The approach of the European Union’s institutions to the Conference on the Future of Europe is muddled, with risks for the outcome.
The European Union after several delays
opened the Conference on the Future of Europe on 9 May 2021. Its
purpose, according to a March 2021 Joint Declaration from the presidents of the EU institutions, is to “open a new space for debate with citizens to address Europe’s challenges and priorities”. The conference is aimed in particular at younger Europeans.
The broader context is that there is a
widely-shared, though far from uncontested, view that the EU needs
reform. The euro and refugee crises, the coronavirus pandemic, Brexit,
the rise of populism, and a less rule-governed and predictable global
order have raised concerns about the EU’s ability to deliver solutions
to pressing problems. There are also concerns about the EU’s democratic
deficit and its weak connection to citizens, though it should be noted
that the EU has exhibited greater-than-expected coherence in the
handling of Brexit. In response to the coronavirus pandemic, the EU has
launched the Next Generation EU recovery fund. However, what that will
amount to in terms of EU’s long-term resilience remains unclear.
The Joint Declaration presented the
conference as a way to solicit citizens’ views on the issues that matter
to them, and what they think the EU should do about those issues. The
conference will devise platforms and forums for active engagement with
citizens. The question is what that means in terms of reform, and the
broader impact the conference will have on the EU’s future nature and
direction of development.
The conference’s outcome is uncertain. One
reason for this is that the European Commission, Council and
Parliament, which are in joint charge of the conference, have very
different views on the conference’s goals. From the three institutions’
proposals, two different visions emerge. We can label these two visions vehicle for reform versus forum for reflection.
The European Parliament wants the process to be an exercise in
participatory democracy that results in tangible reforms, including
treaty reforms, to improve EU governance and reinforce the EU’s
democratic legitimacy. In contrast, the Council has a far less ambitious
position on citizens’ participation, underlines the need to focus on
‘policy first’, and has stated that the process should not lead to
treaty changes.
The Joint Declaration gives no commitment
that the citizens’ deliberations will be followed up with tangible
action, beyond the production of a report. Nevertheless, the Joint
Declaration is not without democratic ambitions. It notes that: “(w)e, the Presidents of the European Parliament, the Council and the European Commission, aim to give citizens a say on what matters to them” [sic].
Different visions and institutional responsibilities
The ambiguity of asking people to have a
say whilst refraining from committing to a course of action to follow up
on what they want can be related to differences in the institutions’
democratic sensitivities and societal responsiveness. The three
institutions have their roots in different spheres of political life and
in different visions of the EU. The European Parliament is situated in
the world of representative-participatory democracy and seeks to
domesticate EU politics as part of developing the EU into a democratic
polity. The Commission has its roots in administration and technocratic
governance. The Council is situated in the world of diplomacy and is
particularly attuned to the EU as a body of sovereign states. The
domestic/international tension also marks the EU’s institutional
structure as a complex mix of supranational and intergovernmental institutions.
This tension can also be said to be reflected in the two core visions
for the conference: vehicle for reform versus forum for reflection...
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