The principle of subsidiarity European Parliament(欧洲议会辅助性原则的原则).pdf
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THE PRINCIPLE OF SUBSIDIARITY
In areas in which the European Union does not have exclusive competence, the principle of
subsidiarity, laid down in the Treaty on European Union, defines the circumstances in which
it is preferable for action to be taken by the Union, rather than the Member States
LEGAL BASIS
Article 5(3) of the Treaty on European Union (TEU) and Protocol (No 2) on the application of
the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality
OBJECTIVES
The principle of subsidiarity and the principle of proportionality govern the exercise of the EU ’s
competences. In areas in which the European Union does not have exclusive competence, the
principle of subsidiarity seeks to safeguard the ability of the Member States to take decisions
and action and authorises intervention by the Union when the objectives of an action cannot
be sufficiently achieved by the Member States, but can be better achieved at Union level, ‘by
reason of the scale and effects of the proposed action ’ The purpose of including a reference to
the principle in the EU Treaties is also to ensure that powers are exercised as close to the citizen
as possible, in accordance with the proximity principle referred to in Article 10(3) of the TEU
ACHIEVEMENTS
A. Origin and history
The principle of subsidiarity was formally enshrined by the Maastricht Treaty, which included a
reference to it in the Treaty establishing the European Community (TEC) The Single European
Act (1987) had already incorporated a subsidiarity criterion into environmental policy, however,
albeit without referring to it explicitly as such. In its judgment of 21 February 1995 (T-29/92),
the Court of First Instance of the European Communities ruled that the principle of subsidiarity
was not a general principle of law, against which the legality of Community action should have
been tested, prior to the entry into force of the TEU
Without changing the wording of the ref
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