Historical context On 20 May 1992, the Swiss government submitted an application for accession to the European Community, based on an official report published two days earlier. In response, the
Lega dei Ticinesi and the
Swiss Democrats launched on 21 July 1992 an initiative entitled "EU accession negotiations: let the people decide!" to give the people and the cantons the power to confirm the opening of these negotiations. On 6 December 1992, however, a narrow majority of the voters and a large majority of the cantons rejected the agreement on the
European Economic Area. As a consequence, the accession application was frozen by the authorities for an indefinite period. The Lega and Swiss Democrats' initiative nonetheless succeeded on 21 January 1994 and was rejected in the popular vote on 8 June 1997.
Signature collection and submission of the initiative Meanwhile, a committee made up of representatives from several pro-European movements is launching this new initiative with the sole aim, according to its initiators, of restarting negotiations in order to determine, at the end of those negotiations, “what membership means for Switzerland, what it will receive and what it will have to contribute". The collection of the required 100,000 signatures began on 21 February 1995. On 30 July 1996, the initiative was submitted to the
Swiss Federal Chancellery, which formally confirmed its success on 14 February 1997.
Discussions and recommendations of the authorities The Federal Assembly and the Federal Council both recommended rejection of the initiative. In its message to the Federal Assembly, the Federal Council noted that, according to the division of powers between the authorities as defined by the Constitution, the opening of international negotiations falls under its decision and not a popular vote. It therefore proposed, as an indirect counter-proposal, a federal decree stating that "Switzerland participates in the European integration process and aims to join the European Union for this purpose" while giving the executive responsibility for organising the negotiations as well as the choice of the timing to reactivate the accession application. After lengthy debates between the two federal chambers, the Federal Council's counter-proposal was ultimately rejected by the
Council of States, the main reason being the desire to leave the authorities "full autonomy in matters of foreign policy". The voting recommendations of the political parties are as follows
Vote On March 4, 2001, the initiative was rejected unanimously by the cantons and by 76.8% of the votes cast, with a turnout of 55.8%. == Aftermath ==