The governing body of motorsport wants to amend its regulations to restrict the methods by which its executives may be held accountable for poor management.
Member clubs have been notified of a set of changes to the laws regulating the audit and ethics committees, which will be put to a vote by the FIA general assembly on December 13.
These would guarantee that the president of the FIA and the president of its senate, not the senate itself, would be in charge of any ethical charges.
Additionally, they would take away the audit committee’s autonomy to look into financial matters on its own.
The recommendations follow a year in which the audit and ethics committees looked into several claims regarding the actions of Mohammed Ben Sulayem, the president of the FIA.