Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde
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Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde (often abbreviated as BHV) is a contentious Belgian electoral arrondissement in the center of the country that encompasses both the officially bilingual Brussels-Capital Region, which coincides with the administrative arrondissement of Brussels-Capital, as well as the officially unilingual Dutch-speaking area around it, Halle-Vilvoorde, which in turn forms a separate administrative arrondissement. Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde is also a judicial arrondissement, unambiguously better known as the Brussels judicial Arrondissement after the location of its courts.
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The official status of this region stems from the 1961-1965 Lefevre-Spaak government, during which Brussels was officially limited to 19 municipalities. This was due to Flemish fear for uninterrupted growth of the by then already predominantly French-speaking agglomeration into the surrounding Flemish countryside.
A deal was struck. Bilingual Brussels would be limited to 19 municipalities, encompassed by the Halle and Vilvoorde areas in which six municipalities however, had a French-speaking minority (of between 30 and 50% of the local population, as determined by the then latest linguistic census). The French-speaking parties tried to add these areas to Brussels, which was fiercely resisted by the unanimous Flemish parties who wanted to protect the native, Flemish, population. The areas became officially Dutch-speaking but were required by law to provide facilities for francophone residents in the six municipalities with language facilities (Dutch: faciliteitengemeenten, French: communes à facilités).
This arrangement thus followed the same lines as for a number of municipalities on the border between Wallonia and Flanders, where local linguistic minorities (above 30% at the census that had preceded their determining) could enjoy identical facilities.
There has not been an official linguistic census in Belgium since this one, mainly because of the Flemish refusal, as many signs suggest that the French-speaking population has largely increased (unofficial studies estimate a majority of French-speaking population between 52% and 79%, see municipalities with language facilities)[citation needed]
Though officially agreed and effected, this compromise led to bitter resentment by both communities and did much to fuel the rise of extreme parties on both sides.
For the elections of the Chamber, the usual electoral districts are the provinces (since the general elections of 2003). In the former province of Brabant however, the old electoral arrangements still survive: the French-speaking electoral arrondissement of Nivelles (the whole province of Walloon Brabant), the Dutch-speaking electoral arrondissement of Leuven (coinciding with the eastern administrative arrondissement of the province of Flemish Brabant) and the electoral arrondissement of Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde, coinciding with both the administrative arrondissement Brussels-Capital and Halle-Vilvoorde (the western administrative arrondissement of the province of Flemish Brabant). For the allocation of seats between the party lists on the level of the former province of Brabant (apparentment), lists can be combined between Leuven and Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde (Dutch-speaking parties do this) or between Nivelles and Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde (French-speaking parties do this).
For the elections of the Senate and of the European Parliament, electors can choose between the lists competing for seats in the Dutch-speaking electoral college and for those running for seats in the French-speaking electoral college.
Around 2000, a consensus was gradually formed among Flemish parties to request the splitting of the electoral district. For the elections in 2003 new electoral districts were created based on the provinces. With regards to Brussels and the arrondissements of the province of Flemish Brabant the old districts (Leuven and B-H-V) were retained. This situation was condemned in 2002 as unconstitutional by the Arbitration Court (Dutch: Arbitragehof, French: Cour d'Arbitrage) — now the Constitutional Court. It judged that, among others, this was in contradiction with the explicitly provincial definition of the electoral districts for national and European elections. However, it left open the precise nature of any solution and this did not explicitly demand the splitting of the electoral district, nor did it allow its maintenance.
The purported reasons for Flemish dissatisfaction are the following: In European and national elections voters in this district can choose candidates from both communities (French and Flemish), although the Halle-Vilvoorde area solely belongs to the constitutionally-established Flemish community. Because of the amalgamated BHV electoral district, that possibility is extended to the French-speakers living in the Flemish district of Halle-Vilvoorde. This means that people living in Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde can vote for parties and candidates from another Region and Community than the one they live in. The current BHV electoral district was therefore ruled to breach the constitutionally established borders and equality principles: between provinces, between the language areas, as well as between the Communities. The problem is not so much that French-speaking inhabitants of Halle-Vilvoorde can vote for French-speaking candidates who live in Halle-Vilvoorde themselves, but that they can vote for candidates and parties who belong to another constitutionally established Community and Region.
The French-speaking parties, who are embedded in the French Community and the Brussels and Walloon Regions, are radically opposed to dividing the BHV electoral district, while the Flemish parties are equally adamant in favour of a split.
