions on the institutions

Article 13 establishes the institutions in the following order and under the following names: the European Parliament, the European Council, the Council, the European Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union, the European Central Bank and the Court of Auditors. it obliges co-operation between these and limits their competencies to the powers within the treaties.

Article 14 deals with the workings of Parliament and its election, article 15 with the European Council and its president, article 16 with the Council and its configurations and article 17 with the Commission and its appointment. Article 18 establishes the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and article 19 establishes the Court of Justice.

Title 4, Provisions on enhanced cooperations

Title 4 has only one article which allows a limited number of member states to co-operate within the EU if others are blocking integration in that field.

Title 5, General provisions on the Union's external action and specific provisions on the Common Foreign and Security Policy

Chapter 1 of this title includes articles 21 and 22. Article 21 deals with the principles that outline EU foreign policy; including compliance with the UN charter, promoting global trade, humanitarian support and global governance. Article 22 gives the European Council, acting unanimously, control over defining the EU's foreign policy.

Chapter 2 is further divided into sections. The first, common provisions, details the guidelines and functioning of the EU's foreign policy, including establishment of the European External Action Service and member state's responsibilities. Section 2, articles 42 to 46, deal with military cooperation (including mutual defence).

Title 6, Final provisions

Article 47 establishes a legal personality for the EU. Article 48 deals with the method of treaty amendment; specifically the ordinary and simplified revision procedures. Article 49 deals with applications to join the EU and article 50 with withdrawal. Article 51 deals with the protocols attached to the treaties and article 52 with the geographic application of the treaty. Article 53 states the treaty is in force for an unlimited period, article 54 deals with ratification and 55 with the different language versions of the treaties.

Treaty on the functioning of the European Union

The Treaty on the functioning of the European Union goes into deeper detail on the role, policies and operation of the EU. It is split into seven parts;[1]

Part 1, Principles

In principles, article 1 establishes the basis of the treaty and its legal value. Articles 2 to 6 outline the competencies of the EU according to the level of powers accorded in each area. Articles 7 to 14 set out social principles, articles 15 and 16 set out public access to documents and meetings and article 17 states that the EU shall respect the status of churches under national law.[1]

Part 2, Non-discrimination and citizenship of the Union

The second part begins with article 18 which outlaws, within the limitations of the treaties, discrimination on the basis of nationality. Article 19 states the EU will "combat discrimination based on sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation". Articles 20 to 24 establishes EU citizenship and accords rights to it; to free movement, consular protection from other states, vote and stand in local and European elections, right to petition Parliament and the European Ombudsman and to contact and receive a reply from EU institutions in their own language. Article 25 requires the Commission to report on the implementation of these rights every three years.[1]

Part 3, Union policies and internal actions

Part 3 on policies and actions is divided by area into the following titles: the internal market; the free movement of goods, including the customs union; agriculture and fisheries; free movement of people, services and capital; the area of freedom, justice and security, including police and justice co-operation; transport policy; competition, taxation and harmonisation of regulations (note Article 101 and Article 102); economic and monetary policy, including articles on the euro; employment policy; the European Social Fund; education, vocational training, youth and sport policies; cultural policy; public health; consumer protection; Trans-European Networks; industrial policy; economic, social and territorial cohesion (reducing disparities in development); research and development and space policy; environmental policy; energy policy; tourism; civil protection; and administrative co-operation.[1]

Part 4, Association of the overseas countries and territories

Part 4 deals with association of overseas territories. Article 198 sets the objective of association as promoting the economic and social development of those associated territories as listed in annex 2. The following articles elaborate on the form of association such as customs duties.[1]

Part 5, External action by the Union

Part 5 deals with EU foreign policy. Article 205 states that external actions must be in accordance with the principles laid out in Chapter 1 Title 5 of the Treaty on European Union. Article 206 and 207 establish the common commercial (external trade) policy of the EU. Articles 208 to 214 deal with cooperation on development and humanitarian aid for third countries. Article 215 deals with sanctions while articles 216 to 219 deal with procedures for establishing international treaties with third countries. Article 220 instructs the High Representative and Commission to engage in appropriate cooperation with other international organisations and article 221 establishes the EU delegations. Article 222, the Solidarity clause states that members shall come to the aid of a fellow member who is subject to a terrorist attack, natural disaster or man-made disaster. This includes the use of military force.[1]

