“Randomly chosen citizens cannot understand complex policy issues because they lack the necessary knowledge and expertise.” This is an often-heard criticism of deliberative democracy. 
      
    
    
      In the Conference on the Future of Europe,
 citizens developed several recommendations on democracy in the EU. 
While they do not provide ready-made solutions to Europe’s democratic 
woes, they pinpoint with astonishing accuracy the issues that 
decision-makers should urgently tackle in this field.
“Randomly
 chosen citizens cannot understand complex policy issues because they 
lack the necessary knowledge and expertise.” This is an often-heard 
criticism of deliberative democracy. The citizens who participated in 
the panels organised in the framework of the Conference on the Future of
 Europe prove the critics wrong. It is striking how precisely they 
identify the EU’s core challenges in the fields of democracy, values and
 the rule of law, despite the limited time they had to discuss those issues. 
The recommendations
 developed by the participants of Panel 2, outlined below, cover a range
 of challenges, from the EU’s complex institutional design and the 
dangers of disinformation to the difficulties in stopping national rule-of-law violations.
 These recommendations will not solve the Union’s democratic problems 
overnight. However, they do provide insights and novel ideas on what 
decision-makers could do to complement the EU’s existing toolbox to 
safeguard democracy. 
The EU’s reputation on the international stage is at stake
Firstly,
 the citizens point to the danger of the EU being considered 
hypocritical when promoting its democratic values. They suggest that the
 EU should first strengthen common democratic values within its borders. Only then, in a second step, can it become a ‘global ambassador’ for the EU’s ‘democratic model’
 (recommendation #14). To put it more bluntly, the EU should first put 
its house in order before lecturing others. The EU could lose its 
legitimacy as a promoter of democratic values if its own member states 
flout the values that it preaches. This is where decision-makers should 
listen carefully: Citizens do not want the EU to be perceived as a 
hypocritical actor.  
There are, however, two caveats to this 
recommendation. First, it is unclear how the EU should avoid these 
double standards. Should the EU cancel all its funding for democracy 
abroad when re-establishing democratic values at home? What concrete 
steps should be taken to avoid a hypocritical posture?  
Second, 
while there are common democratic standards – as laid out in Article 2 
TEU –, one ‘European democratic model’ can be ‘exported’ abroad. The EU 
is composed of 27 national democracies (as long as one still counts 
Hungary as part of this democratic club, a fact that has been questioned) as well as a sui generis
 European democracy. Each democracy must follow certain standards to be 
considered a democracy (as outlined by the Venice Commission and in the 
extensive case law of the Court of Justice of the EU). However, this 
should not lead to the fallacious belief that there is a standard 
‘democratic model’ that each and every nation should strive towards.  
Consequently, there is no ‘one size fits all’ democratic model that can be exported abroad. The participating citizens mention diplomacy and dialogue
 as the tools to implement such a model abroad – probably referring to 
the EU’s soft-power instruments. However, we should be mindful of not 
forcing non-EU countries into some sort of democratic ‘template’. They 
must go through their own democratic transformation. Previous attempts 
to do so have mostly failed, whether in the Balkans or Afghanistan.
Improving the EU’s internal rule-of-law toolbox
This does not mean that EU member states should not respect the values set out in Article 2 TEU, the democratic standards for countries already part of the EU. In order to better respect those values, the citizens suggest widening the rule of law conditionality regulation
 to include all breaches of the rule of law, and not only those 
affecting the EU budget (recommendation #10). Indeed, the current scope 
of this regulation is rather narrow, making it difficult for the 
European Commission to fight against systemic rule-of-law breaches. 
However,
 the concrete implementation of a conditionality mechanism that would 
apply to all breaches is rather difficult in legal terms: the Commission
 would need sufficient proof to showcase that a national government 
deliberately attempted to erode rule-of-law standards, which is almost 
impossible to do. Therefore, while the Conference recommendation 
recognises this instrument’s limited effect, implementing a wider scope 
of the regulation in practice would be difficult. In addition, despite 
being the ‘Guardian of the Treaties’, in practice, the Commission can 
only successfully safeguard the Article 2 values with the help of the 
European Council and, therefore, other national governments. 
The citizens also propose organising an annual conference to discuss the results of the European Commission’s rule of law report
 (recommendation #11). Once again, they pinpointed the main challenge: 
this report is not sufficiently discussed in public, thereby reducing 
its visibility and impact. Organising a conference to discuss the 
reports’ insights and conclusions with a range of stakeholders from all 
27 member states could kickstart a debate about the rule of law which 
goes beyond the report. While such a proposal is more than feasible, the
 conference would only have a limited impact in practice, as it would be
 unlikely to lead to any concrete improvements in the European 
rule-of-law situation on the ground. Nevertheless, it could be a first 
step in the right direction to give more importance to the report and 
allow the Commission to make more binding recommendations regarding 
national rule-of-law standards. 
Connecting citizens to ongoing political debates is an end in itself...
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