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Ensuring a vibrant civic space in the European Union

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Gemeinsam mit 415 zivilgesellschaftlichen Organisationen aus EU-Mitgliedstaaten und Kandidatenländern fordert der HVD Bundesverband die Institutionen der EU auf, Maßnahmen zur Förderung einer lebendigen Zivilgesellschaft, zur Wahrung der Demokratie und zum Schutz der Grundrechte Priorität einzuräumen.

To:
Mr Donald Tusk, for the upco­ming Polish Pre­si­den­cy of the Coun­cil of the Euro­pean Uni­on
Ms Met­te Fre­de­rik­sen, for the upco­ming Danish Pre­si­den­cy of the Coun­cil of the Euro­pean Uni­on
Mr Nikos Chris­to­douli­des, for the upco­ming Cypri­ot Pre­si­den­cy of the Coun­cil of the Euro­pean Uni­on
Ms Rober­ta Met­so­la, Pre­si­dent of the Euro­pean Par­lia­ment
Ms Ursu­la Von der Ley­en, Pre­si­dent Elect of the Euro­pean Com­mis­si­on

Hono­ura­ble Pre­si­dents and Prime Minis­ters,

In the per­spec­ti­ve of the upco­ming five-year man­da­te, tog­e­ther with 415 civil socie­ty orga­ni­sa­ti­ons – from 26 Mem­ber Sta­tes and 4 can­di­da­te count­ries – deep­ly com­mit­ted to the pro­mo­ti­on of demo­cra­cy, human rights, and civic enga­ge­ment across Euro­pe, we call on you to prio­ri­ti­se actions that fos­ter a vibrant civic space, uphold demo­cra­cy, and safe­guard fun­da­men­tal rights.

Civil socie­ty plays a pivo­tal role in advan­cing civil, poli­ti­cal, eco­no­mic, social, cul­tu­ral, and envi­ron­men­tal rights. It empowers mar­gi­na­li­sed voices, pro­mo­tes acti­ve par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on in gover­nan­ce, and holds aut­ho­ri­ties accoun­ta­ble.

Despi­te the inva­luable con­tri­bu­ti­ons of civil socie­ty, we are wit­nessing a decli­ne in respect for civic free­doms, the rule of law and demo­cra­cy in the Euro­pean Uni­on, as evi­den­ced by the field, rese­arch and the fin­dings of the Euro­pean Com­mis­si­on rule of law report. The chal­lenges faced by civil socie­ty, inclu­ding rest­ric­ti­ve laws, fun­ding cons­traints, legal harass­ment, and phy­si­cal attacks, threa­ten the very foun­da­ti­on of demo­cra­cy.

While the Euro­pean Uni­on has taken cru­cial steps in the past five years to address demo­cra­tic “backsli­ding” and pro­mo­te civic space, major gaps and chal­lenges must be addres­sed. In the upco­ming legis­la­ti­ve term, the EU must build on the lega­cy of the past five years – par­ti­cu­lar­ly the Euro­pean Commission’s 2022 report on the appli­ca­ti­on of the EU Char­ter of Fun­da­men­tal Rights and fol­low-up con­sul­ta­ti­ons, and 2023 Coun­cil con­clu­si­ons on civic space – to build a more coher­ent and stra­te­gic coope­ra­ti­on and sup­port frame­work, as reques­ted by the Euro­pean civil socie­ty mani­festo endor­sed by over 240 CSOs across Euro­pe. 

Moreo­ver, all Euro­pean laws and poli­ci­es should faci­li­ta­te the actions of civil socie­ty wit­hout nega­ti­ve side effects. This invol­ves con­duc­ting ex-ante fun­da­men­tal rights impact assess­ments of all EU poli­ci­es, incor­po­ra­ting inter­sec­tion­al evi­dence from diver­se civil socie­ty to ensu­re poli­ci­es sup­port the exer­cise of fun­da­men­tal rights.

We call to take up the fol­lo­wing prio­ri­ties in the next five years:

A Euro­pean Civil Socie­ty Stra­tegy, inte­gral to a broa­der Euro­pean Demo­cra­cy Agen­da. This stra­tegy should ack­now­ledge the indis­pensable role of civil socie­ty in all its diver­si­ty in fos­te­ring demo­cra­tic enga­ge­ment and safe­guar­ding human rights. The stra­tegy should pro­vi­de a robust and coher­ent poli­cy frame­work that enables, sup­ports and pro­tects civil socie­ty.

