Resolution 1746
(2010)1 Democracy in Europe: crisis and
perspectives
1. The Parliamentary Assembly notes with
concern that the recent world economic crisis has accentuated
symptoms of a crisis of democracy which have been present for
some time now. In particular:
1.1. lack of necessary regulation and
co-operation at the international level to help face the
challenges of globalisation, as well as lack of political
control over financial interests;
1.2. highly centralised executive decision
making and global negotiation mechanisms with little
parliamentary control, insufficient transparency and without
opportunities for citizens’ participation. This has further
deepened people’s distrust in democratic institutions and the
quality of the democracy they live in and increased their
feeling of powerlessness and frustration;
1.3. concentration of power and money and, in
some Council of Europe member states, also an excessive
concentration of the media, in the hands of a few. More and
more politicians have become dependent on the huge fortunes or
the favours of those who own the media. As inequality and the
concentration of wealth increase, so does the corruption of
democratic institutions;
1.4. a disinterest in the current
institutionalised procedures of democracy and a crisis in
representation. Election turnouts have gone into freefall in
most European countries and abstention rates reached up to 80%
in some of them in the 2009 elections to the European
Parliament;
1.5. populist and extremist movements,
identity politics and nationalistic rhetoric have been
reinforced during recent years under crisis conditions in many
member states;
1.6. an almost unlimited collection of
personal data by state agencies, notably the police and social
security agencies, as well as by private companies, threatens
personal freedom and privacy, which are preconditions for free
participation in democratic life.
2. The Assembly considers that the current
crisis in representation requires that, apart from the
traditional forms of mandate and delegation, with which fewer
and fewer citizens are satisfied, the political relationship
between society and the authorities must also be approached in
a different manner. Thus, without putting into question
representative democracy, the Assembly underlines that
representation can no longer be the only expression of
democracy; the latter has also to be developed beyond
representation, in particular by the following means:
2.1. more sustained forms of interaction
between citizens and the authorities must be established,
beyond the conventional representative approach, in order to
include, in a carefully designed manner, direct democratic
elements in the decision-making process;
2.2. participatory democracy should be
enhanced as a process in which all people, and not only
nationals, are involved in the conduct of public affairs, at
local, regional, national and European levels;
2.3. democracy should be understood not just
as a system or the sum of individual rights, but as a form of
society which requires rules for social justice and
redistribution and implies not only delegating and taking
decisions, but also discussing and living together in dignity,
respect and solidarity. It is work in progress which is put to
the test on a daily basis;
2.4. the renewal of politics also requires
the development of a new culture of civic and political
responsibility. The latter needs to be considered in terms of
responsiveness and accountability, as well as transparency, on
the part of those who govern. This also applies to civil
society actors who participate in the political debate. As far
as the accountability and transparency of political parties
are concerned, the Assembly refers to the newly adopted code
of good conduct in the field of political parties.
3. The Assembly stresses that the right to
participate in the conduct of public affairs, be it at local,
regional, national or European levels, is a human right and a
fundamental political freedom, which should thus be embodied
as such in the European Convention on Human Rights (the
Convention, ETS No. 5).
4. Humanising and democratising the process
of globalisation is another challenge the Council of Europe is
facing. Its contribution could consist in developing, along
with other actors, guidelines to regulate globalisation in
full respect of human rights, including women’s rights and
social rights, ecological imperatives and the rule of law.
5. Stronger support should be given to
transnational networks formed by citizens to address specific
issues, such as environmental, social or even constitutional
questions, especially in view of the advent of transnational
European democracy building. In this context, the Assembly
welcomes the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) provided for
by the Treaty of Lisbon of the European Union, which gives
European citizens an opportunity to present legislative
proposals to the European Commission, thus constituting the
first instrument of direct and transnational democracy in the
European Union. The Assembly expects that the European Union
institutions will implement the ECI in such a manner as to
enable all democratically engaged civil society groups, and
not only the privileged ones, to make use of it in the common
European interest.
6. With a view to contributing to enhancing
people’s participation in the conduct of public affairs,
improving the quality of democracy and promoting the common
interest, the Assembly:
6.1. calls on Council of Europe member states
to:
6.1.1. establish participatory and
deliberative processes and structures, such as participatory
budgeting, citizen initiated referendums and citizens’ juries
or conferences, open to all those living in a country and not
only to nationals;
6.1.2. set up, enhance and promote
independent supervisory institutions, such as ombudsperson’s
offices and bodies dealing with access to public documents and
data protection, so as to enhance the concept of political
responsibility and accountability;
6.1.3.improve citizenship education and
political training by ensuring compliance with the new Council
of Europe Charter on Education for Democratic Citizenship and
Human Rights Education (Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)7), as well
as implementing the Council of Europe’s programmes in the
field of democratic citizenship and human rights
education;
6.2. decides to undertake further reflection,
in close consultation with the European Commission for
Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), with a view to
elaborating an additional protocol to the European Convention
on Human Rights guaranteeing the right to participate in the
conduct of public affairs as a human right and fundamental
freedom. This would supplement, on the one hand, the right to
vote and stand for elections, guaranteed by the Protocol to
the Convention (ETS No. 9, ratified by all but two member
states of the Council of Europe) and, on the other, similar
initiatives taken at local level;
6.3. resolves to organise open public debates
in the context of the drafting process of the new protocol so
that this process offers an opportunity to promote public
discourse and raise awareness on the need to increase
citizens’ active participation and ensure further involvement
of all people in the conduct of public affairs.
7. The Assembly, recalling its earlier
proposal in
Resolution 1886 (2009) on the future of the Council of
Europe in the light of its sixty years of experience, and
reiterating that, among the three main pillars of the Council
of Europe, the democracy pillar needs to be strengthened,
further conceptualised and gain in visibility, proposes
that:
7.1. a Strasbourg Democracy Forum be set up
as an umbrella structure providing an international reference
in the field of democracy and a laboratory for new ideas and
proposals – including older ones which have been forgotten and
need to be put back on the agenda – with a view to restoring
and strengthening democracy. Such a structure could also serve
as a barometer with respect to the main new challenges to
democracy in Europe today, including those raised by
globalisation;
7.2. a high-profile personality, a sort of a
delegate for democracy, be entrusted with the task of leading
and animating the Strasbourg Democracy Forum, as well as
disseminating, on a permanent basis, the Council of Europe’s
message on democracy-related issues of major current interest.
8. The Assembly invites the national
parliaments of the Council of Europe member states to examine
the present report and resolution and provide their feedback
in an appropriate manner with a view to ensuring relevant
follow-up in the framework of national legislation and
policies.
9. The Assembly invites the European Union
institutions to open a discussion on ways of getting the
parliaments of the member states of the European Union more
closely involved in Community decision making.
1. Assembly debate on 23 June 2010
(24th Sitting) (see Doc.
12279, report of the Political Affairs Committee,
rapporteur: Mr Gross). Text adopted by the Assembly on
23 June 2010 (24th Sitting).
See also
Recommendation 1928 (2010).
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