Samenvatting Politiek van de Europese Unie Universiteit Leiden jaar 1 Bachelor Politicologie blok 4

Summary Politics of the European Union 

 

Goals:

  • History of european integration

  • Know how institutions work

  • The main theories of european integration

  • Be able to contextualize and analyze current events

 

Lecture 1: the history of the European Union 

 

Early 20th century

  • Treaty of versailles

  • League of nations

 

Ww2 caused:

  • Economic devastation

  • Political weakness

  • Divided continent

  • Failure of treaty of versailles is known

  • Exploration of new interstate relations

 

Change of political climate:

  • Combatting nationalism

  • New political map of Europe

  • New international power balance

  • Division of Germany

 

Change of the economic climate

  • Bretton woods monetary system:

  • IMF

  • World Bank

  • General agreement on tariffs and trade

  • European recovery program (marshall aid) 

 

Differences between the western European states

  • All states joined for hard-headed national calculations always prevailed

  • European integration helped the nation state

 

Institutional developments

  • Organization for european economic cooperation > 1948

  • The council of Europe > 1949

  • NATO > 1949

  • The European coal and steel community > 1951

  • The European defense cooperation > western European union > 1954

  • European Economic Community > 1958

  • Organization for economic co-operation and development > 1961

 

The European coal and steel community

  • 1950 Schuman Declaration

  • 50 years duration

  • Ambition to create a free trade area

  • Coal and steel integrate: main resources for warmaking and industrialization

  • Common market makes it harder to build weapons

 

Institutions of the ECSC

  • High authority: nine members (prequel to european commission)

  • Special council of ministers: ministers of porfolios coal and steel (precursor of the european council)

  • Common assembly (precursor of the european parliament)

  • Court of justice: settled conflicts between member states

 

Architects of european integration

  • Jean Monnet (president of ECSC)

  • Robert Schumann (french prime/foreign minister, schumann declaration)

  • Konrad Adenauer (Chancellor of Germany, German entrance nato)

  • Alcide de Gasperi (italian prime minister)

 

The European Defense Community (1950)

  • Establish an European Army 

  • Supranational organization

  • Didn't pass by the French parliament, UK was not interested

  • This failed

 

Western European Union (1955)

  • 6 members + UK

  • Forum for defense cooperation

  • Permitted Germany to join NATO

  • Did not exist long

  • Not institutionalized

 

The European Economic Community 1957

  • Refocus on economic integration

  • Liberal capitalism

  • Some protectionist elements: agriculture

  • Creates a common market with a free trade area: removing all tarifs

  • Creation of a customs union: creates a common external tariffs: creates a common external trade policy. The Common Commercial Policy

  • Common rules: prohibits practices that prevent competition between member states

  • Common Market: promotes free movement of persons, services and capital

  • Mentioning a common currency (47 years)

  • Messina declaration 1955 and treaties of Rome 1957

 

Institutions of the EEC

  • Commission (initiates new policy and oversee implementation)

  • Council of ministers (makes decisions on proposals from the commission)

  • Parliamentary assembly (could question or censure the commission) (elected from 1979)

  • Court of justice (responsible for respect to treaties)

 

EURATOM 1957

  • European Atomic Energy Community

  • Treaties of Rome

  • Promotion of research

  • Health and safety

  • Nuclear common market

  • Same institutions

  • Did not do much, member states protected own market

 

These institutions form The European Communities

 

Lecture 2: History of the European Union part 2 1960s-present

 

Options to study

  • Chronology

  • Treaties

  • Deepening of policies

  • Widening of membership

 

Chronology:

  • Grand steps: treaties, enlargement

  • Incremental steps: economic, political decisions, court judgement

Treaties:

  • Reflect, advance and unfold integration

  • No rolling back

  • 1966-1980s: gap 

  • Eurosclerosis: no appetite for european integration: french resistance

  • Luxembourg compromise of 1966: unanimity for all decisions

 

Treaty overview

  • Treaty ECSC: 1951

  • Treaty EEC & EURATOM: 1957

  • Single European act: 1986 (Economic integration)

  • Treaty of Maastricht: 1992 (formation of the European Union, EU gained power in more areas)

  • Treaty of Amsterdam: 1997 (adjustments decision making procedure for eastern European Enlargement)

  • Treaty of Nice: 2001 (preparation for eastern European enlargement decisionmaking)

  • Treaty of Lisbon: 2009 (a real European Union legally)

 

Treaty of maastricht: pillar structures

  • 3 pillars

  • First pillar: EEC, ECSC, EAEC (majority)

  • Second pillar: common security and foreign policy (unanimity)

