What is this about?
The Treaty of Lisbon is an agreement between all EU countries. It sets out the EU’s powers, responsibilities, and how it is organised.
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Who does it affect?
Everyone in the EU – citizens, businesses, and governments – because it shapes the laws that affect the daily lives of everyone in the EU.
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Why is it important?
The EU wouldn’t have clear rules on how to make decisions, pass laws, or protect people’s rights without this treaty.
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Main Changes Brought by the Treaty of Lisbon:
- Stronger Democracy
- The European Parliament gained more power, especially in passing laws in cooperation with the Council of the EU.
- Citizens gained the right to propose legislation through the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) – if 1 million citizens sign a specific petition, the EU must consider and discuss their idea.
- Clearer Leadership
- Creation of the President of the European Council (a fixed, renewable position) to make the EU to be more stable.
- Creation of the High Representative for Foreign Affairs to strengthen the EU’s voice in international affairs.
- More Efficient Decision-Making
- Increased the use of majority voting in the Council instead of requiring unanimous agreement, making it easier to pass laws.
- Stronger Role of National Parliaments
- National parliaments can now check EU proposals and raise a ”yellow card” if they believe the EU is interfering too much in national matters.
- Legally Binding Rights
- The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights became legally binding, giving citizens stronger legal protection.
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