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European Parliament |
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European ParliamentParliament of the European Union (EU), which meets in Strasbourg, France, and Brussels, Belgium. Members are elected for a five-year term. The number of seats in the parliament is related to the number of EU members – after the accession of ten new countries to the EU in 2004 the number of seats rose from 626 to 732. The president of the European Parliament is Pat Cox (from 1999). Originally merely consultative, the European Parliament became directly elected in 1979, and later assumed increased powers. Though still not a true legislative body, under a co-decision legislative procedure introduced by the 1992 Maastricht Treaty (and extended by the 1997 Amsterdam Treaty), the European Parliament has been placed on an equal footing with the Council of the European Union in the adoption of legislation in many areas, with proposals requiring the agreement of both institutions. It can also dismiss the whole European Commission (which it threatened to do in January 1999) by a two-thirds majority, and reject the EU budget in its entirety. It also has an important role in overseeing EU spending, questioning EU commissioners and national ministers, and approving international agreements. In addition, it appoints an ombudsman to consider complaints from citizens concerning maladministration by EU bodies. It is the only EU institution that meets and deliberates in public.
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On Sunday we have a common assembly of all our members, whether they live in the city or in the outlying districts. The standard can be used by companies that use a common assembly with different component configurations, each with a unique part number. Separate engineering teams can design and manufacture parts of a common assembly in record time, but the parts must interface successfully. |
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