  • Third pillar: justice and home affairs (unanimity)

 

Other treaties:

  • Merger treaty: merges institutions

  • Schengen treaty: free movement

 

Deepening = vertical integration

  • Institutional deepening: institutions above the state gain power, increased use of majority voting

  • Policy deepening: growth of political power of the EU, new fields of policy areas

 

History viewed by economic integration:

 

In stages

  • Free trade area

  • Customs union

  • Integrated internal market

  • Economic and monetary union

 

Widening

  • Denmark, Ireland, UK 1975

  • Greece 1981

  • Portugal and Spain 1986

  • Austria, Finland, Sweden 1995

  • Cyprus, Malta, baltic states, Poland, Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia 2004

  • Bulgaria, Romania 2007

  • Croatia 2013

(Norway rejected twice after a referendum)

(Switzerland rejected once by referendum)

 

1960: EFTA, Competitor to the EEC but failed (UK as founder, becomes the EEA)

EEA: switzerland, iceland, norway, liechtenstein (no voting rights but part of the economic single market)

 

Changes in conditions (kopenhagen criteria)

  • Stable institutions guaranteeing: democracy, rule of law, human rights, respect minorities

  • Functioning market economy, ability to cope with competitive pressure and market forces, product standards

  • Acceptance of the acquis communautaire: to be able to take on membership obligations, adherence to political economic and monetary union

 

Lecture 3: the european council

 

The main EU institutions

  • Citizens represented in the parliament

  • Member states represented in the european council and council of the EU

  • EU interests represented in European commission

 

The European council: representing the member states at the highest level

  • Heads of state or government

  • Sets the EU political agenda

  • Since 2009 officially, lisbon treaty (created in 1974)

  • Recognition in the single european act (1986)

  • Increased power 

  • Before 2009 the HoS/G and president of the commission, but also included foreign ministers and one other commissioner

 

President of the european council

  • Since 2009

  • Appointed for 2.5 years, 1 time renewable

  • Responsibilities: chairs EuCo meetings, ensure the continuity of the work of the european council

  • Find consensus and cohesion within the EuCo

  • Ensures the external representation of the EU on security and foreign policy

 

Former presidents of EuCo

  • Herman van Rompuy 2009-2014 (low profile, looks for compromises, efficient)

  • Donald Tusk 2014-2019 (high profile, strong positions, bold but biased)

  • Charles Michael 2019-2024 (low profile, looks for compromises)

 

Frequency of meetings

  • Varies according to changing needs and circumstances

  • At least 4 meetings of 2 days

  • Restrictions who can enter

  • Extensively prepared and closely reported

  • Formal: announced meetings, informal: meeting to discuss something, extraordinary: when something important suddenly happens. 

  • Eurosessions: only for Euro-countries, since 2015, twice a year

  • Functions: history making decisions are made in these summits, contentious matters are referred up to the EuCo, policy initiator, forum of exchanging ideas

  • Topics: eu evolution, constitutional and institutional matters, appointing presidents, enlargement, external relations, specific internal policies,1 economic and monetary policies

 

Lecture 4: Council of the EU

 

Council of the EU

  • Ministers of national government

  • Negotiate and vote on legislation

  • Since 1951

 

Council of the European Union functions:

  • legislates together with the parliament 

  • Also has executive functions (areas of high politics, euro area, migration, foreign policy)

  • Forum of exchange: devising the big bargains that orientate future EU policy

 

key responsibilities

 

policy and law-maker actor

  • Decision maker on binding legislation

    • Co-legislates with the EP, sort of upper chamber 

  • Decision maker on nonbinding legislation

    • adopt opinions or recommendations

 

Executive actor  

  • Single market: council committees

    • made of national representatives that work together with the commision on executive decisions

  • Foreign and security policy: at the ministers’ level 

    • the council takes decisions with immediate executive implications 

  • Economic affairs: at ministers’ level, sanction member state for exceeding budget deficit rules 

 

Mediator

  • Find compromises on legislative proposals and future reforms 

  • Mediates between:

    • national and ideological interests 

    • the council and the commission

    • the council and the EP

  • Mediation is performed by the council presidency and the general secretariat 

  • council configurations do exist to 

 

The European council consists of three levels of meetings

  • Ministers

  • Coreper: Committee of permanent Representatives

  • Committees and working groups 

    • In practice the working party decides and the corper and ministers adopt it 

  • The council meets around 4000 times a year

 

The ministers 

  • Formations and membership

    • Ministerial meetings bring together all relevant people 

    • Consists of 100-150 people

  • Powers: 