Part 6, Institutional and financial provisions

Part 6 elaborates on the institutional provisions in the Treaty on European Union. As well as elaborating on the structures, articles 288 to 299 outline the forms of legislative acts and procedures of the EU. Articles 300 to 309 establish the European Economic and Social Committee, the Committee of the Regions and the European Investment Bank. Articles 310 to 325 outline the EU budget. Finally, articles 326 to 334 establishes provision for enhanced co-operation.[1]

Part 7, General and final provisions

Part 7 deals with final legal points, such as territorial and temporal application, the seat of institutions (to be decided by member states, but this is enacted by a protocol attached to the treaties), immunities and the affect on treaties signed before 1958 or the date of accession.[1]

Protocols, annexes and declarations

There are 37 protocols, 2 annexes and 65 declarations that are attached to the treaties to elaborate details, often in connection with a single country, without being in the full legal text.

Protocols;[2]
Annexes[3]
Declarations[4]

There are 65 declarations attached to the EU treaties. As examples, these include the following. Declaration 1 affirms that the charter, gaining legal force, reaffirms rights under the European Convention and does not allow the EU to act beyond its conferred competencies. Declaration 4 allocates an extra MEP to Italy. Declaration 7 outlines Council voting procedures to become active after 2014. Declaration 17 asserts the primacy of EU law. Declaration 27 reasserts that holding a legal personality does not entitle the EU to act beyond its competencies. Declaration 43 allows Mayotte to change to the status of "outermost region".

Euratom

As well as the two main treaties, their protocols and the Charter of Fundamental Rights; the Treaty Establishing a European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) is still in force as a separate treaty.

Title one outlines the tasks of Euratom. Title two contains the core of the treaty on how cooperation in the field is to take place. Title three outlines institutional provisions and has largely been subsumed by the European Union treaties. Title four is on financial provisions and title five on the general and title six is on final provisions.[5]

Amendment and ratification

European Union

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

The treaties can be changed in three different ways. The ordinary revision procedure is essentially the traditional method by which the treaties have been amended and involves holding a full inter-governmental conference. The simplified revision procedure was established by the Treaty of Lisbon and only allows for changes which do not increase the power of the EU. While using the passerelle clause does involve amending the treaties, as such, it does allow for a change of legislative procedure in certain circumstances.

The ordinary revision procedure for amending treaties requires proposals from an institution to be lodged with the European Council. The President of the European Council can then either call a European Convention (composed of national governments, national parliamentarians, MEPs and representatives from the Commission) to draft the changes or draft the proposals in the European Council itself if the change is minor. They then proceed with an Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) which agrees the treaty which is then signed by all the national leaders and ratified by each state.[6]

While this is the procedure that has been use for all treaties prior to the Lisbon Treaty, an actual European Convention (essentially, a constitutional convention) has only been called twice. First in the drafting of the Charter of Fundamental Rights with the European Convention of 1999–2000. Second with the Convention on the Future of Europe which drafted the Constitutional Treaty (which then formed the basis of the Lisbon Treaty). Previously, treaties had been drafted by civil servants.

The simplified revision procedure, which applies only to part three of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and cannot increase the powers of the EU, sees changes simply agreed in the European Council by a decision before being ratified by each state.[6] The amendments to protocol 36 and article 136 (both being ratified as of August 2011) both make use of the simplified revision procedure due to the small scope of their changes.

The treaties also contain a passerelle clause which allows the European Council to unanimously agree to change the applicable voting procedure for an area of legislation from a special legislative procedure to the ordinary legislative procedure, provided that no national parliament objects. This procedure cannot be used for area which have defence implication.[6]

Any reform to the legal basis of the EU must be ratified according to the procedures in each member state. All states are required to ratify it and lodge the instruments of ratification with the Government of Italy before the treaty can come into force in any respect. In some states, such as Ireland this is usually a referendum as any change to that state's constitution requires one. In others, such as Germany, referendums are constitutionally banned and the ratification must take place in its national parliament.

On some occasions, a state has failed to get a treaty passed by its public in a referendum. In the cases of Ireland and Denmark a second referendum was held after a number of concessions were granted. However in the case of France and the Netherlands, the treaty was abandoned in favour of a treaty that would not prompt a referendum. In the case of Norway, where the treaty was their accession treaty (hence, their membership), the treaty was also abandoned.

