Chapter 7: The European Union. You Say You Want a Constitution? –Does it matter whether it’s called a constitution or a treaty? –What about growth?

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 7: The European Union

You Say You Want a Constitution? –Does it matter whether it’s called a constitution or a treaty? –What about growth?

Thinking about the EU –Who’s in? Who’s Out? EU grew to 27 member states in ‘ million residents GDP about equal to U.S.

Thinking about the EU –The new Europe Expansion forced debate about governance New members are significantly poorer than others Many new countries had been ruled by Communists

Thinking about the EU –Three Pillars Trade and economic issues Cooperation in justice and home affairs Desire to create a Common Foreign and Security Policy

Thinking about the EU –Key Questions How and why did the EU emerge? What is its political culture and how does it affect the way people participate in political life? What are its main decision-making bodies? What are its critical public policy initiatives? How do the European people learn about and react to those policies?

The Evolution of the EU –Not such a new idea Marshall Plan and OEEC, late 1940s ECSC, 1951 The Treaty of Rome: the EEC and EURATOM, 1957

The Evolution of the EU –Creating the Common Market Early debates about expansion Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), 1966 Single European Act, 1985 Maastricht Treaty, 1991 Treaty of Nice, 2000

Political Culture and Participation in the EU –Partisan life remains almost exclusively national, not European –Democratic Deficit describes “distance” between citizens and EU decision making –Media remain national, not European, except for Eurosport –Language differences remain

The European State? –The Commission Permanent executive of the EU Supervises work of 30 ministry-like services Initiates and implements most programs Commissioners nominated by their national government; approved by qualified majority of Council Serve EU, not home countries (in theory)

The European State? –The Council of Ministers Ministers from member governments meet to deal with topics relevant to their portfolios Foreign and Finance ministers meet monthly Heads of government meet twice yearly Commission proposals require Council as well as Parliamentary approval Complex system of “qualified majority voting” is an attempt to avoid gridlock of required unanimity

The European State? –The European Court of Justice Court of First Instance Court of Auditors (EU finance cases) European Court of Justice –Each government appoints one judge –Broad constitutional jurisdiction –EU laws and regulations take precedence over national law

The European State? –The European Parliament Legitimacy increased after 1979 when MEPs were directly elected Codecision requires Council and Commission to consult and get Parliamentary approval or acquiescence without a unanimous Council vote Approves all nominees to Commission –The Complexities of EU Decision Making

The European State? –Next steps? Treaty of 2007 is likely to be a plateau of change Membership for Turkey is next big question –The EU and national sovereignty How much national sovereignty has EU assumed? Further regulation of trade will be a demonstration of power of EU

Public Policy in the EU –The Internal Market Removal of tariffs and trade barriers Growth of transnational enterprises European Monetary Union has facilitated European business

Public Policy in the EU –The Common Agricultural Policy Huge, expensive program Seems to inhibit free trade Changes forced on EU by global forces Not extended to newest members immediately

Feedback –Little news coverage of EU and its politics –Voting rates lower than for national elections –Alienation from EU politics widespread

Conclusion: A Balance Sheet –Major factor in post-WWII peace and prosperity –Demonstrates success of transnational organization

Learning Objectives After mastering the concepts presented in this chapter, you will be able to: Comprehend the history of the political and economic development of the European Union. Understand the role of Jean Monnet in the history of the EU formation. Define the constitutional importance of the EU’s acquis communautaire Recognize factors that contribute to the challenges of adopting the European Union’s Constitution. Recognize three pillars of the European Union. Discuss the complexity of supranationalism vs. intergovernmentalism while debating the statehood characteristics of the EU. Understand the process of formation, functionality, importance and legitimacy of the following institutions of the European Union: European Parliament, European Commission, Council of Ministers, European Council, European Court of Justice Assess the political, economic and social importance of the following treaties of the European Union: Treaty of Rome, Single European Act, Maastricht Treaty, Treaty of Amsterdam, Treaty of Nice

Learning Objectives After mastering the concepts presented in this chapter, you will be able to: Understand the purpose and functions of the European Monetary Union. Assess the economic (and, political) impact of the euro, as well as the decision of some EU members not to join the Euro Zone. Discuss the specifications of the Common Agricultural Policy. Define civil society and political culture of in the European Union. Identify challenges of political participation in the EU. Recognize and discuss the ‘democratic deficit’ in the European Union. Describe the process of the enlargement of the European Union. Understand the codecision procedure of the European Parliament and analyze the concept of legitimacy of the EP. Discuss process of political decision making in the European Union. Comprehend the impact of the European Union’s development and enlargement on the national sovereignty of member states.