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European Citizens' Initiative

The European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) is a European Union (EU) mechanism aimed at increasing direct democracy by enabling "EU citizens to participate directly in the development of EU policies",[1] introduced with the Treaty of Lisbon in 2007. This popular initiative enables one million citizens of the European Union,[2] with a minimum number of nationals from at least seven member states, to call directly on the European Commission to propose a legal act (notably a Directive or Regulation) in an area where the member states have conferred powers onto the EU level. This right to request the commission to initiate a legislative proposal puts citizens on the same footing as the European Parliament and the European Council, who enjoy this right according to Articles 225 and 241 TFEU, respectively. The commission holds the right of initiative in the EU.[1] The first registered ECI, Fraternité 2020, was initiated on 9 May 2012 (Europe Day), although the first submitted ECI (but second registered) was One Single Tariff.

Historical background edit

The ECI has its origins in the Constitutional Convention on the Future of Europe in 2002–2003. Thanks to the campaign work of activists and Convention members the ECI was introduced in a last-minute act into the Constitutional Treaty.[3][4]

In 2005, the Constitutional Treaty was rejected by the citizens of France and the Netherlands in two national referendums. As a consequence of that, Intergovernmental Conference prepared the Treaty of Lisbon. The treaty ratification was delayed due to referendum in Ireland where it was initially rejected in June 2008 by the Irish electorate, a decision which was reversed in a second referendum in October 2009.

On 13 December 2007, the Treaty of Lisbon was signed by all the EU Member States. On 11 November 2009, the European Commission published a Green Paper on the European Citizens' Initiative, launching a public consultation process on the ECI.[5]

The council and the commission came up with a preliminary compromise on 14 June 2010. After it produced several drafts and opinions that were discussed in the Constitutional Affairs and Petitions Committees, the European Parliament, on 15 December 2010, finally voted on the ECI Regulation. After one year of negotiations, all three main EU institutions (the European Commission, the Council and the European Parliament) agreed on a final ECI Regulation, on 16 February 2011.

The initiative was inspired by Switzerland, which is not a member of the EU. The country has several tools of direct democracy such as the federal popular initiative (since 1848) and the optional referendum (since 1874).

Legal basis edit

The legal basis of the citizens' initiative is set out in Article 11, Paragraph 4 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU) and Article 24, paragraph 1 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). Both articles were newly introduced with the Treaty of Lisbon. The ECI complements the existing right of petitioning the European Parliament and the right of appeal to the Ombudsman as set out in the Treaty of Maastricht (1993). Petitions and the ECI are fundamentally different however in terms of function, addressees and conditions.[6]

The practical arrangements, conditions and procedure of the ECI are determined in the Regulation 2019/788 on the European citizens' initiative, which has been applicable since 1 January 2020.[7] Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 2019/1779 lays down technical specifications for the ECI's online collection systems.[8]

The regulation 2019/788 replaced the original regulation 211/2011. Initiatives that were registered until 31 December 2019 are still partly governed by the old rules: • General rules – Regulation (EU) No 211/2011 • Online signature collection – Regulation (EU) No 1179/2011

The new Regulation requires a review by 1 January 2024, and every three years thereafter. In the review process, the commission presents a report on the implementation of the ECI regulation with a view to its possible revision, to which the European Parliament reacts in a report with further recommendations.

Initiatives edit

Before entry into force edit

Greenpeace collected one million signatures in December 2010 for a petition, hosted by Avaaz, against the authorisation of new GM crops in Europe.[9] Although Greenpeace has called the petition an ECI in the media, it has never been formally registered with the commission, which would not have been possible before 1 April 2012, and so can therefore not be regarded an ECI, as introduced by the Lisbon Treaty.

First registered initiative edit

The European Commission chose the symbolic date of 9 May 2012 (Europe Day) to officially launch the first ECI. It turned out to be Fraternité 2020. It was officially registered on 9 May and boasts registration number ECI(2012)000001.[10] The initiative failed to reach the required number of signatures.

First six successful initiatives edit

Right2Water edit

On 21 March 2013, Right2Water became the first ECI to collect more than a million signatures and it reached the minimum quota of signatures in seven countries on 7 May 2013. It stopped collecting signatures on 7 September 2013, with a total of 1,857,605 signatures. The initiative was submitted to the commission in December 2013 and its public hearing at the European Parliament took place on 17 February 2014.[11] In March 2014, the commission adopted the Communication in response to the Right2Water initiative.[12] On 1 July 2015, the commission published the Roadmap for the evaluation of the Drinking Water Directive[13] and in February 2018, a proposal for the revision of the Drinking Water Directive. In December 2020, the European Parliament and the Council adopted the revised Directive, which entered into force in January 2021. The commission has also carried out a number of other actions in response to this initiative.

One of Us edit

On 28 February 2014, One of Us was submitted to the commission as an ECI, having gathered 1,896,852 signatures (so far the highest number of signatures per ECI). The initiative sought that the EU "establish a ban and end the financing of activities which presuppose the destruction of human embryos, in particular in the areas of research, development aid and public health."[14]

A public hearing on the initiative took place at the European Parliament on 10 April 2014.[15] On 28 May 2014 the European Commission adopted the Communication on the European Citizens' Initiative "One of us".[14] The commission decided not to submit a legislative proposal since it considered the existing legal framework, as decided by Member States and the European Parliament only a few months before the submission of the ECI, as appropriate. In its Communication, it explained extensively why it considers that there is no need to modify the legal framework.

The One of Us initiative subsequently sued the European Commission, arguing, among other things, that the Commission's refusal to act was not properly argued. The initiative lost before the General Court in April 2018 and on appeal before the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Justice in December 2019.[16]

Stop Vivisection edit

On 3 March 2015, the third European Citizens' Initiative to gather the required number of signatories, Stop Vivisection, was submitted to the commission. The campaign collected 1,326,807 signatures. On 11 May 2015, a public hearing at the European Parliament took place.[17] On 3 June 2015, the European Commission adopted the Communication on the European Citizens' Initiative "Stop Vivisection"[18] proposing a series of non-legislative follow-up actions.

Ban glyphosate and protect people and the environment from toxic pesticides edit

The initiative was submitted to the commission on 6 October 2017. By that date, 1,070,865 signatures from 22 Member States had been checked and validated. The commission adopted a communication on 12 December 2017, setting out the actions it intends to take in response to the initiative.[19]

On 11 April 2018, the commission adopted a proposal for a Regulation on transparency and sustainability of the EU risk assessment in the food chain. The Regulation[20] was adopted by the European Parliament and Council in June 2019. The new legislation started applying on 27 March 2021.

Minority Safepack edit

A package of 9 proposals (initially 11, 2 blocked by the commission) aiming "to improve the protection of persons belonging to national and linguistic minorities and strengthen cultural and linguistic diversity", and submitted to the commission on 10 January 2020. Supported by FUEN.[21] The European Parliament organised a hearing[22] on 15 October 2020. On 14 January 2021 the commission responded[23] by referring to a series of non-legislative follow-up actions.

End the Cage Age edit

Over the course of one year, many scientists, companies and more than 170 NGOs supported the ECI, aiming at a phase out of caged farming in the European Union. They succeeded in collecting almost 1.4 million signatures, by emphasising the need for a prohibition of cages for farmed rabbits, pullets, broiler breeders, quail, ducks and geese. Furthermore, the organisers demand a prohibition of farrowing crates for sows and sow stalls, as well as a prohibition of enclosed calf pens. Almost 1.4 million signatures have been gathered, as certified in October 2020.[24] In response to this initiative, the Commission committed to propose legislation to phase out, and finally prohibit, the use of cage systems for the animals mentioned in the ECI by the end of 2023.[25]

On-going ECIs edit

The updated list of initiatives registered by the commission and currently collecting support is available in the commission's ECI register.[2]

Ban on conversion practices in the European Union edit

The European Citizens' Initiative "Ban on conversion practices in the European" is led by LGBTI+ associations from all over the European Union, and coordinated by the French association ACT (Against Conversion Practices). This initiative calls on the European Commission to ban "conversion practices" in all its member states and to recognize the rights of conversion practices victims. It was registered on the 24th of January by the European Commission. The petition campaign will start on the 17th of May 2024 and end on the 17th of May 2025.

Refused ECIs edit

While most ECIs have been approved, a few have been refused, as they did not meet the requirements for registration. Out of 99 ECIs requests for registration submitted between 2012 and 2020, 76 initiatives were registered (with three registered after a court sentence after an original refusal) and 26 were refused. Three of the originally refused initiatives have been registered after a court sentence annulled the initial refusal. The updated list of refused requests for registration ECIs is available in the commission's ECI register[26] Examples:

  • A European Citizens Initiative campaigning to phase out nuclear energy in the EU – My voice against nuclear energy;[27][28]
  • A European Citizens Initiative to recommend singing the European Anthem in Esperanto;[29]
  • A European Citizens Initiative to stop TTIP.[30] The alliance of organisations behind the petition have submitted a complaint in the European Court of Justice against this decision of the European Commission.[31][32] On 10 May 2017, the European Court of Justice ruled the petition legitimate.[33] The European Commission approved the initiative's registration on 4 July 2017 and reopened the signature collection on 10 July 2017.[34]

Withdrawn ECIs edit

A number of ECIs have decided to withdraw after being approved, for various reasons. Their list is available on the commission's ECI register.[35]

Procedure edit

Minimum number of signatories per country[36]
Member State Signatories as of 01/02/2020
Austria 13 395
Belgium 14 805
Bulgaria 11 985
Croatia 8 460
Cyprus 4 230
Czech Republic 14 805
Denmark 9 870
Estonia 4 935
Finland 9 870
France 55 695
Germany 67 680
Greece 14 805
Hungary 14 805
Ireland 9 165
Italy 53 580
Latvia 5 640
Lithuania 7 755
Luxembourg 4 230
Malta 4 230
Netherlands 20 445
Poland 36 660
Portugal 14 805
Romania 23 265
Slovakia 9 870
Slovenia 5 640
Spain 41 595
Sweden 14 805

There are a few steps absolutely necessary to organise an ECI:[37][38]

  • Step 1: Prepare the initiative and set up a citizens' committee: the members of this committee (at least 7 EU citizens, who must live in at least 7 different EU countries, old enough to vote in European Parliament elections) designate from among them a representative and a substitute to speak and act on its behalf vis-à-vis the commission;[39]
  • Step 2: Registration of the ECI in one of the 23 official EU languages on the commission's website (answer of the commission within two months);[40]
  • Step 3: For the use of an online signature collection get your system certified (by national authorities, answer within 1 months);[41][42]
  • Step 4: Collection of statements of support (max. 12 months): you need to have a minimum number of signatories in at least seven EU countries on the way to 1 million (see the thresholds for each country in the table below).[43] This minimum numbers correspond to the number of the Members of the European Parliament elected in each Member State, multiplied by 750.[36]
  • Step 5: Get statements of support in each EU country certified by the national authority (answer within 3 months);[44][45]
  • Step 6: Submit the ECI to the commission.[46]

Weaknesses edit

Problems in the design of the ECI have heavily burdened ECI campaigners in the process. These include legal constraints (such as liability issues over data protection and insufficient advice regarding the appropriate legal basis of ECIs), technical issues (the online collection system is not user-friendly and does not let campaigners access email addresses of signatories to keep them informed), and bureaucratic hurdles (each member state has different data requirements and signature forms). Very few citizens are aware that the ECI exists. Moreover, there is little guarantee that a successful ECI will have an actual impact on EU legislation, as the three first 'successful' ECIs have shown.

The review process will offer a reflection over the successes and failures of the ECI during its first three years. Many civil society organisations, ECI organisers and Members of the European Parliament are advocating for a major reform of the ECI regulation.[47][48]

The ECI Campaign, an organization exclusively working for the successful introduction and implementation of the European Citizens' Initiative right, has proposed 12 concrete ways to make the ECI work. Those suggestions were the result of the publication entitled "An ECI That Works. Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens' Initiative".[49]

In order to support and help ECI organizers The ECI Campaign offers a new and improved software to collect signatures called OpenECI.