  • A strong man­da­te for a Com­mis­si­on Vice Pre­si­dent respon­si­ble for demo­cra­cy, civic space and dia­lo­gue with civil socie­ty. The role should invol­ve appro­pria­te means to initia­te, spear­head and over­see the imple­men­ta­ti­on of the stra­tegy, and ensu­re cohe­rence bet­ween inter­nal and exter­nal approa­ches to civil socie­ty. The man­da­te should also include proac­ti­ve sup­port to civic actors under pres­su­re and time­ly fol­low-up on civil socie­ty com­plaints on attacks. This should include sup­port for the deve­lo­p­ment of initia­ti­ves aimed at pro­tec­ting civil socie­ty and human rights defen­ders – inclu­ding tho­se in exi­le – from harass­ment, inti­mi­da­ti­on, and attacks, such as the estab­lish­ment of civil socie­ty-led ear­ly war­ning mecha­nisms and pro­tec­tion mecha­nisms offe­ring rapid emer­gen­cy sup­port.
  • Rein­for­cing inter­me­dia­ry bodies and adop­ting a Civil Dia­lo­gue Agree­ment: Inter­me­dia­ry bodies have a cru­cial role in orga­ni­s­ing and chan­nell­ing people’s needs and aspi­ra­ti­ons. Civil dia­lo­gue should be unders­tood as per­ma­nent, struc­tu­red, and meaningful inter­ac­tion bet­ween insti­tu­ti­ons and orga­nis­ed civil socie­ty lea­ding to the co-crea­ti­on of just, inclu­si­ve, and sus­tainable poli­ci­es. A civil dia­lo­gue agree­ment with the EU insti­tu­ti­ons should cle­ar­ly defi­ne the scope, venues, instru­ments, and out­co­mes.
  • Empowe­ring Fun­ding Poli­ci­es: Fun­ding pro­gram­mes for civil socie­ty should be deve­lo­ped through inclu­si­ve, co-crea­ti­on pro­ces­ses, ensu­ring they address the needs of civil socie­ty orga­ni­sa­ti­ons and the com­mu­ni­ties they ser­ve, and redu­cing admi­nis­tra­ti­ve bur­dens. The future Mul­ti­an­nu­al Finan­cial Frame­work should reflect the need to fur­ther sup­port civil socie­ty within the dif­fe­rent poli­cy are­as through both ope­ra­ting grants and pro­ject grants, inclu­ding by incre­asing the bud­get of the Citi­zens, Equa­li­ty, Rights and Values Pro­gram­me (CERV).
  • A Euro­pean Demo­cra­cy Semes­ter: Buil­ding on the Euro­pean rule of law cycle, the EU should estab­lish a Euro­pean Demo­cra­cy Semes­ter, open to can­di­da­te count­ries for acces­si­on, loo­king at the inter­play bet­ween eco­no­mic and social poli­ci­es, and demo­cra­cy. The annu­al review must include a stand-alo­ne chap­ter on civic space and should be more cle­ar­ly and trans­par­ent­ly lin­ked to both enforce­ment and reform mecha­nisms.
  • A stron­ger role of the Fun­da­men­tal Rights Agen­cy (FRA) as the Euro­pean human rights insti­tu­ti­on. This includes enab­ling the FRA to issue its own opi­ni­ons on EU poli­ci­es and sys­te­ma­ti­cal­ly invol­ving the agen­cy in the impact assess­ment. 

In order to make the sup­port to for civil socie­ty effec­ti­ve, the EU insti­tu­ti­ons need to adopt a coher­ent approach to demo­cra­cy insi­de and out­side of the EU, as well as streng­then the demo­cra­tic legi­ti­ma­cy of the Euro­pean poli­ci­es that must crea­te inclu­si­ve socie­ties for all.

The­se recom­men­da­ti­ons, buil­ding on the work of civil socie­ty actors at the natio­nal and Euro­pean level, need to gui­de the action of the Euro­pean Uni­on in the next five years.

We stand rea­dy to col­la­bo­ra­te with all EU insti­tu­ti­ons and poli­ti­cal forces com­mit­ted to advan­cing the­se pro­po­sals. Tog­e­ther, we can build a Euro­pe whe­re civil socie­ty thri­ves, demo­cra­cy flou­ris­hes, and fun­da­men­tal rights are pro­tec­ted.

This docu­ment has been pre­pared in the con­text of the Civil Socie­ty Forum orga­nis­ed in War­saw on June 26th, 2024. It out­lines the impe­ra­ti­ve actions EU insti­tu­ti­ons must under­ta­ke in the upco­ming five-year legis­la­ti­ve term to ensu­re a vibrant civic space. It builds on the work done over the years by civil socie­ty at the natio­nal and Euro­pean level.

We invi­te other civil socie­ty orga­ni­sa­ti­ons to con­ti­nue using and buil­ding on the­se pro­po­sals. We are com­mit­ted to working with insti­tu­ti­ons and poli­ti­cal forces wil­ling to make this agen­da a rea­li­ty. 

Yours sin­ce­re­ly,
Gabri­el­la Civico, Pre­si­dent of Civil Socie­ty Euro­pe
tog­e­ther with 415 Civil Socie­ty Orga­ni­sa­ti­ons

Open let­ter: Ensu­ring a vibrant civic space in the Euro­pean Uni­on – civil society’s expec­ta­ti­ons for the next five years

Annex: Let­ter with detail­ed list of signa­to­ries

Read the let­ter in other lan­guages: Bul­ga­ri­an Dutch French Greek

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