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Qualified Majority Voting

Voting weights in the Council of the European Union today(weighted majority system):
Country Votes Population
(millons)

Germany 10 82,0
United Kingdom 10 59,4
France 10 59,1
Italy 10 57,7
Spain 8 39,4
Poland 8 38,6
Netherlands 5 15,8
Greece 5 10,6
Czech Republic 5 10,3
Belgium 5 10,2
Hungary 5 10,0
Portugal 5 9,9
Sweden 4 8,9
Austria 4 8,1
Slovakia 3 5,4
Denmark 3 5,3
Finland 3 5,2
Republic of Ireland 3 3,7
Lithuania 3 3,7
Latvia 3 2,4
Slovenia 3 2,0
Estonia 3 1,4
Cyprus 2 0,8
Luxembourg 2 0,4
Malta 2 0,4
Total votes 124
Blocking votes 37
Qualified majority 88

Qualified Majority Voting (QMV) is a voting procedure employed in the Council of the European Union for some decisions, under which each member state has a fixed (weighted) number of votes. At present, any decision taken using QMV must gain a minimum of about 71% of the total votes in order to be adopted. Currently this is 88 votes (of 124), so it needs 37 to block a decision.

Two changes are planned to this:

  • When the Treaty of Nice comes into effect on November 1st 2004, these weightings will change to take into account the 10 new member states who joined on 1 May 2004. (See article on the Treaty for more details.)
  • If and when the new Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe comes into force, the rule for QMV will be simplified. Under this new rule, any QMV decision will require a 'double majority' of at least 55% of member states representing 65% of citizens.

Use of QMV vs unanimity

At present, QMV is used to make some decisions, while others require unanimity among all Council members. Under the proposed Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe, which has been agreed by the Council but has yet to be ratified by all member states, decisions in about 20 more policy areas will be taken using QMV, leaving only sensitive issues such as tax, social policy, defence and foreign policy subject to unanimity.

It is argued that this change will be necessary in order to streamline decision-making and prevent gridlock in a newly enlarged European Union. Some commentators have seen the change as a loss of sovereignty from individual member states, since it effectively abolishes the national veto in many secondary areas.

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