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Democracy and Accountability

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It has been suggested that the EU is an embryonic federation since it has a ... The EU does not resemble a federal state. ... Construction of a consensus. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Democracy and Accountability


1
Democracy and Accountability
2
Democracy and Accountability in the EU
  • Ending of the permissive consensus
    (ratification of Maastricht Treaty in 1992-93).
  • Democracy self-governing community deciding what
    should be done. Accountability controlling those
    who are acting on its behalf.
  • Democracy cannot operate without accountability

3
The state-centrist view
  • Liberal democracy Democracy and accountability
    operate through the electoral process
    (socialization and political education).
  • Proponents of state-centrism opposed any aspects
    making the EU different than a traditional
    international agreement between states
    (threatening to liberal democracy).
  • Maintaining the veto in the Council, a weakening
    of the ECJ, a strict limitation on Community
    competencies, governmental control over the
    Commission, and rolling back the power of the EP.

4
The state-centrist view
  • However this argument can be considered
    anachronistic
  • The extent of integration and interdependence is
    so advanced that the repatriation of policy to
    the member states could only be secured with
    massive disruption and destabilization in Europe.
  • Many of the forces of globalization which
    undermine the domestic autonomy of all but the
    strongest states would operate whether or not the
    EU existed.

5
The state-centrist view
  • Any state which attempted repatriation of policy
    by itself would almost certainly suffer as a
    result of the potential punitive power of other
    member states.
  • There are normative arguments against
    state-centrism as it promotes intolerant
    nationalist rhetoric against multi-ethnic and
    multi-lingual environment that the EU has created.

6
Federalism
  • If the nation-state no longer seems a viable
    location for democracy, there is the temptation
    to accept the other extreme.
  • There has always been a federalist tradition
    among supporters of European integration which
    has favored the establishment of some kind of a
    United States of Europe, on normative grounds
    (Spinelli).

7
Federalism
  • It has been suggested that the EU is an embryonic
    federation since it has a federal legal system, a
    single market, and supranational political
    institutions.
  • A constitution which would openly define and
    limit the powers operating at each level is a
    requirement for the establishment of clear forms
    of democracy and accountability.

8
Federalism
  • However there are several problems with this
    approach too
  • The EU does not resemble a federal state. The
    governments retain primacy in the policy-making
    process and exercise a range of powers in
    domestic and external policy.
  • The stronger member states remain important
    international actors. Bilateral relations of
    individual states (US) are often of greater
    significance than those between the member states
    (CFSP).

9
Legitimacy and the nation-state model
  • Commission and the Council
  • Sought to counter democratic concerns by treating
    them as a crisis of legitimacy which might be
    reversed by enhancing the popularity of the
    community and the European identity of its
    citizens.
  • Symbols that recycle the rituals of national
    construction have been used like a European
    flag, anthem, and passport.
  • More important was the establishment of a
    European citizenship with the Treaty of
    Maastricht, but it was again largely symbolic and
    of course not necessarily democratic.

10
Legitimacy and the nation-state model
  • Legitimacy rests on a sense of a common identity.
  • Because of we-feelings towards the rest of the
    population in a states, we are willing to accept
    our state and its need for significant powers.
  • However, the attempts to create such a feeling in
    the EU have been largely unsuccessful.

11
The institutional approaches
  • Alternative Institutions of the EU should
    resemble those within the states.
  • The EP main vehicle toward democratization, its
    powers have significantly increased (only body
    directly elected on a European basis).
  • Room for skepticism about the extent to which the
    EP has ameliorated the problems of democracy and
    accountability, or can be expected to do so.

12
The institutional approaches
  • EP remoteness from the electorate..
  • Its role is relatively obscure in relation to
    government, (governments are not formed from it,
    and cannot be forced out of office by it).
  • The population would take more note of the EP if
    it had the power to bring down the Council for
    instance. The EP could not secure such power
    without the establishment of a federation, which
    is difficult in itself.

