
The EU will introduce reforms to curb abuses in party financing for European Parliament elections as it tries to bolster trust in the bloc's democracy, a senior official said Friday.
The European Commission,
the EU executive, announced the plans as part of a drive to increase
public support for the European Union following a populist wave of
dissatisfaction that led to the shock British vote last year to exit the
28-nation bloc.
"We need a more democratic European Union with policies and spending that better reflect the wishes of our citizens," European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans said at a press conference in Brussels.
Timmermans
said the commission hopes the measures win approval from member states
and the European Parliament in time for European elections in 2019.
The
changes aim to stop cases where one person or different members of a
single national party sponsor more than one European political party,
creating a situation where many parties represent the same group of
people.
"Some appear to be little more than fronts to extract money from the European taxpayer," Timmermans said. "This abuse must end and quickly.
"We
therefore propose to allow only political parties and no longer
individuals to sponsor the registration of a European political party."
In
a bid for greater transparency, the reforms will require national
parties' websites to show the political programme, logo and gender
balance of the European party they are affiliated with.
The
new rules, he said, would also aim to ensure that funding for European
political parties better reflect the true share of each party's vote in
elections to the European Parliament, the EU's only elected body.
Until now, 15 percent of the total budget is distributed evenly to all parties, however large or small their vote share.
The commission now proposes to allocate 95 percent of the total budget on the basis of voter share in European elections.
He refused to cite specific cases of abuse pending the outcome of investigations.
Timmermans
also proposed reforming the European Citizens' Initiative where the EU
is required to respond to a petition on proposal when it is signed by
one million citizens from at least one-fourth of the member states.
The reforms calls for simplifying the rules for participation and lowering the eligible age for participation to 16 from 18.
Source: Pulse.ng
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