The paper deals with the introduction of the EU in the modern world and then
explores the relationship of democracy and the European Union and how the Union
tries to impose democratic operations in its existence. The paper also considers
the various challenges the Union faces in realising the democratic ideals and
upholding them. It considers the various crises, problems, and issues that came
since the inception of the Union and suggested specific ways by which the Union
may tackle the problems.
Research Objective
The paper attempts to delve into the democratic principles of the European Union
and, through a thorough analysis, figure out the challenges to the Union that
are imposed in the working, vis-à-vis the democratic ideals, and give probable
suggestions for the same issue.
Introduction
Democracy, in the modern world, is the ideal. Even though democracy has been the
most used (and abused) idea since, after the Second World War[1], it is
essential for furthering the goals and ideals of a world that cares for its
citizens. The people are only empowered when they have the power to change the
rules under which they live.
The EU is a unique bloc that emerged in the European continent as an economic
and political alliance and cooperative body between 27 member states. In the
aftermath of the Second World War, the idea increased trade, economic dependency
and avoided conflict. It has done a commendable job at bringing on the same
table players that were enemies and fostered peace and growth of the entire
region.
However, the EU is more often than not charged with being against the ideals of
democracy, with all its supranational powers and apparent lack of transparency,
no matter given to the fact that democracy was one of the founding principles of
the EU.
This paper will analyse how the EU applies its democratic principles and its
challenges in overcoming the same.
The Democratic Ideals in the EU
There is a widespread idea that the democratic principles of the EU are weak and
inadequate for today's world[2]. We must try and understand the democratic
decision making of the Union to proceed further.
Direct Citizen Representation
The agreement to hold the first direct elections for the European Parliament in
1976 encouraged the development of the direct representation we now have. As a
direct representative of EU citizens, the European Parliament oversees the
organization's operations and enacts legislation. The EU's budgetary authority
is formed with the help of the Parliament, which also has the jurisdiction to
nominate and remove Commission members.
The EP has a set tenure, is in place indefinitely, and has its own business
agenda. It is also the only institution that was created as a result of a direct
election by the populace. It also exercises significant authority over the
Commission, all of which contributes to the Parliament's enhanced power and, by
extension, the citizens.
Indirect Citizen Representation
Indirect democracy is also apparent in the workings of the EU, where the
European Council is the most important political institution of the EU and is
composed of the Heads of States of the National Parliament which in turn were
chosen by the citizens. The Council is influential as it sets the Union's goals
and ways to achieve them. It also takes decisions on issues where the Council of
Ministers cannot agree on and tackles global problems under the common foreign
and security policy to coordinate foreign policies of the member nations.
Moreover, the Council of the European Union represents the Governments of the
member-states.
Citizen's Inputs
The EU has portals and applications that take the problems and views of the
Citizens under the European Citizens' Initiative. Citizens are not only allowed
but encouraged to contribute to the democratic proceedings and give suggestions
and views on the policies of the EU, and every citizen of a member country is a
citizen of the EU and has all the rights and liabilities, regardless of gender,
race, and more. (The EU - what it is and what it does, 2021)[3]
Co-dependency of bodies
The EU has a system where the decisions taken are of a large scale and are taken
by a collaborative approach of multi-level parliamentary bodies and agencies,
fostering the growth and fusion of different levels of governing bodies.[4]
The system gives birth to a secondary level of representation of citizens,
called a multi-level parliamentary field[5], which means that the system has
connections and bears similarities in the structural entity to the existing
state systems and governance levels. They have one function – Citizen
Representation.
National Parliaments in the EU
National Parliaments exert control over the EU's decision as they form the
European Council. They are the ones that approve the treaties that have to be
modified, changing how the EU functions as a whole. The approval is usually a
constitutional procedure working in a democratic country. They also take
decisions on the Union's financial assets.
The National Parliaments are usually vital in the decisions under unanimity
rule, and EP has a lesser say in that, and since these decisions involve
political significance, there is much deliberation, public participation and
levels of scrutiny. However, they have less control in decisions that work under
the power of the EP, and the majority is the standard for decision making..
