- Jan 18, 2009
- 5,065
My knowledge of the EU is limited, so if you can manage to hold a discussion with me without being rude I would love to understand your point.
From what i can work out representatives of the EU parliament are voted for by the public of each country. But the EU commission are send by the government of each country. The commission make policy which is sent through to the Parliament to be passed (am I right so far?)
the UK has the house of commons in which representatives are voted for by the people and the House of Lords which are selected by some other process.
In neither system to we get to vote directly for the leaders, speakers or presidents
One house voted for and one house selcted by other means.. sorry but it seems pretty similar to me, what do you see as the difference?
OK, no problem, I have attached links to the EU in previous posts, it's all there.
The key point here is that the EU commission is responsible for creating EU law, the EU Parliament ratifies and/or amends it. So, for EU directives the Commission create the law, it is ratified by the EU Parliament then it is implemented by the member state via their own local act passed by the own local parliament. In these cases the member states can amend directives...........so not a problem.
However the EU Commission also has the power to create and impose laws via Regulations which they do regularly (e.g. capital requirements regulation, which will set how banks can remunerate staff).
EU regulations will typically be sent to the EU Parliament but once passed by the EU Parliament they go straight into law in the member states without approval by the member states local parliament.
The Lisbon treaty which created this power also conferred the EU Commission with the power to create regulations and impose them directly on member states without ratification by the EU Parliament.
The EU Commission is not elected by the EU electorate, but by politicians.
The EU Parliament is elected by the EU electorate.
Therefore if you were to compare this to the UK it would be like giving the electorate the right to vote in the Lords but not MPs in the Commons. In the UK it is the MPs that create and pass the law in the commons before it is passed onto the Lords for ratification and/or amendment.
Put another way executive power in the UK resides in the commons, just like the power is in the EU resides in the Commission. The UK electorate vote for who wields the power in the UK, European politicians vote for who wields the power in the EU.
The two are not comparable on that basis, and I know which one is more democratic...............what about you?