THE EUROPEAN CHARTER OF REGIONAL SELF-GOVERNMENT - Follow-up given by the Committee of Ministers to Recommendation 34 (1997) on the draft European Charter of Regional Self-Government - CPR (9) 6 Part II

Rapporteur: Peter RABE (Germany)

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EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM

Introduction

Democratic structures are developing rapidly in the new Europe united within the Council of Europe. The 44 Member states of the Council of Europe have accepted to follow and implement the standards and values of the organisation which are the protection of Human rights, the rule of law and the promotion of a pluralistic democracy. Democratic structures at local and regional levels are strengthened and further developed by the Council of Europe and especially its Congress of Local and Regional Authorities.

Local democracy is based on the European Charter of Local self-government, a European Convention which was of the utmost importance for the creation of the local democratic structures in the countries of transition in central and eastern Europe. Regional democracy has not yet a comparable reference document. The Congress decided therefore to fill the gap and to propose to governments a European Charter for regional self-government in the form of a binding convention. The existence of such a document will facilitate the building-up of regional democratic structures in member countries and the strengthening of the structures where they exist already.
The Congress of Local and Regional Authorities and especially its Chamber of Regions are undertaking all necessary efforts to succeed in this field.

1. - 1997 – the CLRAE Recommendation 34 (1997)

Following a proposal of the Chamber of Regions, the report on the European Charter of Regional Self-Government was presented by Mr Peter Rabe (Lower Saxony, Germany) at the 4th Session of the Congress. The Recommendation 34 (1997), which was adopted by the Congress on 5 June 1997, invited the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe to support the draft European Charter of Regional Self-Government and the Committee of Ministers to examine the draft European Charter of Regional Self-Government, with a view to its adoption as a Council of Europe convention. This convention should become a complement to the European Charter of Local Self-Government and the most appropriate legal instrument for protecting and guaranteeing regional self-government.

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe supported the draft Charter by adopting on 7 November 1997 the Recommendation 1349 (1997). The Assembly of European Regions and the Council of European Municipalities and Regions also expressed their favourable opinion on this draft Charter. The Committee of the Regions of the European Union at its 36th plenary session of 13 December 2000 unanimously adopted the Opinion on the Recommendation of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe on a European Charter of Regional Self-Government supporting the draft charter and calling on the Member States to turn it the into a convention.

This issue was also discussed at the Ancona Conference of the Congress on the Charters of Local and Regional Self-Government (16 October 1999). The Final Declaration of the conference stressed that “The system of international legal guarantees in relation to respect for the principle of subsidiarity at all levels of government will be incomplete until the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe adopts the draft European Charter of Regional Self-Government, drawn up by the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe.”

2. - 1998 – the Committee’s of Ministers first reaction

Bearing in mind all these elements, the Ministers’ Deputies, who are responsible to take a decision on all Council of Europe draft conventions, adopted at their 623rd meeting (17 March 1998), the ad hoc terms of reference N° CM/696/170398 asking the Steering Committee on Local and Regional Democracy (CDLR) to identify elements of a possible legal instrument on regional self-government on which sufficiently wide agreement can be reached and hence which will point to the kind of legal instrument which may prove possible and desirable. This task of the CDLR should be completed by June 1999.

3. - 1999 – the CDLR’ opinion on the preparation of a legal instrument on regional self-government

The CDLR examined this question at its 21st (2 June 1998), 22nd (1 December 1998) and 23rd (31 May 1999) meetings and adopted a legal opinion concerning the preparation of a legal instrument on regional self-government. In this opinion, the CDLR recognised the importance of the process of regionalisation in reinforcing democracy and stability in Europe and noted the diversity of situations, the impossibility of presenting a single model for regionalisation and that regional structures were not appropriate for all states.

During the discussions, the CDLR identified:

On this basis, the CDLR discussed the possible nature of legal instrument, taking into consideration the necessary flexibility of such an instrument. A substantial number of delegations expressed the opinion that the drawing up of a European Charter of Regional Self-Government – as a convention – would be preferable, as long as such a Charter takes into account the diversity of models of regionalisation in Europe and does not call into question the legitimacy of one or another model. A number of other countries nevertheless stressed the necessity of a recommendation, on the grounds that it would better ensure the respect of the diverse situations in this field.

At the end, the CDLR concluded that it would be legally and technically feasible to draw up a legal instrument on regional self-government and decided to propose to the Ministers’ Deputies that it should be given a double task, that of simultaneously drawing up a draft convention and a flexible draft recommendation. This would allow member states to take a position having full knowledge of the matter and would favour a wide agreement on the text to be finally retained. It proposed that these new terms of reference should finish at the end of 2000.

The CDLR proposed that both the Parliamentary Assembly and the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe should join in the work of the Drafting Committee which the CDLR has suggested should be set up by the Ministers’ Deputies.

