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Government proposal on Finland's accession to NATO submitted to Parliament

Published 12/5/2022 2:00 PM
NATO members' flags in the front of NATO HQ

Government proposal on Finland's accession to NATO submitted to Parliament

The Government has given Parliament its proposal on Finland's accession to NATO on Monday, December 5, 2022.

The government proposal can be read on Parliament's website (in Finnish). 

The Government proposes that Parliament approve the North Atlantic Treaty and the Agreement on the Status of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, National Representatives and International Staff. The North Atlantic Treaty establishes the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and defines the principles governing the activities of the Alliance and the obligations of its members. The Agreement on the Status of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, National Representatives and International Staff, known as the Ottawa Agreement, defines the status of NATO as a legal person and the privileges and immunities of NATO staff.

Speaker of Parliament will announce the proposal in plenary on Wednesday, 7 December. The date of the referral debate will be decided at the Speaker's Council meeting on the same day.

You can follow the progress of the proceedings in the parliament on this webpage

Parliamentary consideration of the government proposal

The parliamentary consideration of the government proposal is divided into different stages. Their schedule will be updated later. 

Referral debate

The consideration of the proposal begins with the referral debate, which takes place in a Parliament's plenary session. At the end of the debate, the plenary session decides to which committee the proposal will be sent for a report. The plenary session also decides on possible statement committees, i.e. which committees submit statements to the reporting committee.

Committee consideration

The committee consideration starts as soon as possible after the plenary session has sent the matter to the committee. The report will not be completed until the statement committees have given their statements.

After the committee has completed its report, the consideration of the matter will continue in a plenary session.

First reading

The government's proposal on Finland's accession to NATO contains two legislative proposals that will bring into force the regulations requiring legislation. ​ All legislative proposals have two readings in the plenary session, the first and the second. The basis for debate in the plenary session is the report written by the committee, no longer the government's proposal as such.

In the first reading, the chairperson of the committee presents the report. MPs discuss the report and can propose changes to it.

If amendments are proposed, they are voted on at the end of the first reading. After this, the legislative proposals can only be accepted or rejected, but their content will no longer change.

​Partly single reading, partly second reading

In addition to legislative proposals, the government's proposal includes the acceptance of an international obligation, i.e. the agreement on joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and approving the North Atlantic Treaty and the Agreement on the Status of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, National Representatives and International Staff. Acceptance of an international obligation is discussed in the plenary session only once in the so-called single reading.

In the same plenary session, the two legislative proposals whose contents were decided on in the first reading are taken up for second reading. The second reading is held no earlier than the third day after the end of the first reading.

In this partly only, partly second reading, the decision is first made on the acceptance of the international obligation, and then on the acceptance or rejection of the legislative proposals. If the parliament wants to attach resolutions to its answer, they will also be decided in this reading.

Parliamentary reply

Parliament's decision regarding the government's proposal is announced in a parliamentary reply to the Government. The speaker and secretary-general of Parliament sign the parliamentary reply.​​

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