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ESPON

COVID Statement - News 2020

CEMR taking part in a study on COVID’s territorial impact and local responses


CEMR is partnering with ESPON – the EU research programme on territorial development – to study the territorial impacts of COVID-19 and policy answers in European regions and cities. We will collect information through a survey of our members and gather relevant case studies from our experts.

The resulting study will seek to identify the patterns of COVID’s spread and emphasise both the importance of local governments in assessing the pandemic’s impact, as well as the role of their associations.

Lessons from the COVID19 Pandemic

COVID recovery - News

Local and regional governments need stronger support, recognition, and autonomy in times of crisis


As Europe continues to grapple with the long-term consequences of the COVID-19 crisis, the Council of European Municipalities and Regions (CEMR) highlights the vital role of local and regional governments during the pandemic and the urgent need for stronger multilevel governance and financial resilience.

From the earliest days of the pandemic, local and regional authorities were at the frontline: managing public health measures, ensuring social services, maintaining education and local transport, and supporting vulnerable groups. They also had to cope with increased expenditure while facing plummeting revenues, a phenomenon CEMR described as the “scissor effect.” Despite their efforts, many municipalities and regions received little compensation or recognition for their critical role.

In light of these challenges, CEMR has outlined ten key recommendations to ensure more effective responses in future crises and support long-term resilience:

  1. Recognition of essential services
    Local and regional governments must be acknowledged as essential actors in crisis management. Their competences, funding, and resources must be guaranteed and reinforced, with better alignment of policies across government levels.
  2. Equal access to EU recovery tools
    Municipalities and regions should be directly involved in shaping and implementing national recovery plans, particularly in the context of the Recovery and Resilience Facility. This means ensuring equal access to EU funds, simplification of procedures, and stronger monitoring mechanisms.
  3. Flexible financial frameworks
    The EU fiscal rules need to evolve. CEMR calls for more flexibility for local and regional governments in borrowing and investment, especially for long-term sustainable projects. Debt incurred for these purposes should be excluded from deficit calculations under the Stability and Growth Pact.
  4. Stronger digital transition
    The pandemic highlighted the digital divide across Europe. More investment is needed to strengthen local digital infrastructure and capacity, especially in rural and underserved areas. Local and regional authorities must play a central role in the EU’s digital transition.
  5. Health, care, and social services
    Municipalities and regions are often responsible for delivering or coordinating health and care services. They must be involved in national health policy planning, with proper resources and long-term investment to ensure quality and accessibility.
  6. Support for local economies
    Cities and regions played a key role in supporting local businesses and workers during the crisis. The EU and Member States must ensure that economic recovery policies reach the local level and that municipalities can take proactive measures to protect local economies.
  7. Strengthening social cohesion
    COVID-19 amplified existing inequalities. Local authorities are best placed to address social exclusion, support vulnerable groups, and reinforce community resilience, but need adequate funding and policy support.
  8. Better governance
    The pandemic exposed the weaknesses of top-down crisis responses. Multilevel governance, subsidiarity, and the partnership principle must be strengthened to ensure effective cooperation and faster, more tailored solutions.
  9. Green recovery
    Recovery funds and policies must prioritise sustainability. Local governments are already implementing the Green Deal at ground level, through sustainable mobility, energy-efficient buildings, and green public spaces. Their role must be formally supported in EU policy and funding instruments.
  10. Crisis preparedness
    Europe must develop better tools for future emergencies. This includes building the capacity of local administrations, sharing best practices, and ensuring municipalities have access to critical resources when crises hit.

Conclusion
The COVID-19 pandemic has been a stress test for European governance and local governments passed it with resilience and determination. Now, CEMR urges EU institutions and Member States to turn these lessons into action. By strengthening the role, autonomy, and resources of local and regional authorities, Europe can better prepare for the next crisis and deliver a fair, green, and inclusive recovery for all.

Read the position paper here 

For more information, contact: 

MFF and COVID recovery

MFF and COVID recovery - News 2020

Upcoming recovery package and MFF should support municipalities and regions


The response to the COVID-19 pandemic has made it clear: local and regional governments are playing a crucial role in implementing and monitoring the necessary measures to tackle the crisis. With revenue sources in steep decline and expenses skyrocketing, municipalities and regions need to be specifically targeted under the European Union’s proposed recovery plan.

More than ever, the EU needs a robust budget, both for the immediate recovery and to invest in future generations. This has been clearly voiced by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and is backed up by the joint proposal of French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel to provide a €500 billion recovery fund to modernise the European economy.