Challenges faced to the idea of Democracy in the EU
The Struggle of Supranational Integration
The EU has established itself as one of the most successful supranational
organisations using an ever-evolving integration strategy. However, as
integration advances and the supranational elements become more pronounced, the
democratic ideals become less and less viable as member nations lose their veto
power and submit to a system put in place by various EU authorities. Since major
executives refused to share power, there is a need for a trans-European
organisation that speaks for its population even if the European Parliament is
the only direct representative of the people. As a result, the European
Parliament needs to fight hard for authority and recognition.
Democracy across States
The European Countries that make up the EU are democratic sovereigns opposed to
the idea of a democracy of institutional settlement among states, which takes
away their sovereign. The idea of a trans-State democracy stems from a complex
amalgamation of the supranational identity of the EU and the democratic national
governments and their interactions in a complex setup.
While the EU imposes democracy within a State (Article 7 of the Treaty of
European Union), the imposition of democracy across all states becomes complex
as the democratic government of one member-nation might be on the other end of
the ideological spectrum of other member-nation. However, under a supranational
entity, both have limited on the issue. Unlike the UN, which has sovereign
member nations in an intergovernmental setting, the EU is more of a
supranational bloc of nations where the dependence on the institution and its
power is considerably more.
Another issue is the rise in pseudo-democracies within the EU, like Hungary that
portrays itself as a democratically elected body, but the truth is far from it,
and the whole system is rigged[6]. Such complex interactions between various
types of democracies and non-democracies in an institutional democratic setup
makes the whole system very complicated and troubled.
Citizen Representation and Belongingness
While the EU tries to speak for its population, in reality it is more of an
executive entity, with members who are not in any way democratically elected
making decisions. Although the European Council is made up of elected heads of
state and the European Parliament is elected directly, the representation of the
people is at risk due to the EU's growing supranational function. Additionally,
there is a grave threat posed by citizens' growing mistrust in the EU's
operations, which must be addressed by the institution in a fashion that
includes bodies and activities that engage the populace and give them a sense of
belonging to a society bigger than themselves.
Increased Executive Power
There has been a shift of decision-making power where the European Council has
emerged as the most powerful organ, and decisions are taken in an
intergovernmental fashion using various treaties. The same is termed Executive
Federalism and lacks oversight of any parliamentary proceedings, leading to a
break of democracy and loss of power of the European Parliament.
Creditor/Debtor State
After Europe's Sovereign Debt Crisis, two classes of states emerged within the
EU – The bailors or creditor states and the bailees or the debtor states.[7]
The same has led to a destruction in the democratic operations of the EU as the
creditor states enjoy power over the debtor state and go beyond their authorised
boundaries to make laws for the debtor states, while the debtor state's own
democratic and sovereign powers are limited. The same, in turn, limits the
citizens' power to govern themselves. These plans set to bolster democracy have
started eating it themselves.[8]
Suggestion and Conclusion
The European Union is an essential and prevailing body, but it is not without
its issues. Analysing the democratic principles of the EU and the challenges,
the paper tries to give certain suggestions for the same.
- Imposition of a Federal Structure:
Many of the problems the EU faces with its democratic processes are caused
by an oppressive power imbalance between the EU and its member states. The
same issue can be resolved if the EU adopts a federal structure with an
appropriate division of powers, allowing the European Parliament to pass
laws that apply to the entire EU and its member states, with no other body
or nation-state interfering in the areas that belong under their purview.
The member states would form a single administration under the EU, with the
European Council acting as a second house to the European Parliament with
equal authority.
- Better treatment of Debtor States:
Debtor states were bailed out of their financial crisis, and they owe a debt
to the bailors, but if the EU is to go on like a supranational body with
democratic operations, which incorporates all its members as one and gives
citizens the power, EU has to treat them same, giving none the power over
the other.
- More powers to European Parliament:
To make the EU a genuinely democratic body, European Parliament must be
bolstered with more powers since it is the only body representing the
citizens directly. The same would lead to a reduction in Executive
Federalism.