Treaties are also put before the European Parliament and while its vote is not binding, it is important; both the Belgian and Italian Parliaments said they would veto the Nice Treaty if the European Parliament did not approve it.[7]

Ratified treaties

Signed
In force
Document
1948
1948
Brussels Treaty
1951
1952
Paris Treaty
1954
1955
Modified Brussels Treaty
1957
1958
Rome treaties
1965
1967
Merger Treaty
1975
N/A
European Council conclusion
1985
1985
Schengen Treaty
1986
1987
Single European Act
1992
1993
Maastricht Treaty
1997
1999
Amsterdam Treaty
2001
2003
Nice Treaty
2007
2009
Lisbon Treaty
                         
Three pillars of the European Union:  
European Communities:  
European Atomic Energy Community (EURATOM)
European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) Treaty expired in 2002 European Union (EU)
    European Economic Community (EEC)
        Schengen Rules   European Community (EC)
    TREVI Justice and Home Affairs (JHA)  
  Police and Judicial Co-operation in Criminal Matters (PJCC)
          European Political Cooperation (EPC) Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP)
Unconsolidated bodies Western European Union (WEU)    
Treaty terminated in 2011  
                       

Legend for below table:   [Founding] - [Amending] - [Membership]

Treaty Established/Amended Signed in Signed on Effective from Ceased
ECSC Treaty source text European Coal and Steel Community Paris, FR 01951-04-18 18 April 1951 01952-07-23 23 July 1952 02002-07-23 23 July 2002[8]
Euratom Treaty source text European Atomic Energy Community Rome, IT 01957-03-25 25 March 1957 01958-01-01 1 January 1958 in force
EEC Treaty (Treaty of Rome) source text European Economic Community Rome, IT 01957-03-25 25 March 1957 01958-01-01 1 January 1958 in force
Netherlands Antilles Association Convention source text Applied OCT status to the Netherlands Antilles Brussels, BE 01962-11-13 13 November 1962 01964-10-01 1 October 1964 in force
Merger Treaty Brussels, BE 01965-04-08 8 April 1965 01967-07-01 1 July 1967 01999-05-01 1 May 1999[9]
First Budgetary Treaty Luxembourg, LU 01970-04-22 22 April 1970 01971-01-01 1 January 1971 in force
Acts of Accession Brussels, BE 01972-01-22 22 January 1972 01973-01-01 1 January 1973 in force
Second Budgetary Treaty Brussels, BE 01975-07-22 22 July 1975 01977-06-01 1 June 1977 in force
Act of Accession Enlarged to Greece Athens, GR 01979-05-28 28 May 1979 01981-01-01 1 January 1981 in force
Greenland Treaty[10] Secession of Greenland Brussels, BE 01984-03-13 13 March 1984 01985-01-01 1 January 1985 in force
Acts of Accession Enlarged to Spain and Portugal Madrid, ES
Lisbon, PT
01985-06-12 12 June 1985 01986-01-01 1 January 1986 in force
Schengen Agreement Established open borders Schengen, LU 01985-06-14 14 June 1985 01995-03-26 26 March 1995 in force
Single European Act source text Luxembourg, LU
The Hague, NL
01986-02-17 17 February 1986
01986-02-28 28 February 1986
01987-07-01 1 July 1987 in force
Treaty of Maastricht source text
(Treaty on European Union)
European Union Maastricht, NL 01992-02-07 7 February 1992 01993-11-01 1 November 1993 in force
Acts of Accession Corfu, GR 01994-06-24 24 June 1994 01995-01-01 1 January 1995 in force
Treaty of Amsterdam source text Amsterdam, NL 01997-10-01 1 October 1997 01999-05-01 1 May 1999 in force
Treaty of Nice source text Nice, FR 02001-02-26 26 February 2001 02003-02-01 1 February 2003 in force
Treaty of Accession 2003 Athens, GR 02003-04-16 16 April 2003 02004-05-01 1 May 2004 in force
Treaty of Accession 2005 Enlarged to Bulgaria and Romania Luxembourg, LU 02005-04-13 13 April 2005 02007-01-01 1 January 2007 in force
Treaty of Lisbon source text Lisbon, PT 02007-12-13 13 December 2007 02009-12-01 1 December 2009 in force
Protocol amending the Protocol on Transitional Provisions Amending Protocol 36 Brussels, BE 02010-06-23 23 June 2010 02011-12-01 1 December 2011 in force

Protocol amending the Protocol on Transitional Provisions

Due to the delay in the ratification of the Lisbon Treaty, the 2009 elections were held under the rules of the Nice Treaty, just before the EU began to operate under Lisbon rules. This involved the Parliament electing fewer members than it was allocated under Lisbon. In order to address the appointment of extra members to Parliament to serve until 2014, a protocol was drawn up on 23 June 2010 and was then ratified by member states (the protocol, like a full treaty, needed ratification by all members as it is a treaty amendment). The protocol brought the total number of seats allocated to each country up to those stated in Lisbon and allows for them to be appointed. However, Germany (which would have lost 3 seats under the Lisbon treaty) will keep its extra members until the next election.[11][12][13][14]

