Tasks and responsibilities
The agenda of the committee is very broad. Examples of the topics addressed by the Domestic Affairs Committee are municipal and regional governance, municipal communities, municipal and regional tasks and responsibilities, equalisation of municipal subsidies, grants and general subsidies to municipal and regional bodies, electoral statutes and public registry.
The committee closely monitors governmental work in these spheres.
The tasks and responsibilities of the Domestic Affairs Commitee can be subdivided into two primary areas:
- handling of Bills and proposals within the committee’s remit
- ongoing parliamentary scrutiny within the domestic policy sphere, including monitoring the Government’s observance of relevant laws passed by the Danish Parliament
Parliamentary scrutiny of how the Government conducts and administers domestic affairs policies is often the Domestic Affairs Committee’s primary activity. In practice, parliamentary scrutiny is exercised through the standing committee members’ tabling questions to the minister, either as Section 20 questions (verbal or in writing), questions in committee, questions in consultation or as enquiries.
The Government is responsible for applying policy within the remit of the committee on the basis of the legislation enacted by Parliament. These can be specific acts within the committee’s specialist area and grants under the Finance Act. As a rule, legislation passed in the Danish Parliament pertaining to a sphere within the Domestic Affairs Committee’s remit is based on a political compromise.
Specialist ministry
The committee’s specialist ministry is the Ministry of the Interior and Health.
In addition to the central department on Slotsholmen in Copenhagen, the ministry consists of a number of authorities and enterprises, including its own Benchmarking unit, CPR (The Central Office of Civil Registration) and VIVE (The Danish Centre for Social Science Research).