The European institutions and national governments must closely involve municipalities, regions and their representative associations in the implementation of the recovery fund.  As the OECD states in its recent study on the territorial impact of COVID-19, coordination mechanisms and shared responsibilities across all levels of government are essential to ensuring a coherent and effective response.

What’s more, the recovery fund will be linked to the Commission’s recommendations to member states issued as part of the European Semester. Given that 60% of these recommendations have a local or regional impact, it is essential to take into account local and regional governments’ role in the recovery. This is all the more necessary insofar as the fund aims to support those regions and sectors that have suffered most.

Supporting future-oriented investments and resilient territories

CEMR fully supports using the EU’s new Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) to encourage future-oriented investments that respect European climate ambitions and foster resilient societies, including through the Green Deal and the Digital Strategy.

Member States have a unique opportunity here to take action to mitigate and fight against climate change”, said French Senator and CEMR Spokesperson for Climate Ronan Dantec. “The EU’s immediate and long-term investments need to be climate-proof, especially in the areas of mobility, construction and energy.

Cohesion funds are more crucial than ever to enabling Europe’s towns and regions to undertake long-term and sustainable planning and investment, and thus become more resilient. That is why cohesion policy should continue to make up at least one third of the EU budget.

“Europe now needs to be thinking about the post-crisis situation and long-term needs”, said Ilaria Bugetti, Councillor of the Toscana Region and CEMR Spokesperson for Territorial Development. “We need to support the local economies and citizens that have suffered from the lockdowns, rethink territorial planning and redesign urban spaces to make them more resilient; we have to invest in innovation and education to make our societies sustainable and fit for a carbon-free future. This is a huge effort, to which cohesion funds need to considerably contribute.”

Decentralised cooperation will contribute to the EUs international engagements

Municipalities and regions are also well-placed to contribute to the EU’s international development policies, if supported by the right tools, notably the new Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument (NDICI).  “Local and regional governments’ actions with partner countries to limit the spread of COVID-19 show once again their central role beyond our borders”, said Tine Soens, Municipal Councillor for Kortrijk (Belgium) and PLATFORMA Spokesperson for International Cooperation. “By financing decentralised cooperation between towns and regions, the EU’s long-term budget can foster a swift recovery and resilient societies worldwide.

The future EU budget must be agreed as soon as possible and ideally before the end of the year. Any further delay would jeopardise the security of many planned EU projects and negatively impact municipalities, regions, SMEs, workers and an already vulnerable population.

EU funds

EU Funds - News 2020

How to upgrade the EU’s COVID response in the territories


This op-ed by CEMR Secretary General, Frédéric Vallier, was originally published in English in Euractiv and in French in Le Courrier des Maires and in Euractiv France.

While all of Europe is reeling from the coronavirus pandemic, the crisis undeniably has a strong territorial dimension. Some localities and territories are more severely affected and different regions are not equally well equipped to deal with such a rapidly propagating virus. There is unbearable pressure on hospitals and health services, most severely in areas such as northern Italy, Spain, northern England, or eastern France.

Municipalities and regions are at the forefront of this crisis, whether in enforcing lockdowns, continuing to provide essential public services – above all healthcare and support for the most vulnerable – or in leading the gradual relaxation of containment measures. At the same time, many of their sources of revenue are falling due to the closure of public facilities and the general economic slowdown.

The European Commission has taken steps towards addressing these challenges by creating the Coronavirus Response Investment Initiatives (CRII and CRII+). These will provide unspent cohesion funds to finance medical assistance and economic and social support to fight the pandemic.

The new rules feature some welcome flexibility. Member States will be able to redirect money from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) towards the priorities they identify, such as direct support to SMEs. They will also have the option of transferring money between different thematic priorities and cohesion funds.

In this difficult moment, we are fortunate to be able to build on solidarity and cooperation between European regions. This is what European Cohesion Policy is all about.

Improving the Coronavirus Response Investment Initiatives

However, there continue to be obstacles to the rapid and smooth implementation of the new measures and the EU’s territorial response to coronavirus could be improved. In particular, the rules of audits and control need to be drastically relaxed to allow the Managing Authorities to make rapid and secure use of these measures. The controls on state aid, public procurement, traceability, justification of expenses and eligibility of beneficiaries must be adapted to the new needs and the emergency situation created by the crisis. 

The possibility of transferring funds between categories of regions should be solely motivated by high local or regional impact of the current health, social and economic crisis. Otherwise, there is a risk that funds will be recentralised at the national level at a time when Member States are defining how they will work with the local and regional level for the next budgetary period. 