Future treaties

Despite a reluctance to pursue new treaties following the painful ratification of the Lisbon Treaty, there are a number of new amendments being processed or considered. An amendment to TFEU Article 136 allowing the creation of a bail-out mechanism is undergoing ratification since late 2010 (expected by 2013); a new treaty creating the aforementioned bailout mechanism which has been in ratification of eurozone-only states since mid-2011 (expected by mid-2013) is also in the process.

There are also expected treaties dealing with certain opt-outs promised during Lisbon negotiations (see section below) and also accession treaties to allow new members to join (next likely candidate to be Croatia in 2013).

Treaties undergoing signing/ratification
Treaty Establishing/Amending Signed in Signed on Ratification Expected
European Council Decision amending Article 136 of the TFEU Amending Article 136 Brussels, BE 02011-03-25 25 March 2011[15]
0 / 27
Jan. 2013
Treaty establishing the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) European Stability Mechanism Brussels, BE 02011-07-11 11 July 2011[16]
0 / 17
Jul. 2013
Treaty of Accession 2011 Enlarging to Croatia Brussels, BE 02011-12-09 9 December 2011[17]
0 / 27
1 July 2013

Eurozone reform

A treaty and treaty amendment are, as of 2011, undergoing ratification in order to establish the European Stability Mechanism (ESM). The ESM would replace the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM) and is in response to the European sovereign debt crisis. It is planned to be ratified and enter force by 2013, when the EFSF and EFSM expire. A treaty amendment was required to give it legal legitimacy (as it was feared Germany's constitutional court could strike it down) and non-Eurozone states were excluded as the UK refused to participate in any fiscal integration.[18][19] Further amendments may follow once the final shape of the eurozone's economic governance is decided.

The simple two-line treaty amendment was agreed by the European Council on 16 December 2010. The amendment reads: "The member states whose currency is the euro may establish a stability mechanism to be activated if indispensable to safeguard the stability of the euro area as a whole. The granting of any required financial assistance under the mechanism will be made subject to strict conditionality." It is designed only to give basis to the bail out fund and calm the markets.[20] The text is being inserted into Article 136 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union as paragraph 3.[21] With the amendment allowing for the ESM's creation, the "Treaty Establishing the European Stability Mechanism" sets out the details of how the ESM would operate.[22]

Croatia

On 14 September 2011 the Treaty concerning the Accession of the Republic of Croatia was finalised and made public. It was signed on 9 December 2011 in Brussels and should be enter force on 1 July 2013. The treaty will need to be ratified by the current 27 member states and by Croatia; which is planning a referendum for February 2012. The treaty is 250 pages long and provides for amendments to the treaties to add Croatian representatives into EU institutions (including transitional provisions before new elections take place) and outlines Croatia's various financial contributions. The document does not include monitoring mechanism of Croatia by the European Commission to ensure continued reform, as was the case with Bulgaria and Romania. Ireland's guarantees and the Czech Republic's opt-outs will be signed alongside the accession treaty (see below).[23][24][25][26][27]

Opt-outs

As a result of the various compromises during the ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon, there are a number of protocols which leaders have stated will be added to the next treaty, probably the accession treaty of Croatia or Iceland no sooner than 2011. These protocols related to opt-outs and guarantees to Ireland and the Czech Republic in order to get support from their public and president respectively.[28][29] Following the rejection of the treaty by the Irish electorate in 2008, a number of guarantees (on security and defence, ethical issues and tax) were given to the Irish in return for a second attempt. On the second attempt in 2009 the treaty was approved. Rather than repeat the ratification procedure, the guarantees were merely declarations with a promise to append them to the next treaty.[28][30]

Czech President Václav Klaus refused to complete ratification of the treaty unless the Czech Republic was given an opt-out from the Charter of Fundamental Rights (as Poland and the United Kingdom had) due to his claim it could be used by Germans expelled from the Eastern bloc after the Second World War. Thus the Irish solution was used again to satisfy his demand.[29][31] These opt-outs will be signed and ratified along side Croatia's accession treaty (see section above), which should be signed by the end of 2011 and ratified by mid-2013.[27]

Abandoned treaties

Treaty instituting a European Defence Community.

Following on from the success of the Treaty of Paris, efforts were made to allow West Germany to rearm within the framework of a European military structure in the form of a European Defence Community. The treaty was signed by the six members on 27 May 1952 and the Common Assembly began drafting a treaty for a European Political Community to ensure democratic accountability of the new army, but this treaty was abandoned when the Defence Community treaty was rejected by the French National Assembly on 30 August 1954.

1973 and 1995 Acts of Accession of Norway

Norway has tried to join the European Communities/Union on two occasions, on both occasions a national referendum returned a negative result leading Norway to turn down membership. The first treaty was signed in Brussels on 22 January 1972 and the second in Corfu on 24 June 1994.

Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe (the European Constitution)

The European Constitution was a treaty that would have repealed and consolidated all previous overlapping treaties (except the Euratom treaty) into a single document. It also made changes to voting systems, simplified the structure of the EU and advanced co-operation in foreign policy. The treaty was signed in Rome on 29 October 2004 and was due to come into force on 1 November 2006 if it was ratified by all member states. However, this did not occur, with France rejecting the document in a national referendum on 29 May 2005 and then the Netherlands in their own referendum on 1 June 2005. Following a "period of reflection", the constitution in that form was scrapped and replaced by the Treaty of Lisbon.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, Europa
  2. ^ Protocols, Europa
  3. ^ Annexes, Europa
  4. ^ Declarations, Europa
  5. ^ CONSOLIDATED VERSION OF THE TREATY ESTABLISHING THE EUROPEAN ATOMIC ENERGY COMMUNITY (2010/C 84/01), EurLex Accessed 18 September 2011
  6. ^ a b c Select Committee on European Union Tenth Report: CHAPTER 3: SIMPLIFIED TREATY REVISION AND PASSERELLES, British House of Lords 2008
  7. ^ Kirk, Lizabeth (12 December 2000) European Parliament may reject the Nice Treaty, EU Observer
  8. ^ Expired due to 50 year limit included in Treaty, absorbed by EU via Treaty of Nice.
  9. ^ Replaced by Amsterdam Treaty
  10. ^ OJ L 29, 1.2.1985
  11. ^ Romania targets new MEPs in expanding Schengen backlash, EU Observer
  12. ^ 18 new MEPs to join the European Parliament in December, Alzheimer Europe
  13. ^ Official Journal of the European Union C 263 /1 - PROTOCOL AMENDING THE PROTOCOL ON TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS ANNEXED TO THE TREATY ON EUROPEAN UNION, TO THE TREATY ON THE FUNCTIONING OF THE EUROPEAN UNION AND TO THE TREATY ESTABLISHING THE EUROPEAN ATOMIC ENERGY COMMUNITY
  14. ^ Ratification details
  15. ^ a136 Amendment details
  16. ^ ESM Treaty details
  17. ^ Treaty of Accession 2011 details
  18. ^ Van Rompuy wants clearer 'hierarchy' to deal with future crises, by Honor Mahony, EUobserver, 25.05.2010
  19. ^ Don't expect Britain to back a new EU treaty, Cameron tells Merkel, by Tony Paterson, The Independent, 22.05.2010
  20. ^ Phillips, Leigh (17 December 2010) EU leaders agree to tweak treaty, keep bail-out fund unchanged, EU Observer
  21. ^ EUROPEAN COUNCIL 16-17 DECEMBER 2010 CONCLUSIONS, European Council 17 December 2010
  22. ^ EUROPEAN COUNCIL 24/25 MARCH 2011 CONCLUSIONS
  23. ^ Croatia's EU accession treaty most likely to be signed in Warsaw, Croatian Government 20 July 11
  24. ^ EU accession treaty goes public, Croatian Times 22 September 2011
  25. ^ Pop, Valentina (14 September 2011) EU finalises Croatia membership treaty, EU Observer
  26. ^ Treaty concerning the Accession of the Republic of Croatia (PDF), Council of the European Union and the Government of Croatia
  27. ^ a b 'Warsaw Treaty' to seal Croatia's EU accession, EurActiv 30 September 2011
  28. ^ a b Crosbie, Judith (12 May 2009) Ireland seeks sign-off on Lisbon treaty guarantees, European Voice
  29. ^ a b Mahony, Honor (30 October 2009) EU treaty closer to ratification after Czech deal agreed, EU Observer
  30. ^ Smyth, Jamie (2 April 2009) MEP queries legal basis for Ireland's Lisbon guarantees, Irish Times
  31. ^ Gardner, Andrew (29 October 2009) Klaus gets opt-out, European Voice

References

External links