    • The ministers take all final decisions on anything adopted in the council’s name

      • Commission proposals for legislation

      • Common positions or actions in foreign & security policy

      • Noting progress reports

      • Requests to the Commission for information 

 

The Eurogroup

  • Has a permanent president 

  • Jeroen Dijsselbloem held the position from 2013-2018 

  • ECOFIN adopts official decisions of the Eurogroup

 

COREPER: 

  • Committee of permanent Representatives

    • COREPER 1, deputy permanent representatives, deal mainly with routine matters

    • COREPER 2, deals with difficult matters

    • There also exist senior committees which can be between coreper and the committees and working groups 

 

The council presidency 

  • rotates every 18 months  between groups of 3 member states (so 6 months with every member state) 

    • In these 18 months the 3 member states can coördinate their topics

  • The presidency has a lot of power because it decides the agenda

    • presidencies offer opportunities but can also create major problems for member states because it can be seen as a burden

    • The small EU countries have difficulties to man the institution 

    • Also during elections, presidency is hard because you can’t press your own issues 

  • The foreign affairs council is always chaired by a high representative 

 

Decision making procedures

  • formally there are three decision making procedures

    • Unanimity: for sensitive policy areas

    • Qualified majority

    • Simple majority

 

Lecture 5: the european commission

 

What is the European commission

  • Looks like a EU civil service

  • Also has executive powers

  • A complex bureaucracy

  • Supranational

  • The heart of the EU political system

  • Independent of the member states

 

Roles and functions

  • Initiator and proposer of new policies (sole right of legislative initiative)

  • Guardian of the legal framework (seeing if the member states follow EU law)

  • Executive functions (for example imposing fines in competition policy)

  • Manager of EU finances (administer cohesion policy (help offered by the EU when new members join)

  • External representative and negotiator

 

Power resources

  • Its powers of initiative: exclusive and non-exclusive

  • Neutrality

  • Access to information through: commission services, always present in all decision making forums, a lot of advisor and expert committees

 

The college of commissioners of the european commission

  • Under the Lisbon treaty: one commissioner per member state, 5-year terms, nominated and accepted, and approved as a whole

 

The Spitzenkandidat

  • Political groups in the EP appoint candidates for the position of commission president

  • Group with the most votes becomes commission president

  • Not always true, European council can intervene

 

Lecture 6: The European parliament 

 

Located in Brussels, Strasbourg and Luxembourg 

 

Key powers

  • Legislative power 

  • Budgetary power 

  • Parliamentary control

  • Enlargement decisions 

 

Legislative:

  • not a normal parliament 

    • cannot initiate legislation only ask the commision

    • Does not adopt legislation on its own, always together with the council 

  • Is part of an institutional triangle with the commission and the council where it can:

    • be on equal footing in oridnary legislative procedure 

    • give a non-binding opinion as consultation

    • say yes or no to legislation as a whole in the consent procedure 

      • makes it a take it or leave discussion where the EP can’t decide about the specifics 

 

Budgetary powers:

  • The EP has co-budgetary authority with the council

    • considerable influence on the annual budget

    • propose modifications, or approve/reject the whole budget 

  • The EP is however excluded from deliberations on the multiannual financial frameworks (MFF)

    • are agreed on every 7 years 

    • It can only agree/reject about the MFF as a whole

 

Scrutiniser of the executive

  • The parliament can elect the commission president and the college

  • dismiss the college (vote of no confidence, only came close in 1999)

  • special and inquiry committees (no consequences)

  • Budgetary control committee

  • Written and oral questions to the commission, the ECB and other EU agencies

  • They have however little control over the council and no control over the European council. 

 

Giving consent for enlargement and international trade agreements

  • The EU parliament only comes very late in the process and can only agree or disagree

 

EP formal work 

  • standing committees: eacht committee has 80 members, some more important, prominent then others 

 

Lecture 7: Decision making processes 

 

Factors determining EU policy processes 

  • Treaty Base

    • This lays down the different decision making procedures and specifies the circumstances in which they are to be used

  • Status of policies 

    • procedures tend to be more fixed when binding decisions is envisaged

    • Commission legislation which is often very specific and technical is usually subject to less political review and discussion than council and EP legislation

  • Degree of generality

    • Policy making may not necessarily involve a specific procedure but can consist of exchanges of ideas by interested parties 

  • Newness/controversiality/sensitivity

    • The more this applies, the more complex policy processes are likely to be

  • Balance of responsibility 

    • Where the EU policy making role is supplementary to that of the member state

  • Circumstantial and their perception

    • Some things evolve in time like crime and terrorist threats which became a more international problem 