The impact of the COVID-19 crisis on the local and regional level is tremendous and the proposed support will not be sufficient to address it completely. What’s more CRII and CRII+ will only use unallocated cohesion funds from the previous spending period and hence the money available in various countries will not necessarily be proportionate to COVID-19’s impact there.

At CEMR, we strongly believe the European Commission and Member States should explore additional possibilities to support municipalities and regions. The Commission in particular should consider extraordinary measures for 2021 in order to ensure continuity of the response to the economic and social challenges that are only beginning to emerge. 

The EU’s long-term response

We can’t go back to business as usual. We need a long-term budget and strategy to be prepared for future pandemics and crises. 

Member States are struggling to contain the pandemic because of a structural lack of investment in critical sectors. This shows more than ever the need for a strong Cohesion Policy, which is not designed to respond to an urgent crisis situation, but rather to structurally strengthen regions’ social and economic development (including health and climate action) through long-term planning.

This crisis has also shown that European states have failed to ensure their collective capacity to respond to such a situation. We will need to rethink our model of development, so that our continent can provide for our basic needs and not be dependent on others when it comes to safeguarding the health and life of Europeans. 

Without an agreement on the EU’s next long-term budget, we will not have the resources to answer the dire needs of citizens and the territories most affected by the crisis. I urge legislators to promptly reach an agreement for an ambitious Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). This must provide the necessary funds to dampen the COVID-19 crisis’ short- and medium-term socio-economic impact and promote robust territorial, economic and social cohesion in all Member States and regions.

Municipalities and regions have a wealth of experience and expertise of practical management in our territories. As such, to ensure CRII and CRII+ can be swiftly and practically implemented, we call on Member States to include their country’s associations of local and regional governments in the reflection on how to implement these new measures. The associations will be able to identify the remaining barriers to the full application of the CRII and CRII+. At European level, the Council of European Municipalities and Regions will both collect and share information on the effective implementation of CRII and CRII+ in different Member States.

We must do all we can to help those in need and put an end to this pandemic. The need for a vigorous immediate response should not however make us lose sight of our long-term goals: resilient and equitable societies founded on sustainable development. A strong Cohesion Policy is needed more than ever to make sure all of Europe’s territories can thrive and look to the future with confidence.

Achieve “active subsidiarity”  

European Union - EU Enlargement News

Improving EU policymaking through stronger dialogue with Europe’s local and regional governments 


With the European Union facing increasingly complex challenges, from demographic shifts to digitalisation and climate resilience, ensuring that policies are designed and delivered as close to citizens as possible is more relevant than ever. In this context, the Council of European Municipalities and Regions (CEMR) has released a position paper advocating for a more structured, inclusive, and effective approach to subsidiarity and proportionality in EU decision-making. 

The paper responds to the European Commission’s 2018 Communication on subsidiarity and proportionality, which calls for a stronger application of these core principles in the legislative process. CEMR welcomes this shift and provides five concrete proposals to embed local and regional governments more deeply into the EU policy cycle. 

Towards active subsidiarity: five key proposals 

CEMR argues that local and regional governments (LRGs) are not merely stakeholders but essential partners in the design, implementation and evaluation of EU legislation. To improve policy outcomes, the position paper puts forward five central proposals: 

  1. Structured Dialogue: Introduce formal mechanisms to ensure that local and regional governments and their associations are regularly consulted at all stages of policy development, mirroring the success of the Social Dialogue model. 
  1. Effective Engagement: Tailor consultation tools to better capture the input of LRGs and provide feedback on how their responses are considered, moving beyond one-size-fits-all approaches. 
  1. Weighted Input: Recognise the democratic legitimacy of local authorities by assigning greater weight to their input in EU consultations and encourage deliberative dialogue through local stakeholder meetings. 
  1. Use of Local Data: Draw on the unique evidence and experience of LRGs earlier in the legislative cycle, especially through inception impact assessments and a reformed REFIT platform. 
  1. Access to Policymaking: Develop systems allowing LRGs to help shape legislation from the ground up and promote models of multilevel governance like those trialled through the Urban Agenda for the EU. 

A call for genuine partnership 

CEMR highlights that better regulation and stronger subsidiarity are not only technical improvements but democratic imperatives. By embedding multilevel governance and recognising the expertise of towns, cities and regions, the EU can build policies that are more effective, more efficient, and more trusted by citizens. 

This paper adds to CEMR’s broader push for a European governance model based on real partnership with local and regional governments. With the next European Commission mandate on the horizon, the time is ripe to make “active subsidiarity” a reality. 