Flemish demands for the area to be split are met with equally stringent demands by the Francophone community for the six special-facility communes to be officially added to Brussels proper.[citation needed] This Francophone demand would create a previously non-existent "corridor" between the French-speaking region of Wallonia and majority French-speaking Brussels, much to the dismay of Flemish politicians.[citation needed]
As of 2005, cabinet ministers and parties have been locked in debate over the future of this electoral district, and long overdue decisions have not yet been forthcoming.
Compromise solutions have been proposed:
- The BHV electoral district could be joined to the neighbouring Flemish electoral district of Leuven, allowing greater numbers of Dutch speakers a vote in a combined Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde-Leuven district. There are, however, concerns that this would be unconstitional under Article 63 of the Belgian constitution, which limits the number of candidates standing in a single electoral district. Some advocate changing this section of the constitution. However, modification of the constitution requires, by Belgian law, that the prevailing government be dissolved, re-elected through nationwide elections held within forty days and the newly formed Chamber and Senate to vote on the issue. Since a significant change of attitude is unlikely from any new government, most citizens and political parties (with the exception of the far-right Vlaams Belang) are unwilling to risk the fall of the government over something of this nature.
- In return for leaving BHV in its current state, one might accomplish Flemish demands for specific powers currently under Federal jurisdiction to be conferred to the Regions.
A deadline of May 11, 2005, by which time a decision was to be reached, has expired with a compromise eluding the negotiators. A compromise worked out by Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt was explicitly opposed by only one coalition partner, namely the Flemish party Spirit. It is believed that this compromise would have entitled the French Community with the right to exercise certain, limited powers over inhabitants of the Flemish Community, in return for the splitting of BHV.
After visiting King Albert II to report the failure of the seven negotiation meetings to reach a successful conclusion, the Prime Minister requested a vote of confidence from the parliament. The Parliament supported the government on Friday 13th May 2005 and the issue was put on hold until the next general election in 2007.
With the federal elections of 10 June 2007 looming, the problem of the electoral district of Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde reemerged. Because the federal government failed to comply with a ruling of the Court of Arbitration which declared the provincial electoral districts compared to the two remaining arrondisemental ones in the former province of Brabant unconstitutional, several mayors in the Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde area have threatened to refuse to compile the lists of electors.
Professor and constitutional expert Paul Van Orshoven from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven declared that the elections, held on June 10, were unconstitutional. According to Van Orshoven there are two problems:
- As the previous election was held Sunday May 18, 2003, the final date to hold elections (four years from the previous) is Sunday, May 13, 2007
- The Court of Arbitration gave the government the time to fix the B-H-V problem until the next elections should been scheduled, after that election results could be declared void.
As in 2003, several mayors and groupings have called for a boycott of the elections. 24 communes have refused to cooperate in the organization of the elections. In May 2007, the commune Steenokkerzeel launched a court case against the federal government for not complying with the ruling of the Court of Arbitration. The case will be handled starting May 25.
The problem of BHV became an important issue in the 2007 Belgian government formation. On 7 November 2007, the Dutch-speaking parties voted at the committee on the interior of the Chamber of Representative for the disentanglement, while the French-speaking parties refused to vote and left the room. This situation has never previously occurred in Belgian history.
The newly appointed Flemish President of the Constitutional Court Marc Bossuyt has stated that future federal elections could be deemed "unconstitutional" if a legal arrangement for Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde hadn't been put in place by then.[1][2][3][4] The next federal elections are scheduled for 2011.
According to Article 65 of the Belgian Constitution the Federal Parlement ends it term after 4 years which automatically leads to new federal elections within 40 days.[5]
- ^ "Verkiezingen 2009 ongrondwettelijk zonder oplossing BHV", De Morgen, 2007-11-13. Retrieved on 2007-11-14. (Dutch)
- ^ ""Geen verkiezingen zonder oplossing BHV"", Vrtnieuws.net, 2007-11-13. Retrieved on 2007-11-13. (Dutch)
- ^ ""'Zonder oplossing BHV geen grondwettelijke verkiezingen'"", De Standaard, 2007-11-13. Retrieved on 2007-11-14. (Dutch)
- ^ ""Marc Bossuyt entame sa présidence en force"", La Libre Belgique, 2007-11-14. Retrieved on 2007-11-14. (French)
- ^ "Normale verkiezingsdatum en vervroegde verkiezingen" (Dutch). FPS Interior Belgium - Directorate of Elections (2007-04-10). Retrieved on 2007-11-14.
- 2007 Belgian government formation
- Communities, regions and language areas of Belgium
- Politics of Belgium
- Municipalities with language facilities
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