The ECI Support Centre, a joint initiative of Democracy International, the European Citizen Action Service and the Initiative and Referendum Institute Europe, has developed an 'App' for Android smartphones, which informs users of the latest European Citizens' Initiatives. The Centre recommends the EU Commission to develop an ECI-App, which should enable mobile signing and can help raise public awareness of the ECI.[50]

The on-line signature collection system edit

The ECI process allows organizers to also collect statements of support on-line. The first versions of the software provided by the European Commission have been heavily criticized by some developers.[51][52] Some organisers have also criticized the security regulations regarding the ECI collection process and the number of technical errors during the collection period.[53] In 2016, a new, fully bottom up online collection software has been provided by The ECI Campaign.[54]

Reform process 2015–2016 edit

According to the ECI Regulation 211/2011 every three years the commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and the council on the application of the Regulation. In mid 2014, the European Parliament presented a new ECI study entitled "European Citizens‘ Initiative – First lessons of implementation". The analysis was conducted at the request of the AFCO and PETI Committees, and tried to identify difficulties faced by organisers when setting up and running an ECI.[55]

In October 2014 Mr. Frans Timmermans became the newly elected commissioner responsible for the ECI. During the question and answer session in the European Parliament he avoided giving any concrete answers regarding the use or reform of the ECI.[56] A few weeks later The ECI Campaign organised a workshop "An ECI For the Next Generation". Many participants felt that the ECI was "at a crossroad" and needed reform.[57]

In December 2014 the European Citizen Action Service (ECAS) and the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) organised a conference entitled "ECI Legal Framework – Need for Reform?". During the conference the findings and recommendations of a study undertaken by ECAS and the law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer on the legal basis of the refused ECIs were presented and discussed.[58] The overall conclusions of the study are that the legal admissibility requirements are applied in a too narrow fashion by the commission, that decisions to refuse registration were arbitrary and that reasons given for rejection were often incomplete.

On 26 February 2015, the Constitutional Affairs (AFCO) and Petitions (PETI) committees of the European Parliament organised a public hearing on the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI). This marked the official start of debate on the review of the ECI regulation. Despite security restrictions limiting attendance, the hearing attracted a standing-room only crowd. Present were key ECI stakeholders: the European Commission, Parliament and Council, EESC, civil society organisations and ECI organisers. Three and a half hours of discussion led the participants to the conclusion that the ECI needed reform.[59] Speaking at the hearing, Frans Timmermans, First Vice-president of the European Commission, stated that the ECI has not worked well enough and took personal responsibility to improve it so that it would not disappear.[60]

In March 2015 the European Ombudsman, Emily O'Reilly, made proposals to strengthen the role that ECI play in democratic political debate at the European level. The Ombudsman called for better guidance for ECI organisers, a stronger involvement of the European Parliament and the council and increased pressure on the Member States to make sure that all EU citizens can sign an ECI, regardless of where they reside. Emily O'Reilly explained in her statement: "The Commission has done a lot to give effect to the ECI right in a citizen-friendly way. However, more can be done to ensure that ECI organisers feel that their efforts to mobilise one million signatures are worthwhile and that political debate at the European level takes account of their initiatives, even if specific initiatives do not lead to new EU legislation. We need a more effective dialogue with ECI organisers at different stages of an initiative as well as more transparent decision-making as regards what action the Commission takes on ECIs."[61] The Ombudsman's full list of suggestions is available online.[62]

On 31 March 2015, the commission adopted the Report on the application of Regulation (EU) No 211/2011 on the citizens' initiative, which constitutes an important element of potential ECI reform.[63]

On 13 April 2015, third edition of the "ECI Day" took place in the European Economic and Social Committee. The conference was entitled "Review, Renew, Reset!" and focused on the EC's and Ombudsman's reports.[64] During the event The ECI Campaign presented an open letter to European Commission First Vice President Frans Timmermans, signed by 21 ECI campaigns. It called on the commission to propose a deep and meaningful amendment to the ECI's Regulation 211/2011.[65]

In consequence of the above-mentioned conferences and reports Members of European Parliament (MEPs) on the Constitutional Affairs (AFCO) and Petitions (PETI) committees started to draft a report calling for a motion of the European Parliament on the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI). It asks the commission to consider several ways to make the ECI both more impactful and easier to use. AFCO Rapporteur MEP György Schöpflin presented the draft ECI report for discussion on 16 April 2015 AFCO committee meeting. During a lively 45 minute debate, many MEPs expressed their commitment to reform and strengthen the ECI. In consequence, after 2 months of in-depth analysis over 20 members of the AFCO committee came up with 127 amendments to the draft report. Additionally, PETI and JURI committees presented their own opinions on the ECI.[66][67]

On 16 June 2015, the Latvian Presidency of the Council of the EU, the Council General Secretariat and The ECI Campaign brought together stakeholders from EU institutions, member states and civil society to reflect on the future of the ECI. This was the first ECI conference hosted in the premises of the EU Council. Stakeholders expressed deep concern that ECI use declined dramatically since 2013 and that no ECI led to a legislative proposal. All agreed that the ECI is unnecessarily complex. Participants noted that significant changes to ECI procedures are urgently needed if citizen confidence in the ECI is to be restored and it is to fulfil its promise of participatory democracy.[68]

