There’s a quote in there:
For instance, it is not possible to interrupt a speaker at will, something that’s common in many national parliaments.
Where? At least here in Spain, you can’t interrupt the speaker when they have the floor. Doing otherwise seems like a recipe for disaster.
The current system DOES allow it
Technically true, not in practice. On almost half of the provinces (those with less than 4 seats)* you risk your vote going to waste if you don’t vote for one of the big two parties.
it’s not a system like the American one, what does not allow it’s the will of the voters
It’s the same issue, but worse in their case. The American system also allows it if only the voters massively voted for some third party.
those on the right do not like a center party.
Do they?
* In fact, you could even include those with 5 seats, which would put it over the 50% of provinces and 30% of seats.
Unfortunately the current system doesn’t allow a small center party to survive and add nuance to the political scene.
There isn’t a binary «veto»/«simple majority». Supermajorities exist, and the Council already has rules like double-majorities to preserver a smaller country’s voice. Vetoes only work for small groups, and cause gridlock in all other cases.
Ireland, for instance is constitutionally neutral
That’s why article 42 is worded that way. Ireland (and Austria) not being able to contribute directly doesn’t mean that the 25 other countries can’t act.
Thanks, since the page didn’t mention where they had gone to I assumed they were just gone.
Gotta say though, not a fan on using subdomains. It would have been better to have everything under social-network.europa.eu (which I just tried and doesn’t have a web page). It’s not like there’s a limit on number of profiles per instance.
Aren’t the Olympics free?
I don’t think anybody in Spain cares about this.
Might be an issue with fonts?
Honestly, just use Debian. It can run under 200MB of RAM (default install), so it beats all distros on the list except for TinyCore and SliTaz, and it actually has packages.
It’s a bad thing because the economy slows down and companies have less income, which means less pay for the workers.
Now that you mention that, I seem to recall something similar does already exist in the EU Parliament. Blue Cards, which I think every MEP has a few of.
From the first article (which I admit I just skimmed the top of it):
Could be interesting to see how that turns out.