4. - 2000 – allocation of the ad hoc terms of reference to CDLR for the elaboration of a legal instrument on regional self-government.

The Committee of Ministers considered the CDLR’s proposals at its meetings on September 1999, without, however, coming to any clear conclusions as to how best to proceed. In the absence of majority support, it postponed its decision on what instructions to give the CDLR for drafting a convention-type Charter and/or a Recommendation.

The Committee of Ministers re-examined this subject and decided, on 12 January 2000, to charge the Steering Committee on Local and Regional Democracy (CDLR) to undertake until December 2001 the preparatory work for the elaboration of a legal instrument on regional self-government, on the basis of the previous work of the Committee (see ad hoc terms of reference – Appendix I).

5. - 2000 – December 2001 – work of the Drafting Committee for the Legal Instrument on Regional Self-Government

When carrying out the task of elaboration of a legal instrument on regional self-government, the CDLR was assisted by a Drafting Committee composed of representatives of 17 member States the Committee’s work having been open to all member States (see ad hoc terms of reference – Appendix II).

The Drafting Committee held five meetings: 3-4 February 2000, 23-24 October 2000, 23 February 2001, 25-26 June 2001 and 5-6 November 2001. The CLRAE was represented at the above-mentioned meetings by Mr Cuatrecasas, President of the Congress, by Mr Koivisto, President of the Chamber of Regions, by Mr Semmelroggen, Assistant to Mr Rabe, and by Mr De Bruycker, University of Brussels, consultant-expert.

During the first meeting on 3-4 February 2000, the Committee had a first exchange of views on the general orientation to be given to its work and on the different models of regional self-government existing in the member States. It adopted a standard outline for describing the various national models, which the national delegations attending were invited to amplify (see Appendix III).

At its second meeting (23-24 October 2000), the Drafting Committee defined, on the basis of the information obtained, a classification of six models of regional self-government for the principal "types" of regions in Europe (see Appendix IV).

During its meeting of 23 February 2001, the Drafting Committee examined in detail two preliminary draft models (1 and 6) of regional self-government.

The Drafting Committee examined also at its last meeting a document on the common principles of the six models. This was transmitted to CDLR for its meeting of 10-12 December. These basic concepts and common principles may constitute the common core of principles of a legal instrument designed to apply to all States, which wish to establish or to reform a regional democratic governmental level.

Country

Regional entities

Regional models

Comments

Belgium

3 Regions

Federal state; model 1

 

Bulgaria

28 Regions

Unitary state; the region is a decentralised state structure

The region is not a self-government

Czech Republic

14 Regions

Unitary state; model 3

There is no hierarchical relationship with the municipalities

Denmark

14 Counties

Greater Copenhagen

Unitary state; model 5

There is no hierarchical relationship with the municipalities; 1 metropolitan region

Estonia

15 Regions

Unitary state; the region is a decentralised state structure

The region is not a self-government

Finland

19 Regions

Unitary state; model 6

There is no hierarchical relationship with the municipalities

France

26 Regions (including 4 DOM)

Unitary state; model 5

There is no hierarchical relationship with the municipalities

Germany

16 Länder

Federal state; model 1

 

Hungary

Counties

Unitary state; model 3

 

Italy

20 Regions including 5 with special status

State with very wide regional autonomy;
model 1 (Regions with special status) and 3 (other Regions)

 

Latvia

26 Regions

Unitary state; model 6

 

Malta

3 Regions

Unitary state; the region is a structure for co-ordination of municipalities

The region is not a self-government

Poland

16 Regions

Unitary state; model 4

There is no hierarchical relationship with the districts (powiats) and municipalities

Russian Federation

89 constituent entities with different statutes

Federal state; model 1

 

Spain

17 Autonomous Communities with differentiated statutes (asymmetrical regionalisation)

State with wide regional autonomy; model 2

 

Sweden

20 Counties

Unitary state; model 5 (counties)

There is no hierarchical relationship with the municipalities

Switzerland

26 Cantons

Federal state; model 1

 

Turkey

81 Provinces

Unitary state; model 5

There is no hierarchical relationship with the municipalities

United Kingdom

3 “countries” and a “province”, with differentiated statutes
Greater London

Unitary state with elements of wide regional autonomy;
model 2 (Scotland and Northern Ireland), 4 (Wales) and 5 (Greater London)

No regional devolution for England. In Scotland, power to enact primary legislation + autonomous civil and penal judicial system. In Northern Ireland, power to enact primary legislation. In Wales, power to enact subordinate legislation. 1 metropolitan region

 

1 Power of the region to enact primary legislation: the power to enact legislation in designated areas of competence, which is to apply to a region, and which for those areas of competence is of the same legal status as legislation enacted by the national parliament for such (other) areas of competence as are the responsibility of that parliament.

2 The scope of this decision-making power may vary. It consists in general in implementing national legislative measures.