Differences from referendums edit

Citizen initiatives are democratic mechanisms that let citizens propose and vote on laws and policies. By gathering a certain number of signatures, citizens can demand a binding vote on a proposed policy or legislation. With the European Citizens' Initiative, citizens can invite the commission to look at the proposed policy or legislation; it is not obliged to act. Citizen initiatives differ from referendums in which citizens only can accept or reject a law or policy proposed by parliament. Also, it has been stated by the European Commission that an ECI can only be the subject of the acceptation/creation of a law, but it cannot ask to reject a law.[69]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Homepage – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". European Commission. 20 December 2013. Archived from the original on 12 January 2014. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Home – European citizens' initiative – portal". European Commission. 13 November 2020. from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  3. ^ Michael Efler: How the Convention got convinced, 27 June 2003, citizens-initiative.eu
  4. ^ Michael Efler: A rollercoaster ride toward the ECI, 27 June 2003, democracy-international.org
  5. ^ "GREEN PAPER on a European Citizens' Initiative". Eur-lex.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  6. ^ "Introduction". europarl.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 14 August 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  7. ^ "Regulation (EU) No. 2019/788 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European citizens' initiative". Eur-lex.europa.eu. Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  8. ^ "Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 2019/1799 laying down technical specifications for online collection systems pursuant to Regulation (EU) No 2020/788 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European citizens' initiative". Eur-lex.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  9. ^ "First European Citizens' Initiative delivered to Commissioner Dalli". Greenpeace.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  10. ^ "Open initiatives – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  11. ^ "Right to water: attend the first EP hearing for a Citizens' Initiative – News – European Parliament". Europarl.europa.eu. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  12. ^ "Communication from the Commission on the European Citizens' Initiative "Water and sanitation are a human right! Water is a public good, not a commodity!"". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  13. ^ "Evaluation of the Drinking Water Directive 98/83/EC" (PDF). Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  14. ^ a b "Communication from the Commission on the European Citizens' Initiative "One of Us"". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  15. ^ "European Parliament hearing on "One of Us" European Citizens' Initiative | News | European Parliament". Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  16. ^ Judgment of the Court: Patrick Grégor Puppinck and Others v European Commission., 19 December 2019
  17. ^ "European Citizens' Initiatives – Events – AGRI – Committees – European Parliament". Europarl.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  18. ^ "COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION on the European Citizens' Initiative "Stop Vivisection"" (PDF). Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  19. ^ COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION on the European Citizens' Initiative "Ban glyphosate and protect people and the environment from toxic pesticides"
  20. ^ "EUR-Lex – 32019R1381 – EN – EUR-Lex".
  21. ^ Minority SafePack – one million signatures for diversity in Europe
  22. ^ "ECI Hearing on 'Minority Safepack – one million signatures for diversity in Europe' | European Citizens' Initiatives | Events | LIBE | Committees | European Parliament".
  23. ^ "Register of Commission Documents".
  24. ^ Initiative citoyenne européenne: une sixième initiative présentée avec succès à la Commission//Daily News 02 / 10 / 2020 European Commission
  25. ^ "European Citizens' Initiative: Commission to propose phasing out of cages for farm animals". ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
  26. ^ "Refused requests for registration – European Citizens' Initiative register". Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  27. ^ "Refused request for registration – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  28. ^ ""An ECI That Works! Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens' Initiative." / "My Voice against Nuclear Power"" (PDF). Ecithatworks.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  29. ^ "Refused request for registration – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  30. ^ "Question on Refused request for registration – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  31. ^ "European Citizens' Initiative against TTIP: Submission of complaint in the European Court of Justice". Stop-ttip.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  32. ^ [Case T-754/14: Action brought on 10 November 2014 – Efler and Others v Commission. http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.C_.2015.034.01.0039.02.ENG] Eur-lex.europa.eu
  33. ^ "'Stop TTIP' petition is legitimate, top EU court rules". Euractiv.com. 11 May 2017. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  34. ^ "L'Europe donne son feu vert à une action de pétition contre le TTIP". 4 July 2017. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  35. ^ "European Commission > European Citizens' Initiative". Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  36. ^ a b Regulation of the EP and of the Council. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  37. ^ "How it works – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  38. ^ "Guide to the European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. 11 March 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  39. ^ "Citizens' committee – The procedure step by step – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  40. ^ "Registration – The procedure step by step – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  41. ^ "Competent national authorities that certify online collection systems – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  42. ^ "Certification of online system – The procedure step by step – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  43. ^ "Collection – The procedure step by step – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  44. ^ "Competent national authorities that certify statements of support – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  45. ^ "Verification of statements – The procedure step by step – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  46. ^ "Submission of the initiative – The procedure step by step – European Citizens' Initiative – European Commission". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  47. ^ "The ECI Campaign – 12 ways to build an ECI that works". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  48. ^ "Democracy International – European Citizens' Initiative Reform". Democrary-international.org. 4 February 2015. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  49. ^ "ECI That Works! – Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens' Initiative". Ecithatworks.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  50. ^ "ECI Support Centre – ECAS". Ecas.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  51. ^ ""An ECI That Works. Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens' Initiative." – Interview with Xavier Dutoit" (PDF). Ecithatworks.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  52. ^ ""An ECI That Works. Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens' Initiative." – Reinder Rustema – "Why the ECI needs a Community-Developed Online Collection System"" (PDF). Ecithatworks.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  53. ^ ""An ECI That Works. Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens' Initiative."" (PDF). Ecithatworks.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  54. ^ "ECI Software that Works! OpenECI is designed by and for ECI campaigners – European Citizens' Initiative – The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. 8 December 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  55. ^ "European Parliament, "European Citizens' Initiative – First lessons of implementation"" (PDF). Europarl.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  56. ^ "The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  57. ^ "The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  58. ^ "ECAS – "The European Citizens' Initiative Registration: Falling at the First Hurdle? Analysis of the registration requirements and the "subject matters" of the rejected ECIs"" (PDF). Ecas.org. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  59. ^ "The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  60. ^ "The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  61. ^ "Ombudsman calls on Commission to make European Citizens' Initiative politically relevant". Ombudsman.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  62. ^ "Decision of the European Ombudsman closing her own-initiative inquiry OI/9/2013/TN concerning the European Commission". Ombudsman.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  63. ^ "Report on the application of Regulation (EU) No 211/2011 on the citizens' initiative" (PDF). Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  64. ^ "EESC, ECI Day 2015 General Report" (PDF). Eesc.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  65. ^ "The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  66. ^ "Opinion of the Committee on Petitions for the Committee on Constitutional Affairs on the European Citizens' Initiative". Europarl.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  67. ^ "Opinion of the Committee on Legal Affairs for the Committee on Constitutional Affairs on the European Citizens' Initiative". Europarl.europa.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  68. ^ "The ECI Campaign". Citizens-initiative.eu. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  69. ^ "Refusal of the Stop TTIP ICE". Ec.europa.eu. 10 September 2014. Retrieved 11 May 2015.

External links edit

  • ec.europa.eu/citizens-initiative – European Citizens' Initiative on the European Commission's website
    • reform process of the European Citizens' Initiative.
  • European Citizens' Initiative on the initiators' websites:
    • citizens-initiative.eu (also: ecicampaign.org) – European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) on the ECI Campaign web
    • democracy-international.org/eci.html – European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) on the Democracy International web
    • mehr-demokratie.de/eu-buergerinitiative.html 7 September 2013 at the Wayback MachineEuropäische Bürgerinitiative on the Mehr Demokratie (More Democracy) web
  • Websites of (some) European Citizens' Initiatives (in order of registration):
    • Fraternité 2020
    • oneofus.eu – One of Us
    • endecocide.org – End Ecocide on Earth
    • stop-ttip.org – Stop TTIP
  • ECI/s on citizens-initiative.eu (also: ecicampaign.org) one of the ECI initiators' websites:
    • European Citizens’ Initiative – in that section: What is the ECI? / Open ECIs / Closed ECIs / Rejected ECIs / An overview of the first 2 years of the European Citizens' Initiative
  • ECIs on the commission's website:
    • Closed (finalised) initiatives:
      • Collection closed – collection is closed, not (yet) submitted to the commission
      • Submitted to the Commission – reached the required number of signatures, Commission's answer pending.
      • Answered by the Commission – Commission's conclusions already presented
    • Obsolete initiatives:
      • Withdrawn – withdrawn by the organisers
      • Insufficient support – did not gather the required number of signatures within the 1-year time limit
    • Refused initiatives:
      • Refused requests for registration – did not comply with the conditions according to Art.4(2) of the Regulation on the ECI, with the negative commission's replies