Read the position paper here 

For more information, contact:  

European charter of municipal liberties 

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How the 1953 European Charter of Municipal Liberties laid the groundwork for local self-government in Europe 


In October 1953, more than one thousand mayors and local representatives from 16 European countries gathered in Versailles for a historic assembly. Out of their debates emerged the European Charter of Municipal Liberties, a pioneering text that recognised the essential role of municipalities in safeguarding democracy, peace, and citizen freedoms. Drafted and adopted under the auspices of the Council of European Municipalities, it was one of the first pan-European commitments to local democracy, years before the binding European Charter of Local Self-Government (1985). 

The Charter of 1953 marked a crucial step in Europe’s post-war reconstruction: ensuring that citizens had a say in shaping their communities, free from arbitrary authority, and rooted in centuries-old traditions of liberty and human dignity. 

The Charter of Municipal Liberties defined local self-government as the cornerstone of democratic societies. It emphasised that municipalities were the very foundation of nations, where citizens had the right and duty to participate in local life. 

Key principles included: 

  • Constitutional guarantees: Municipal liberties must be enshrined in law and safeguarded by independent courts. 
  • Autonomy in decision-making: Municipalities should decide on local matters, adapt national laws to local circumstances, and manage their own staff and administration. 
  • Financial independence: Local authorities should raise their own taxes and resources to meet citizens’ needs, with systems of compensation available for those with weaker resources. 
  • Checks and balances: Municipal decisions could only be controlled for legality, and boundaries could not be altered without consulting the affected population. 
  • International cooperation: Municipalities and their associations had the right to belong to international organisations to defend their interests and strengthen European unity. 

The Assembly also adopted a Resolution on Municipalities and European Institutions, declaring municipal self-government the “bulwark of personal liberties” and calling for local authorities to have a voice in the emerging European political community. 

The European Charter of Municipal Liberties (1953) was a visionary document that helped establish the principle that democracy begins at the local level. At a time when Europe was rebuilding from the devastation of war, it placed municipalities at the heart of political, social, and economic renewal. 

Though not legally binding, the Charter inspired decades of work to protect and strengthen municipal autonomy across Europe. It laid the moral and political foundation for the European Charter of Local Self-Government (1985), which gave these principles full legal recognition. 

Seventy years on, the 1953 Charter stands as a testament to the determination of Europe’s mayors and local leaders to defend liberty, democracy, and cooperation across borders, values that continue to shape Europe’s governance today. 

Read the charter here 

For more information, contact: 

European charter of self-government 

SDG Implementation - News 2023

How the European Charter of Local Self-Government reshaped democracy in Europe 


The 20th century witnessed the rise of local and regional democracy as one of the most important democratic innovations. At its heart lies the European Charter of Local Self-Government, the first binding international treaty to guarantee the rights of communities and their elected authorities. Adopted in 1985 under the Council of Europe, the Charter firmly established local democracy as the cornerstone of governance closest to citizens, ensuring that power is not only shared but decentralised in practice. 

The Charter was drafted within the Council of Europe after years of advocacy by the Standing Conference of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe, the predecessor of today’s Congress of Local and Regional Authorities. Opened for signature in 1985 and in force since 1988, it has been ratified by the overwhelming majority of Council of Europe member states. 

The Charter requires that the principle of local self-government be enshrined in domestic law or constitutions. It sets out clear democratic safeguards, including the right of citizens to manage public affairs through elected councils, the protection of local authority boundaries, and the free exercise of local elected representatives’ functions. 

A landmark principle of subsidiarity runs through the text: decisions should be taken at the level closest to the citizen. This decentralisation of power must be matched with adequate financial resources, ensuring local governments are able to act effectively. Safeguards against undue interference, guarantees of financial autonomy, and the right of local authorities to associate nationally and internationally further reinforce their role. 

The Charter is flexible, allowing governments to choose which provisions they accept, but also firm, requiring adherence to a core set of fundamental principles of local democracy. Monitoring by the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities ensures compliance and encourages states to respect and expand local autonomy. 

The European Charter of Local Self-Government remains the benchmark treaty for local democracy, affirming that democracy begins at the local level. It guarantees that communities have the autonomy, powers, and resources to manage their affairs, while protecting citizens’ rights to participate directly or through elected representatives. 

More than three decades after its adoption, the Charter has not only safeguarded local self-government but has become a foundation of European democracy. It continues to inspire reforms, guide constitutional principles, and strengthen the voice of local and regional authorities across the continent. In doing so, it secures what is perhaps democracy’s most vital truth: that governance is most effective when it is closest to the people. 

Read the charter here 

For more information, contact: