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Youth Demands to the Convention on the Future of Europe

Supported by:
Members of the Youth Contact Group
Young European Federalists (JEF)
Youth of the European People’s Party (YEPP)
Liberal and Radical Youth Movement of the European Union (LYMEC)
European Community Organisation of Socialist Youth (ECOSY)


22 June 2002

The Convention on the Future of Europe has a historic opportunity: to lay the foundations for a genuinely democratic European Union, able to meet the challenges of today and the opportunities of tomorrow. In today’s world, where the globalisation of economies and where international concern about the environment, poverty, and crime raise the challenge of establishing global democratic structures, only a united and enlarged Europe can meet the needs of its citizens and contribute to peace and stability. These goals can only be achieved on the basis of an ambitious reform of its institutions and procedures. The Union needs an democratic, open and transparent decision-making system, accountable to its citizens, to reconnect the peoples of Europe with the decisions taken in their name.

This future Europe should have the peoples of Europe at its heart, with a strengthened conception of European citizenship, carrying real rights and obligations, and based on our shared common European values. For the Union to attract the loyalty and support of its citizens, it must be credible in its policy, efficient in its actions, and successful in its results.

This is the challenge facing the Convention on the Future of Europe today.

Essential elements of a European Federal Constitution

The government of the Union must be based on the principles of democracy, subsidiarity, transparency, accountability, and efficiency. The Constitution should define the fundamental rights of EU citizens, the distribution of competences between the European and national levels, and the role and powers of the European institutions. The Union of tomorrow must be based on decentralisation and diversity, not on petty bureaucracy and over-regulation. Its institutions must be capable of acting effectively, and able to meet the expectations of the people of Europe for a future based on freedom, security, solidarity, prosperity, and sustainable development.

Three essential element of a federal European Constitution:

· Fundamental rights: the Charter on Fundamental Rights and Freedoms should be made legally binding and should be at the heart of the Constitution.

· Competences: a more effective and transparent delineation of competences, between those which are exclusive competences of the Union, those which are shared between the European and national levels, and those which remain the competence of the member states. This should be based on the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality.

· Decision-making: decision-making procedures should be simplified, and majority voting in the Council should be the rule. All legislation should be subject to co-decision between the Parliament, as the chamber of the people, and the Council, as the chamber of the States. The three pillar system should be replaced by an integrated constitutional order, with full democratic control over the Common Foreign and Security Policy and Justice and Home Affairs.

A democratic and accountable institutional structure

· European Parliament: as the only directly democratically-elected body, the Parliament, representing the people, should be given the right of initiative for legislation; full budgetary competence; and should have oversight in all areas where the Union is competent.

· Council: should be transformed into a genuine second chamber representing the states, acting as a legislative body only, meeting in public, and operating according to the principles of openness and transparency.

· Commission: the Commission should be the Executive of the Union, fully accountable to the Parliament. Members of the Commission should be selected according to competence, not nationality, and their nomination subject to the approval of the European Parliament. The President of the Commission must be responsible to the European Parliament, and is to be elected by the Parliament on the basis of candidates nominated by the European Political Parties.

· Court of Justice: all matters within the competence of the Union should be subject to the Court of Justice, and the Court should become a genuine Constitutional Court.




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