european, citizens, initiative, european, union, mechanism, aimed, increasing, direct, democracy, enabling, citizens, participate, directly, development, policies, introduced, with, treaty, lisbon, 2007, this, popular, initiative, enables, million, citizens, e. The European Citizens Initiative ECI is a European Union EU mechanism aimed at increasing direct democracy by enabling EU citizens to participate directly in the development of EU policies 1 introduced with the Treaty of Lisbon in 2007 This popular initiative enables one million citizens of the European Union 2 with a minimum number of nationals from at least seven member states to call directly on the European Commission to propose a legal act notably a Directive or Regulation in an area where the member states have conferred powers onto the EU level This right to request the commission to initiate a legislative proposal puts citizens on the same footing as the European Parliament and the European Council who enjoy this right according to Articles 225 and 241 TFEU respectively The commission holds the right of initiative in the EU 1 The first registered ECI Fraternite 2020 was initiated on 9 May 2012 Europe Day although the first submitted ECI but second registered was One Single Tariff Contents 1 Historical background 2 Legal basis 3 Initiatives 3 1 Before entry into force 3 2 First registered initiative 3 3 First six successful initiatives 3 3 1 Right2Water 3 3 2 One of Us 3 3 3 Stop Vivisection 3 3 4 Ban glyphosate and protect people and the environment from toxic pesticides 3 3 5 Minority Safepack 3 3 6 End the Cage Age 3 4 On going ECIs 3 5 Ban on conversion practices in the European Union 3 6 Refused ECIs 3 7 Withdrawn ECIs 4 Procedure 5 Weaknesses 5 1 The on line signature collection system 6 Reform process 2015 2016 7 Differences from referendums 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistorical background editThe ECI has its origins in the Constitutional Convention on the Future of Europe in 2002 2003 Thanks to the campaign work of activists and Convention members the ECI was introduced in a last minute act into the Constitutional Treaty 3 4 In 2005 the Constitutional Treaty was rejected by the citizens of France and the Netherlands in two national referendums As a consequence of that Intergovernmental Conference prepared the Treaty of Lisbon The treaty ratification was delayed due to referendum in Ireland where it was initially rejected in June 2008 by the Irish electorate a decision which was reversed in a second referendum in October 2009 On 13 December 2007 the Treaty of Lisbon was signed by all the EU Member States On 11 November 2009 the European Commission published a Green Paper on the European Citizens Initiative launching a public consultation process on the ECI 5 The council and the commission came up with a preliminary compromise on 14 June 2010 After it produced several drafts and opinions that were discussed in the Constitutional Affairs and Petitions Committees the European Parliament on 15 December 2010 finally voted on the ECI Regulation After one year of negotiations all three main EU institutions the European Commission the Council and the European Parliament agreed on a final ECI Regulation on 16 February 2011 The initiative was inspired by Switzerland which is not a member of the EU The country has several tools of direct democracy such as the federal popular initiative since 1848 and the optional referendum since 1874 Legal basis editThe legal basis of the citizens initiative is set out in Article 11 Paragraph 4 of the Treaty on European Union TEU and Article 24 paragraph 1 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union TFEU Both articles were newly introduced with the Treaty of Lisbon The ECI complements the existing right of petitioning the European Parliament and the right of appeal to the Ombudsman as set out in the Treaty of Maastricht 1993 Petitions and the ECI are fundamentally different however in terms of function addressees and conditions 6 The practical arrangements conditions and procedure of the ECI are determined in the Regulation 2019 788 on the European citizens initiative which has been applicable since 1 January 2020 7 Commission Implementing Regulation EU No 2019 1779 lays down technical specifications for the ECI s online collection systems 8 The regulation 2019 788 replaced the original regulation 211 2011 Initiatives that were registered until 31 December 2019 are still partly governed by the old rules General rules Regulation EU No 211 2011 Online signature collection Regulation EU No 1179 2011The new Regulation requires a review by 1 January 2024 and every three years thereafter In the review process the commission presents a report on the implementation of the ECI regulation with a view to its possible revision to which the European Parliament reacts in a report with further recommendations Initiatives editBefore entry into force edit Greenpeace collected one million signatures in December 2010 for a petition hosted by Avaaz against the authorisation of new GM crops in Europe 9 Although Greenpeace has called the petition an ECI in the media it has never been formally registered with the commission which would not have been possible before 1 April 2012 and so can therefore not be regarded an ECI as introduced by the Lisbon Treaty First registered initiative edit The European Commission chose the symbolic date of 9 May 2012 Europe Day to officially launch the first ECI It turned out to be Fraternite 2020 It was officially registered on 9 May and boasts registration number ECI 2012 000001 10 The initiative failed to reach the required number of signatures First six successful initiatives edit Right2Water edit On 21 March 2013 Right2Water became the first ECI to collect more than a million signatures and it reached the minimum quota of signatures in seven countries on 7 May 2013 It stopped collecting signatures on 7 September 2013 with a total of 1 857 605 signatures The initiative was submitted to the commission in December 2013 and its public hearing at the European Parliament took place on 17 February 2014 11 In March 2014 the commission adopted the Communication in response to the Right2Water initiative 12 On 1 July 2015 the commission published the Roadmap for the evaluation of the Drinking Water Directive 13 and in February 2018 a proposal for the revision of the Drinking Water Directive In December 2020 the European Parliament and the Council adopted the revised Directive which entered into force in January 2021 The commission has also carried out a number of other actions in response to this initiative One of Us edit On 28 February 2014 One of Us was submitted to the commission as an ECI having gathered 1 896 852 signatures so far the highest number of signatures per ECI The initiative sought that the EU establish a ban and end the financing of activities which presuppose the destruction of human embryos in particular in the areas of research development aid and public health 14 A public hearing on the initiative took place at the European Parliament on 10 April 2014 15 On 28 May 2014 the European Commission adopted the Communication on the European Citizens Initiative One of us 14 The commission decided not to submit a legislative proposal since it considered the existing legal framework as decided by Member States and the European Parliament only a few months before the submission of the ECI as appropriate In its Communication it explained extensively why it considers that there is no need to modify the legal framework The One of Us initiative subsequently sued the European Commission arguing among other things that the Commission s refusal to act was not properly argued The initiative lost before the General Court in April 2018 and on appeal before the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Justice in December 2019 16 Stop Vivisection edit On 3 March 2015 the third European Citizens Initiative to gather the required number of signatories Stop Vivisection was submitted to the commission The campaign collected 1 326 807 signatures On 11 May 2015 a public hearing at the European Parliament took place 17 On 3 June 2015 the European Commission adopted the Communication on the European