- Community-Building:
a significant problem that plagues the EU is the loss of trust in its
citizens. The recent withdrawal of the UK from the European Union (Brexit)
through a referendum is an example of the same distrust. Thus, the EU bodies
must bolster their approach towards increasing citizens' trust and making
them feel part of one Union rather than different countries. The same can be
achieved in multiple ways, including giving more political representation to
people, giving people more rights and subsequent duties, and portraying the
EU, not as an Institution but a State in itself, working for the whole
Union.
The paper's concluding remarks would point to the European's Union's unique
structure that has transcended national boundaries and is emerging as one of the
most powerful trans-national political blocs, bringing together foes and allies
of the past on a single table.
The European Union is viable because it functions with a democratic approach in
democratic nations. However, ever since the debt crisis, the EU has started
becoming more and more of an executive body rather than a parliamentary
structure which is a huge democratic crisis. The European Parliament is losing
its relevance, and the ideas of a supranational body would be limited to
intergovernmental treaties if the same goes on.
The possibility of creating the first democratically run organisation for
humanity is great. Despite recent instability in the region as a result of the
Crisis, Brexit, and the Covid Pandemic, the EU has succeeded in establishing
itself as a potent political and economic force that unites the nations.
However, as evolution is a survivor's tool, we must acknowledge the EU's issues,
take them seriously, and try to solve them, including the challenges to its
democratic processes. The Union must transform and grow in order to survive. In
a world when devastation is only a nuclear weapon away, we need organisations
like the Union to promote peace and guarantee the stability of not only Europe
but the entire world.
References
Journals
- Waligorski, Conrad P. In The Political Theory of Conservative
Economists, University PK, (1990).
- Micossi, Stefano. Democracy in the European Union, SSRN Electronic
Journal. (2008).
- Dietrich Rometsch and Wolfgang Wessels (eds.), The European Union and
Member States. Towards Institutional Fusion?. Manchester UP, (1996).
- Ben Crum and John Erik Fossum (eds.), Practices of Inter-Parliamentary
Coordination in International Politics. The European Union and Beyond. ECPR
Press, (2013).
- Berthold Rittberger, "Integration without Representation? The European
Parliament and the Reform of Economic Governance in the EU", Journal of CMS,
Vol. 52, No. 6. 1175 (2014).
- Ben Crum and John Erik Fossum (eds.), Practices of Inter-Parliamentary
Coordination in International Politics. The European Union and Beyond. ECPR
Press, 125, 125, 140 (2013).
- John Erik Fossum, "Democracy and Differentiation in Europe", Journal of
EPP, Vol. 22, No. 6, 799-815 (2015).
Internet Articles
- Directorate-General for Communication (European Commission), The EU -
what it is and what it does. Op.europa.eu.
https://op.europa.eu/webpub/com/eu-what-it-is/en/
- Democracy Digest. Hungary - not an illiberal democracy but a
pseudo-democracy. Democracy Digest. (2021) https://www.demdigest.org/hungary-not-an-illiberal-democracy-but-a-pseudo-democracy
End-Notes:
- Waligorski, Conrad P. In The Political Theory of Conservative
Economists, University PK, (1990).
- Micossi, Stefano. Democracy in the European Union, SSRN Electronic
Journal. (2008).
- Directorate-General for Communication (European Commission), The EU -
what it is and what it does. Op.europa.eu. https://op.europa.eu/webpub/com/eu-what-it-is/en/
- Dietrich Rometsch and Wolfgang Wessels (eds.), The European Union and
Member States. Towards Institutional Fusion?. Manchester UP (1996).
- Ben Crum and John Erik Fossum (eds.), Practices of Inter-Parliamentary
Coordination in International Politics. The European Union and Beyond. ECPR
Press, (2013).
- Democracy Digest.. Hungary - not an illiberal democracy but a
pseudo-democracy. Democracy Digest. (2021) https://www.demdigest.org/hungary-not-an-illiberal-democracy-but-a-pseudo-democracy/
- Ben Crum and John Erik Fossum (eds.), Practices of Inter-Parliamentary
Coordination in International Politics. The European Union and Beyond. ECPR
Press, 125, 125, 140 (2013)
- John Erik Fossum, "Democracy and Differentiation in Europe", Journal of
EPP, Vol. 22, No. 6, 799-815 (2015).
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