Title: Democratic Deficit
1Democratic Deficit
2Democracy
??µ???at?a
d?µ?? deimos the people
??at?a kratia the rule
3Federalist 10
- A pure democracy ....a small number of citizens
who assemble and administer the government in
person, can admit of no cure for the mischiefs of
faction - Solution A Republic..a system of
- representation(i) delegation to a small of
citizens elected by the rest (ii) enlargement
4Modern definition of Democracy
- Joseph Schumpeter (1942)
- the democratic method is that institutional
arrangement for arriving at political decisions
in which individuals acquire the power to decide
by means of a competitive struggle for the
peoples vote -
5Modern repudiation of democracy.
- --Federalist 10
- - Faction a of citizensunited and
actuated by some common impulse of passion or of
interest, adverse to the rights of other
citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate
interests of the community
6Justifying democracy
- Instrumental Justifications
- Cognitive/Epistemic justifications
- Expressive Justifications
7The three basic aspects of the EU democratic
deficit
- 1. the European People and the EU Institutions
- 2. the Member States and the EU Institutions
- 3. the European Parliament and the other EU
Institutions
8The Standard Version of the critique of
democracy in Europe (Weiler et. al.)
1. Increase in executive power and decrease in
national parliamentary control
- The European Parliament is too weak
3. The European Parliament is too remote
94. No real European elections
5. Weakening of diffuse and fragmented national
interest groups
6. Anti-majoritarian policy drift
7. Overall lack of transparancy
10Democracy without a demos?
Weiler et al demos is the basis for a democratic
polity
EU lacks authority and legitimacy of a democratic
state
Solution
Emergence of a European demos
Cooperation through international treaties
11Inverted regionalism
1. Transfer of government functions from the
members states to the EU
2. Micromanagement
3. No effective limit to the extension of
competences
overall weakening of national parliaments as
public forums
12The DefenceMoravcsik Majone
little evidence that the EU suffers from a
fundamental democratic deficit
Critique results from privileging the abstract
over the concrete (issue of standards)
EU decision making procedures are very much in
line with general practice of most modern
democracies
131. EU decision-making processes are dominated by
national governments
They are the most directly accountable
politicians in Europe
2. Significant increase of the powers of the
European Parliament
veto-power over selection of commission
Legislation under the co-decision procedure must
be approved by the European parliament
143. EU policy-making process is more transparent
than most domestic systems
easy access to policy related documents (i.e.
white and green papers)
Extensive participation and consultation of the
public prior to legislative actions
Extensive judicial review by ECJ and National
Courts
154. Re European elections
EU policy topics not salient enough for voters to
take interest
EU policy making is and should be largely
insolated from majoritarian contests
the EU may be more representative precisely
because it is, in a narrow sense, less
democratic Moravcsik
165. The treaties ensure consensus based
decision-making
6. The Union promotes the access of diffuse
interests to the legislative process
7. The EU is regulatory in nature rather than
redistributive Discussed Problems are rather
problems of credibility than of democratic
deficit (Majone)