Citizens Initiative Stop Vivisection 18 proposing a series of non legislative follow up actions Ban glyphosate and protect people and the environment from toxic pesticides edit The initiative was submitted to the commission on 6 October 2017 By that date 1 070 865 signatures from 22 Member States had been checked and validated The commission adopted a communication on 12 December 2017 setting out the actions it intends to take in response to the initiative 19 On 11 April 2018 the commission adopted a proposal for a Regulation on transparency and sustainability of the EU risk assessment in the food chain The Regulation 20 was adopted by the European Parliament and Council in June 2019 The new legislation started applying on 27 March 2021 Minority Safepack edit Main article Minority SafePack A package of 9 proposals initially 11 2 blocked by the commission aiming to improve the protection of persons belonging to national and linguistic minorities and strengthen cultural and linguistic diversity and submitted to the commission on 10 January 2020 Supported by FUEN 21 The European Parliament organised a hearing 22 on 15 October 2020 On 14 January 2021 the commission responded 23 by referring to a series of non legislative follow up actions End the Cage Age edit Over the course of one year many scientists companies and more than 170 NGOs supported the ECI aiming at a phase out of caged farming in the European Union They succeeded in collecting almost 1 4 million signatures by emphasising the need for a prohibition of cages for farmed rabbits pullets broiler breeders quail ducks and geese Furthermore the organisers demand a prohibition of farrowing crates for sows and sow stalls as well as a prohibition of enclosed calf pens Almost 1 4 million signatures have been gathered as certified in October 2020 24 In response to this initiative the Commission committed to propose legislation to phase out and finally prohibit the use of cage systems for the animals mentioned in the ECI by the end of 2023 25 On going ECIs edit The updated list of initiatives registered by the commission and currently collecting support is available in the commission s ECI register 2 Ban on conversion practices in the European Union edit The European Citizens Initiative Ban on conversion practices in the European is led by LGBTI associations from all over the European Union and coordinated by the French association ACT Against Conversion Practices This initiative calls on the European Commission to ban conversion practices in all its member states and to recognize the rights of conversion practices victims It was registered on the 24th of January by the European Commission The petition campaign will start on the 17th of May 2024 and end on the 17th of May 2025 Refused ECIs edit While most ECIs have been approved a few have been refused as they did not meet the requirements for registration Out of 99 ECIs requests for registration submitted between 2012 and 2020 76 initiatives were registered with three registered after a court sentence after an original refusal and 26 were refused Three of the originally refused initiatives have been registered after a court sentence annulled the initial refusal The updated list of refused requests for registration ECIs is available in the commission s ECI register 26 Examples A European Citizens Initiative campaigning to phase out nuclear energy in the EU My voice against nuclear energy 27 28 A European Citizens Initiative to recommend singing the European Anthem in Esperanto 29 A European Citizens Initiative to stop TTIP 30 The alliance of organisations behind the petition have submitted a complaint in the European Court of Justice against this decision of the European Commission 31 32 On 10 May 2017 the European Court of Justice ruled the petition legitimate 33 The European Commission approved the initiative s registration on 4 July 2017 and reopened the signature collection on 10 July 2017 34 Withdrawn ECIs edit A number of ECIs have decided to withdraw after being approved for various reasons Their list is available on the commission s ECI register 35 Procedure editMinimum number of signatories per country 36 Member State Signatories as of 01 02 2020 Austria 13 395 Belgium 14 805 Bulgaria 11 985 Croatia 8 460 Cyprus 4 230 Czech Republic 14 805 Denmark 9 870 Estonia 4 935 Finland 9 870 France 55 695 Germany 67 680 Greece 14 805 Hungary 14 805 Ireland 9 165 Italy 53 580 Latvia 5 640 Lithuania 7 755 Luxembourg 4 230 Malta 4 230 Netherlands 20 445 Poland 36 660 Portugal 14 805 Romania 23 265 Slovakia 9 870 Slovenia 5 640 Spain 41 595 Sweden 14 805 There are a few steps absolutely necessary to organise an ECI 37 38 Step 1 Prepare the initiative and set up a citizens committee the members of this committee at least 7 EU citizens who must live in at least 7 different EU countries old enough to vote in European Parliament elections designate from among them a representative and a substitute to speak and act on its behalf vis a vis the commission 39 Step 2 Registration of the ECI in one of the 23 official EU languages on the commission s website answer of the commission within two months 40 Step 3 For the use of an online signature collection get your system certified by national authorities answer within 1 months 41 42 Step 4 Collection of statements of support max 12 months you need to have a minimum number of signatories in at least seven EU countries on the way to 1 million see the thresholds for each country in the table below 43 This minimum numbers correspond to the number of the Members of the European Parliament elected in each Member State multiplied by 750 36 Step 5 Get statements of support in each EU country certified by the national authority answer within 3 months 44 45 Step 6 Submit the ECI to the commission 46 Weaknesses editProblems in the design of the ECI have heavily burdened ECI campaigners in the process These include legal constraints such as liability issues over data protection and insufficient advice regarding the appropriate legal basis of ECIs technical issues the online collection system is not user friendly and does not let campaigners access email addresses of signatories to keep them informed and bureaucratic hurdles each member state has different data requirements and signature forms Very few citizens are aware that the ECI exists Moreover there is little guarantee that a successful ECI will have an actual impact on EU legislation as the three first successful ECIs have shown The review process will offer a reflection over the successes and failures of the ECI during its first three years Many civil society organisations ECI organisers and Members of the European Parliament are advocating for a major reform of the ECI regulation 47 48 The ECI Campaign an organization exclusively working for the successful introduction and implementation of the European Citizens Initiative right has proposed 12 concrete ways to make the ECI work Those suggestions were the result of the publication entitled An ECI That Works Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens Initiative 49 In order to support and help ECI organizers The ECI Campaign offers a new and improved software to collect signatures called OpenECI The ECI Support Centre a joint initiative of Democracy International the European Citizen Action Service and the Initiative and Referendum Institute Europe has developed an App for Android smartphones which informs users of the latest European Citizens Initiatives The Centre recommends the EU Commission to develop an ECI App which should enable mobile signing and can help raise public awareness of the ECI 50 The on line signature collection system edit The ECI process allows organizers to also collect statements of support on line The first versions of the software provided by the European Commission have been heavily criticized by some developers 51 52 Some organisers have also criticized the security regulations regarding the ECI collection process and the number of technical errors during the collection period 53 In 2016 a new fully bottom up online collection software has been provided by The ECI Campaign 54 Reform process 2015 2016 editAccording to the ECI Regulation 211 2011 every three years the commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and the council on the application of the Regulation In mid 2014 the European Parliament presented a new ECI study entitled European Citizens Initiative First lessons of implementation The analysis was conducted at the request of the AFCO and PETI Committees and tried to identify difficulties faced by organisers when setting up and running an ECI 55 In October 2014 Mr Frans Timmermans became the newly elected commissioner responsible for the ECI During the question and answer session in the European Parliament he avoided giving any concrete answers regarding the use or reform of the ECI 56 A few weeks later The ECI Campaign organised a workshop An ECI For the Next Generation Many participants felt that the ECI was at a crossroad and needed reform 57 In December 2014 the European Citizen Action Service ECAS and the European Economic and Social Committee EESC organised a conference entitled ECI Legal Framework Need for Reform During the conference the findings and recommendations of a study undertaken by ECAS and the law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer on the legal basis of the refused ECIs were presented and discussed 58 The overall conclusions of the study are that the legal admissibility requirements are applied in a too narrow fashion by the commission that decisions to refuse registration were arbitrary and that reasons given for rejection were often incomplete On 26 February 2015 the Constitutional Affairs AFCO and Petitions PETI committees of the European Parliament organised a public hearing on the European Citizens Initiative ECI This marked the official start of debate on the review of the ECI regulation Despite security restrictions limiting attendance the hearing attracted a standing room only crowd Present were key ECI stakeholders the European Commission Parliament and Council EESC civil society organisations and ECI organisers Three and a half hours of discussion led the participants to the conclusion that the ECI needed reform 59 Speaking at the hearing Frans Timmermans First Vice president of the European Commission stated that the ECI has not worked well enough and took personal responsibility to improve it so that it would not disappear 60 In March 2015 the European Ombudsman Emily O Reilly made proposals to strengthen the role that ECI play in democratic political debate at the European level The Ombudsman called for better guidance for ECI organisers a stronger involvement of the European Parliament and the council and increased pressure on the Member States to make sure that all EU citizens can sign an ECI regardless of where they reside Emily O Reilly explained in her statement The Commission has done a lot to give effect to the ECI right in a citizen friendly way However more can be done to ensure that ECI organisers feel that their efforts to mobilise one million signatures are worthwhile and that political debate at the European level takes account of their initiatives even if specific initiatives do not lead to new EU legislation We need a more effective dialogue with ECI organisers at different stages of an initiative as well as more transparent decision making as regards what action the Commission takes on ECIs 61 The Ombudsman s full list of suggestions is available online 62 On 31 March 2015 the commission adopted the Report on the application of Regulation EU No 211 2011 on the citizens initiative which constitutes an important element of potential ECI reform 63 On 13 April 2015 third edition of the ECI Day took place in the European Economic and Social Committee The conference was entitled Review Renew Reset and focused on the EC s and Ombudsman s reports 64 During the event The ECI Campaign presented an open letter to European Commission First Vice President Frans Timmermans signed by 21 ECI campaigns It called on the commission to propose a deep and meaningful amendment to the ECI s Regulation 211 2011 65 In consequence of the above mentioned conferences and reports Members of European Parliament MEPs on the Constitutional Affairs AFCO and Petitions PETI committees started to draft a report calling for a motion of the European Parliament on the European Citizens Initiative ECI It asks the commission to consider several ways to make the ECI both more impactful and easier to use AFCO Rapporteur MEP Gyorgy Schopflin presented the draft ECI report for discussion on 16 April 2015 AFCO committee meeting During a lively 45 minute debate many MEPs expressed their commitment to reform and strengthen the ECI In consequence after 2 months of in depth analysis over 20 members of the AFCO committee came up with 127 amendments to the draft report Additionally PETI and JURI committees presented their own opinions on the ECI 66 67 On 16 June 2015 the Latvian Presidency of the Council of the EU the Council General Secretariat and The ECI Campaign brought together stakeholders from EU institutions member states and civil society to reflect on the future of the ECI This was the first ECI conference hosted in the premises of the EU Council Stakeholders expressed deep concern that ECI use declined dramatically since 2013 and that no ECI led to a legislative proposal All agreed that the ECI is unnecessarily complex Participants noted that significant changes to ECI procedures are urgently needed if citizen confidence in the ECI is to be restored and it is to fulfil its promise of participatory democracy 68 Differences from referendums editCitizen initiatives are democratic mechanisms that let citizens propose and vote on laws and policies By gathering a certain number of signatures citizens can demand a binding vote on a proposed policy or legislation With the European Citizens Initiative citizens can invite the commission to look at the proposed policy or legislation it is not obliged to act Citizen initiatives differ from referendums in which citizens only can accept or reject a law or policy proposed by parliament Also it has been stated by the European Commission that an ECI can only be the subject of the acceptation creation of a law but it cannot ask to reject a law 69 See also editEuropean Referendum CampaignReferences edit Homepage European Citizens Initiative European Commission European Commission 20 December 2013 Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 13 November 2020 Home European citizens initiative portal European Commission 13 November 2020 Archived from the original on 1 November 2020 Retrieved 13 November 2020 Michael Efler How the Convention got convinced 27 June 2003 citizens initiative eu Michael Efler A rollercoaster ride toward the ECI 27 June 2003 democracy international org GREEN PAPER on a European Citizens Initiative Eur lex europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Introduction europarl europa eu Archived from the original on 14 August 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Regulation EU No 2019 788 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European citizens initiative Eur lex europa eu Retrieved 26 July 2021 Commission Implementing Regulation EU No 2019 1799 laying down technical specifications for online collection systems pursuant to Regulation EU No 2020 788 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European citizens initiative Eur lex europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 First European Citizens Initiative delivered to Commissioner Dalli Greenpeace org Retrieved 30 January 2018 Open initiatives European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu 30 July 2014 Retrieved 15 August 2014 Right to water attend the first EP hearing for a Citizens Initiative News European Parliament Europarl europa eu 14 February 2014 Retrieved 30 January 2018 Communication from the Commission on the European Citizens Initiative Water and sanitation are a human right Water is a public good not a commodity Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Evaluation of the Drinking Water Directive 98 83 EC PDF Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 a b Communication from the Commission on the European Citizens Initiative One of Us Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 European Parliament hearing on One of Us European Citizens