13
The institutional approaches
  • Alternative direct election of the Commission on
    alternative partisan programs would stimulate
    popular interest in the system, promote a greater
    sense of division between government and
    opposition, and provide the Commission with
    both a democratic base and legitimacy which it
    presently lacks.
  • highly unlikely that the member states will allow
    an alternative body, which has greater initiating
    power than the EP to claim a democratic mandate.
  • Nor would the EP want a new rival to challenge
    its democratic legitimacy.

14
The institutional approaches
  • Alternative view Commission to be indirectly
    elected out of the majority party group in the
    EP.
  • Governments dont want to cede the power of
    appointment of the Commission to the EP, and
    reluctant in losing their power to nominate their
    Commissioner.
  • All reforms hardly noticeable to the public, as
    happened with every other reform.

15
Democratic outputs and efficiency
  • Alternative Treat the problem as one that can be
    remedied by greater effectiveness and efficiency.
  • Enhancing the powers and competencies of the EU
    so that it can compete more effectively in the
    world, or make the single market a success.
  • Preoccupation with the output side of
    policy-making.

16
Democratic outputs and efficiency
  • Concentration on outputs without improvements on
    democratic inputs, can simply reinforce the
    initial problems.
  • Inefficiency in decision-making can undermine a
    system of democracy.
  • Improving efficiency within the Council for
    instance, complicates the process of domestic
    accountability whenever a government is outvoted
    or accepts a decision solely on the expectation
    of being outvoted.

17
Independent accountability
  • Distinct forms of governance are necessary.
    Argues that the nation-state has high levels of
    welfare expenditures and that elements of
    redistribution are acceptable because of a shared
    identity.
  • EU should focus on regulation, rather than
    redistribution, and the appropriate agency is an
    independent body of experts established by the EU
    to oversee tasks entrusted to it.

18
Independent accountability
  • Independence and accountability can be reconciled
    through various mechanisms
  • including statutory objectives for performance
    standards,
  • reason-giving and transparency requirements
    facilitating judicial review and public
    participation,
  • due process provisions to ensure fairness among
    the inevitable losers from legislation,
  • and professionalism in order to withstand
    external interference and to reduce the risk of
    capture.

19
Independent accountability
  • Critiques liberal democracy and the nation-state,
    that governments have manipulated economic policy
    for electoral advantage or to appease particular
    interest groups in society.
  • One such independent institution in the EU can be
    considered the ECB, and ensuring that it is
    outside political control is the best way of
    keeping it to its appointed tasks.

20
Independent accountability
  • Independence for the ECB means that there is no
    strong form of democratic authorization for its
    policies at the domestic and EU levels.
  • ECB not more conducive to democracy and
    accountability (inequalities between areas and
    social groups, by removing existing tools of
    economic policy-making from the control of the
    member states).

21
Policy-making by consensus and intra-elite
accountability
  • Construction of a consensus. Assumptions of
    conflict have very little relevance for the
    policy-making process of the EU
  • The government-opposition dichotomy does not
    apply and there is a very strong incentive for
    cooperative policy-making both within and between
    EU institutions.

22
Policy-making by consensus and intra-elite
accountability
  • Votes take place only rarely in the Council and
    the main impact of QMV has been to facilitate the
    search for a consensus.
  • The search for an absolute majority in the EP has
    facilitated cooperation between major groups and
    not competition.
  • The co-decision procedure means that the Council,
    EP, and Commission have powerful inducements to
    conciliate one another in ensuring that agreement
    is reached on proposals.

23
Policy-making by consensus and intra-elite
accountability
  • The committee and comitology systems remain
    obscure neither the way that committees are
    appointed, nor the ways they operate are
    transparent.
  • The exclusion of the people obviously excludes
    ideas that might undermine the elite consensus on
    which policy is currently based.
  • The goals of democracy and accountability
    necessitate the inclusion of discordant voices
    (privileged actors and interests).
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