 

Types of EU acts / decisions 

  • Constitutional framework: the history making decisions 

    • Treaties 

    • revision procedure 

  • Legally binding acts

    • EU secondary law: Policy setting decisions 

      • Regulations, directives and decisions

      • Ordinary legislative procedure & special legislative procedures

    • EU implementing law 

      • Delegated and implementing acts, executives and administrative decisions 

      • Adopted by the commission, the council or the ECB

  • Non binding acts: Policy shaping decisions

    • Soft law

      • Recommendations, opinions, guidelines and joint actions

      • Mostly adopted by the council or the commission

 

Policy processes across policy areas

  • Hard law 

    • Community method 

      • Single market 

      • Agriculture and fisheries 

      • migration and asylum

  • Hard & soft law 

    • Intensive transgovernmentalism

      • Foreign and security policy 

      • Police cooperation

      • Treaty making 

  • Soft law 

    • Open method of coordination

      • Economic policy

      • Employment 

      • Social inclusion

  • Executive decisions 

    • Centralized decision making 

      • Competition policy 

      • Monetary policy 

 

The community method 

  • Focus on hard law (1992) to binding decision (2009)

  • From unanimity to more QMV in the council

 

trilogues: informal meetings between the Commission, the Council, and the EP

  • Take place once the Council and the EP have reached initial internal positions 

  • Agreement possible at any stage, but majority of compromises reached at first reading 

 

Consultation procedure: asking the EP what they think of a proposal 

  • Key areas of application: 

    • Police cooperation 

    • Family law 

    • Harmonization of regulations regarding personal documents 

    • Harmonization of indirect taxation 

    • Expanding ECB authority in banking supervision

 

The consent procedure: EP has to agree with a proposal

  • Areas of application: 

    • The multiannual financial framework (MFF) 

    • The ratification of international agreements signed with third countries (e.g. TTIP) 

    • The accession of new Member States to the EU (enlargement) 

    • withdrawals from the EU

 

Lecture 8: external relations and diplomacy

 

Why is EU unity in external policy difficult?

  • A capability - expectations gap still exists

 

Potentially the EU is a major international actor because:

  • Its size and resources

  • How it can act as an united actor

 

The EU has one voice in the global trade stage

  • It is called the common commercial policy

  • Because it is a single customs union with a single trade policy and common external tariff for other EU countries

  • The European Commission speaks for all member states in the WTO

  • The EU concludes international trade agreements on behalf of the member states

 

The EU has the potential to pursue a liberal international trading system

  • With that it can conclude a variety of different types of trading agreements (trade-, economic cooperation-, association-agreements)

  • To increasingly incorporate political conditionality into trading agreements with non-democratic countries

  • To defend EU interests, which could lead to disagreements with non-EU countries

 

The council of the European Union deals with the issues about trade

  • Informs the commission and parliament

  • Could also involve national parliaments when it has a lot of impact

 

Foreign and defense policies: size and resources

  • The EU has a bigger army personnel than the US

  • Modern military (second after the US)

  • Extensive diplomatic experience and skills

  • Special links with many parts of the world due to a colonial past

  • EU only has one seat in the permanent UN council and only 1 nuclear power

  • An extensive and developing institutional framework

 

Historical development

  • 1950s and 60s nothing happened

  • 1970s began developing a european political cooperation: characterized by flexibility, confidential and informal

  • A treaty base was established 

  • The maastricht treaty created the common foreign and security policy (CFSP) as second pillar of the newly formed EU

  • The Amsterdam and Nice treaties strengthened the CFSP

 

The EU mostly succeeds in developing a shared view, even if it is in general terms on most foreign policy issues

There are a few problems however:

  • Not all EU states are NATO members

  • Differing views on Atlantic partnership

  • Sovereignty question

  • Differing interests in and perceptions of foreign policy theaters

 

The high representative

  • Double hatted: chair of the foreign affairs council and vicepresidente of the European commission

  • Steers the CFSP

  • Implements decisions adopted by the european council and the council of the EU

  • Builds consensus between member states

  • Oversees operational conduct of EU missions and operations deployed as part of CSDP

  • ensure consistency and coherence of the EUs external action

 

CSDP: common security and defense policies

  • Smaller than CSFP

  • Only involves defense

  • Made it's first appearance in the maastricht treaty

  • Amsterdam treaty specified EU's main external security concerns

 

Lecture 9: the economic and monetary union and the euro crisis

 

Stages of the economic and monetary union

 

1986: the single european act set out the objective to create EMU

 

1990: abolition of all restrictions of movement of capital

 

1992: Maastricht treaty established EMU officially

  • Institutional asymmetry between economic and monetary issues, EMU has a stronger monetary side, which has a hard time to adjust to other countries. 

