The United Nations General Committee is a committee of the United Nations General Assembly whose main purpose is to organize the body's agenda, among other things.
The committee consists of 28 members: the President of the United Nations General Assembly, the 21 Vice-Presidents of the Assembly, and the Chairs of the six Main Committees.
The Mandate of the General Committee consists of the following:
The Committee meets periodically to review the progress of the General Assembly and its committees. It also meets at such times as the President deems necessary or upon the request of any other of its members.
An individual Vice-President of the General Assembly does not have the power to unilaterally add an item to the General Assembly's agenda, not even if they are a permanent member of the UN Security Council such as the United States. For example, the General Committee has regularly rejected agenda items about the participation of the Republic of China (Taiwan), even when raised by a sitting Vice-President who formally recognizes the Republic of China (such as Guatemala in 1993).
The rules of the General Assembly state that the President and 21 Vice-Presidents must be elected from the following Regional Groups:
In addition, the chairs of the six Main Committees must consist of one from each group, with the remaining chair rotating unevenly between the three non-European groups (prior to 1994, there were seven Main Committees, with two chairs from the African Group, one chair from every other group, and the remaining chair rotating between the AsiaâÂÂPacific Group and the Latin American and Caribbean Group "every alternate year").
The rules also state that every member of the General Committee must be from a different country. As the permanent members of the Security Council are always vice-presidents, this rule bans the permanent members from being President of the General Assembly or chairs of any Main Committee.
The President's seat is highlighted below. The permanent members of the Security Council are also Vice-Presidents.
The six seats are negotiated between the regional groups; a single group does not always chair a specific Main Committee.