| COREPER, from French Comité des
représentants permanents, is the Committee of Permanent Representatives in the European Union, made up of the head or deputy head of mission from the EU
member states in Brussels. Its defined role is to prepare the agenda for the
ministerial Council of the European Union
meetings; it may also take some procedural decisions. It oversees and coordinates the work of some 250 committees and working
parties made up of civil servants from the member states who work on
issues at the technical level to be discussed later by COREPER and the Council. It is chaired by the Presidency of the
Council.
There are in fact two committees:
- COREPER I is made up of deputy heads of mission and deals largely with social and economic issues;
- COREPER II is made up of heads of mission and deals largely with political, financial and foreign policy issues.
There is also a special committee on agriculture.
Weekly meetings are held in private; the agenda of the meeting is divided into
- a part “I” (I points, items scheduled without debate) and
- a part “II” (II points, items scheduled for debate).
They divide the ministerial agenda into three categories:
- I points which are for information and no ministerial decision is needed;
- A points where the decision can be made without debate (but it has to be put off the agenda of this meeting if any
national delegation opposes it e.g. for the puropose preparing a unilateral declaration);
- B points where debate is needed and the decision may not be known in advance.
An item may be described internally as a false B point - this is to give the public impression as a B point that
ministers are actively debating it because of its importance when in fact it could have been treated as an A point because
negotiation and compromise has already taken place in COREPER. Relatively few decisions are taken by ministers on true B
points: they are usually sent back to COREPER until they can be returned as an A point or a false B point.
The deliberations and decisions of the Council itself under the co-decision procedure are, contrary to all other Council
meetings, including COREPER and Council working group meetings, public.
Details
Article 207 of the EC Treaty lays down the legal basis of COREPER.
Coreper I, comprising the Deputy Permanent Representatives, prepares the ground for the following Council configurations:
- Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs;
- Competitiveness (internal market, industry, research and tourism);
- Transport, Telecommunications and Energy;
- Agriculture and Fisheries;
- Environment;
- Education, Youth and Culture (including audiovisual);
Coreper II, comprising the Permanent Representatives, prepares for the other configurations:
- General Affairs and External Relations (including European security and defence policy and development cooperation);
- Economic and Financial Affairs (including the budget);
- Justice and Home Affairs (including civil protection).
See alsoe :European Union directive,
Codecision procedure
External links
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