  • It creates some problems because it had: a one size fits all policy, while there are a lot of different economies. It has weak and fragmented financial regulation, poor implementation of the stability and growth pact, and the absence of a fiscal union.

 

1994: establishment of the european monetary institute, predecessor to the ecb

 

1999: irrevocable fixing of conversion rates. ECB responsible for monetary policy

 

2002: creation of the euro

 

Key characteristics of the EMU

  • Eurozone members can no longer devaluate their currency or take individual decisions on exchange and interest rates

  • Macro economic policies are aligned under the umbrella of the stability and growth pact (Budgetary deficit maximum 3%, government debt shouldnt be higher than 60% of the GDP)

  • Member states are part of a multilateral surveillance system on their economic policies

 

EU response to the 2008 crisis

  • Provide financial assistance to countries in trouble

  • Create the ESM, european stability mechanism: provides loans in exchange for reforms

  • ECB's bond-buying programs on secondary markets

  • Strengthening the economic and fiscal policy coordination

  • Making high government debt illegal: the fiscal compact

  • Creation of the European Semester: strengthening the role of the commission in monitoring public debt and budget defecit, increasing the possibility of sanctions for non-compliance

  • Increase banking regulation amd supervision

  • Create the single supervisory mechanism: common rules to be followed by eurozone banks, which are supervised by the ECB in the framework set by the European Banking Authority

 

Lecture 10: migration, asylum and the refugee crisis

 

Terminology:

  • Intra-EU migration = free movement (eu citizens can go study, work, live and move freely between member states

  • External Migration = immigration to the EU (people coming from  outside the EU, known as third country nationals)

  • Difference in regular (legal) and irregular (illegal) migration

  • Refugees = asylum policy, escaping from persecution, war or natural disasters. Have international protection rights

 

Conflicts between member states concerning migration

  • Burden sharing: some countries are more affected than others. 

  • Domestic politics: some countries do not want to accept external migration

 

EU-response to the refugee crisis

  • Military patrolling in the mediterranean sea (to prevent loss of life at sea and prevent irregular migration)

  • Frontex

  • Create processing centers: the hotspot approach

  • Redefine the list of countries in.which citizens have the right to qualify for asylum

  • Relocation and resettlement

  • Stop refugee inflows and externalize the problem (closing down the frontier, stranding people in greece) (EU turkey readmission agreement: turkey closing its border in exchange for financial support

 

Main critic point on the EU refugee problem

  • Inability to respond effectively and in a coordinated manner

  • The inhumane treatment of asylum seekers

  • Obstacles in decision making: internal domestic politisation (rise of farright). High legel of distributive conflict: how to share the burden?

 

Lecture 11: the response to the covid-19 pandemic

 

The EU health policies

 

The EU has supporting competences in human health

  • Health mentioned only as a justification to prohibit the free movement of goods, services or people under exceptional circumstances

  • The EU sets safety standards for food, pharma, toys, medical devices, chemicals etc.

  • Health systems are national, but people moved freely across borders

  • Constitutional asymmetry between policies promoting market efficiency and those promoting social protection

  • The EU was unprepared for the covid pandemic

 

Relevant EU institutions

  • European commission: directorate for health and food safety (DG SANTE): proposed legislation and financial support and coordinate the exchange of best practices between EU countries.

  • The council: employment, social policy, health and consumer affairs configuration (EPSCO council)

  • EU agencies: European center for disease prevention and control (ECDC): monitor illness and risk assessment

  • European Medicines Agency (EMA): facilitates development and access to medicine, evaluate applications for marketing authorisation, monitor the safety of medicines and provide information to healthcare professionals.

 

EU measures adopted:

  • Measures to preserve the internal market: launch infringement procedures against governments which ban export of protective equipment

  • Coordinate restrictions on mobility: short suspension of schengen area

  • Measures to create a common pool of resources: RescEU, creates a stockpile of protective and medical equipment.

  • Create a joint procurement scheme for vaccines: allows the European Commission to purchase vaccines tor the EU as a block: creates equality and brings prices down. The Commission focused on lowering prices instead of quick delivery. 

  • EMA took longer to approve vaccines

  • Establish elements of fiscal capacity at the EU level to support economic recovery: creates an emergency recovery fund - Next Generation EU - and a revised multiannual financial framework 2021-2027

  • Shared bonds: makes lending money cheaper for poorer member states

 

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