Thursday, June 19, 2008

42 days and further

Whilst we are debating the decision of David Davis and Magna Carter (which some of us are) Some home truths:

European Arrest Warrant.

The European Arrest Warrant (EAW, or more rarely, EUAW) is an arrest warrant to allow the arrest of criminal suspects and their transfer for trial or detention which is valid throughout the states of the European Union (EU). The EAW is an attempt to increase the speed of extradition throughout EU countries, as well as change the mechanism from having a "political and administrative phase" into a system run by the judiciary


Rapporteur: Graham Watson, Liberal Democrat MEP

In favour

Nick Clegg, Chris Davies, Andrew Duff, Chris Huhne, Sarah Ludford, Liz Lynne, Bill Newton-Dunn, Nicholson of Winterbourne, Graham Watson
Sir Robert Atkins, Chris Beazley, John Bowis, Philip Bradbourn, Philip Bushill-Matthews, Martin Callanan, Giles Chichester, Den Dover, James Elles, Jonathan Evans, Robert Goodwill, Dan Hannan, Malcolm Harbour, Chris Heaton-Harris, Roger Helmer, Caroline Jackson, Timothy Kirkhope, Edward McMillan Scott, Neil Parish, John Purvis, Robert Sturdy, David Sumberg, Charles Tannock, Theresa Villiers
Gordan Adams, Michael Cashman, Richard Corbett, Robert Evans, Glyn Ford, Neena Gill, Mary Honeyball, Richard Howitt, Stephen Hughes, Glenys Kinnock, Eryl McNally, David Martin, Ben Miller, Simon Murphy, Mel Read, Catherine Stihler, Gary Titley, Mark Watts, Philip Whitehead
Jill Evans, Ian Hudghton, Jean Lambert

Against:

Nigel Farage, Jeffrey Titford,

EU Biometric passports:

Supported by PSE, EPP and ALDE in the European Parliament. That's Labour, Tories and Lib Dems who, despite what they say about ID cards, supported the EU being in control of biometrics in our main ID document which would lead to 'further integration' of EU documents.

4 comments:

Chris Palmer said...

This wasn't one of those votes where most people didn't know what they were voting on/for because they had 10 votes in 2 seconds or something bizarre like that? (You will obviously know better that I the rules of procedure in the EU Parliament - well, when they are not breaking them that is...)

Trixy said...

As someone who used to make voting lists for a group, the analysis of legislation in the EP takes months and no sensible MEP would go into a vote without a voting meeting beforehand. At the particular moment in time, it's a nightmare to know what you are voting on, but any discussions and changes should be made and discussed beforehand. When it's the final vote it is much easier than a numbered amendment. I will publish voting lists on blog on near future to show people what it's actually like.

Trixy said...

As someone who used to make voting lists for a group, the analysis of legislation in the EP takes months and no sensible MEP would go into a vote without a voting meeting beforehand. At the particular moment in time, it's a nightmare to know what you are voting on, but any discussions and changes should be made and discussed beforehand. When it's the final vote it is much easier than a numbered amendment. I will publish voting lists on blog on near future to show people what it's actually like.

Mark Wadsworth said...

"Magna Carta"