Initiative News European Parliament Retrieved 30 January 2018 Judgment of the Court Patrick Gregor Puppinck and Others v European Commission 19 December 2019 European Citizens Initiatives Events AGRI Committees European Parliament Europarl europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION on the European Citizens Initiative Stop Vivisection PDF Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION on the European Citizens Initiative Ban glyphosate and protect people and the environment from toxic pesticides EUR Lex 32019R1381 EN EUR Lex Minority SafePack one million signatures for diversity in Europe ECI Hearing on Minority Safepack one million signatures for diversity in Europe European Citizens Initiatives Events LIBE Committees European Parliament Register of Commission Documents Initiative citoyenne europeenne une sixieme initiative presentee avec succes a la Commission Daily News 02 10 2020 European Commission European Citizens Initiative Commission to propose phasing out of cages for farm animals ec europa eu Retrieved 12 November 2023 Refused requests for registration European Citizens Initiative register Retrieved 23 March 2021 Refused request for registration European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu 30 July 2014 Retrieved 25 August 2015 An ECI That Works Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens Initiative My Voice against Nuclear Power PDF Ecithatworks org Retrieved 30 January 2018 Refused request for registration European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu 30 July 2014 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Question on Refused request for registration European Citizens Initiative European Commission Retrieved 12 November 2014 European Citizens Initiative against TTIP Submission of complaint in the European Court of Justice Stop ttip org Retrieved 30 January 2018 Case T 754 14 Action brought on 10 November 2014 Efler and Others v Commission http eur lex europa eu legal content EN TXT uri uriserv OJ C 2015 034 01 0039 02 ENG Eur lex europa eu Stop TTIP petition is legitimate top EU court rules Euractiv com 11 May 2017 Retrieved 13 April 2018 L Europe donne son feu vert a une action de petition contre le TTIP 4 July 2017 Retrieved 13 April 2018 European Commission gt European Citizens Initiative Retrieved 23 March 2021 a b Regulation of the EP and of the Council Retrieved 30 January 2021 How it works European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 6 September 2021 Guide to the European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu 11 March 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Citizens committee The procedure step by step European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Registration The procedure step by step European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Competent national authorities that certify online collection systems European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu 30 July 2014 Retrieved 15 August 2014 Certification of online system The procedure step by step European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Collection The procedure step by step European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Competent national authorities that certify statements of support European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu 30 July 2014 Retrieved 15 August 2014 Verification of statements The procedure step by step European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Submission of the initiative The procedure step by step European Citizens Initiative European Commission Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign 12 ways to build an ECI that works Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 25 August 2015 Democracy International European Citizens Initiative Reform Democrary international org 4 February 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2015 ECI That Works Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens Initiative Ecithatworks org Retrieved 30 January 2018 ECI Support Centre ECAS Ecas org Retrieved 30 January 2018 An ECI That Works Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens Initiative Interview with Xavier Dutoit PDF Ecithatworks org Retrieved 30 January 2018 An ECI That Works Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens Initiative Reinder Rustema Why the ECI needs a Community Developed Online Collection System PDF Ecithatworks org Retrieved 30 January 2018 An ECI That Works Learning from the first two years of the European Citizens Initiative PDF Ecithatworks org Retrieved 30 January 2018 ECI Software that Works OpenECI is designed by and for ECI campaigners European Citizens Initiative The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu 8 December 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2018 European Parliament European Citizens Initiative First lessons of implementation PDF Europarl europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 ECAS The European Citizens Initiative Registration Falling at the First Hurdle Analysis of the registration requirements and the subject matters of the rejected ECIs PDF Ecas org Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Ombudsman calls on Commission to make European Citizens Initiative politically relevant Ombudsman europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Decision of the European Ombudsman closing her own initiative inquiry OI 9 2013 TN concerning the European Commission Ombudsman europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Report on the application of Regulation EU No 211 2011 on the citizens initiative PDF Ec europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 EESC ECI Day 2015 General Report PDF Eesc europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Opinion of the Committee on Petitions for the Committee on Constitutional Affairs on the European Citizens Initiative Europarl europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Opinion of the Committee on Legal Affairs for the Committee on Constitutional Affairs on the European Citizens Initiative Europarl europa eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 The ECI Campaign Citizens initiative eu Retrieved 30 January 2018 Refusal of the Stop TTIP ICE Ec europa eu 10 September 2014 Retrieved 11 May 2015 External links editec europa eu citizens initiative European Citizens Initiative on the European Commission s website reform process of the European Citizens Initiative European Citizens Initiative on the initiators websites citizens initiative eu also ecicampaign org European Citizens Initiative ECI on the ECI Campaign web democracy international org eci html European Citizens Initiative ECI on the Democracy International web mehr demokratie de eu buergerinitiative html Archived 7 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Europaische Burgerinitiative on the Mehr Demokratie More Democracy web Websites of some European Citizens Initiatives in order of registration fraternite2020 eu Fraternite 2020 right2water eu Right2Water oneofus eu One of Us endecocide org End Ecocide on Earth stop ttip org Stop TTIP ECI s on citizens initiative eu also ecicampaign org one of the ECI initiators websites European Citizens Initiative in that section What is the ECI Open ECIs Closed ECIs Rejected ECIs An overview of the first 2 years of the European Citizens Initiative ECIs on the commission s website Closed finalised initiatives Collection closed collection is closed not yet submitted to the commission Submitted to the Commission reached the required number of signatures Commission s answer pending Answered by the Commission Commission s conclusions already presented Obsolete initiatives Withdrawn withdrawn by the organisers Insufficient support did not gather the required number of signatures within the 1 year time limit Refused initiatives Refused requests for registration did not comply with the conditions according to Art 4 2 of the Regulation on the ECI with the negative commission s replies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European Citizens 27 Initiative amp oldid 1219436461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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