The
text approved on Europe Day 2021 will complete the rules determining how
the Conference Platform, Panels and Plenary can transform citizens’
priorities, hopes and concerns into actionable recommendations. It adds
to the rules previously adopted concerning the working methods of the
Executive Board and those related to citizens’ participation.
On the same day, the European Parliament
in Strasbourg is hosting the inaugural event of the Conference on the
Future of Europe. Watch it live here.
Ensuring that citizens’ input will be taken into account
The Conference Plenary will be composed
of 108 representatives from the European Parliament, 54 from the Council
(two per Member State) and 3 from the European Commission, as well as
108 representatives from all national Parliaments on an equal footing,
and citizens. 108 citizens will participate to discuss citizens' ideas
stemming from the Citizens' Panels and the Multilingual Digital
Platform: 80 representatives from the European Citizens’ Panels, of
which at least one-third will be younger than 25, and 27 from national
Citizens’ Panels or Conference events (one per Member State), as well as
the President of the European Youth Forum.
Some 18 representatives from both the
Committee of the Regions and the European Economic and Social Committee,
and another eight from both social partners and civil society will also
take part, while the High Representative of the Union for Foreign
Affairs and Security Policy will be invited when the international role
of the EU is discussed. Representatives of key stakeholders may also be
invited. The Conference Plenary will be gender-balanced.
Their exchanges will be structured
thematically around recommendations from the Citizens’ Panels and input
gathered from the Multilingual Digital Platform. The Platform is the
single place where input from all Conference-related events will be
collected, analysed and published. In due course, the Plenary will
submit its proposals to the Executive Board, who will draw up a report
in full collaboration and full transparency with the Plenary, and which
will be published on the Multilingual Digital Platform.
The final outcome of the Conference will
be presented in a report to the Joint Presidency. The three
institutions will examine swiftly how to follow up effectively to this
report, each within their own sphere of competences and in accordance
with the Treaties.
Quotes
Parliament’s Co-Chair of the Executive Board, Guy Verhofstadt, said: “We
want to create real momentum from the bottom up. The Conference will be
much more than a listening exercise, but a way to truly include
citizens in mapping out our shared European future. The foundations have
been laid: digital and deliberative democratic experiments that have
never been tried on an EU-wide scale. We will guarantee that their
concerns and proposals will then get a political answer. It’s new and
exciting, and it starts today.”
The Portuguese Secretary of State for EU
Affairs, and Co-Chair from the Presidency of the Council of the EU, Ana
Paula Zacarias, said: “Coming from Porto to Strasbourg, to celebrate
Europe Day and the launching of the Conference on the Future of Europe,
the words of President Mario Soares came to my mind when back in 1976 he
defended: ‘to rethink Europe and its future is a permanent duty of all
Europeans. A joint endeavour that needs to be taken forward with
humbleness facing the historic relevance of our common goals’."
Commission Vice-President for Democracy and Demography, and Co-Chair, Dubravka Šuica, said: “This
Conference is an unprecedented exercise for the EU. We are creating a
space where citizens can debate on a par with elected representatives to
spell out the future of Europe. This has never been tried before, but
we are confident that this will strengthen both our European Union and
our representative democracy. And there is no better date to celebrate
that than on the 9th May.”
Next steps
The Executive Board will soon set the
date for the first Conference Plenary meeting. Preparations for the
Citizens’ Panels are underway, while the number of participants and
events on the Conference’s Multilingual Digital Platform continue to
grow. The Conference is committed to give maximum space to young people
and in this vein, preparations for the European Youth Event organised by
the European Parliament in October also continue.