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Democratic Politics in the European Parliament
This 2007 book argues that a strong party system in the European Parliament is promoting democratic accountability.
Simon Hix (Author), Abdul G. Noury (Author), Gérard Roland (Author)
9780521872881, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 19 April 2007
260 pages, 27 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm, 0.548 kg
'An original and compelling case for recognising the growing importance of party politics in the European Parliament.' Michael Shackleton, European Parliament Secretariat
With the European Parliament comprising politicians from many different countries, cultures, languages, national parties and institutional backgrounds, one might expect politics in the Parliament to be highly-fragmented and unpredictable. By studying more than 12,000 recorded votes between 1979 and 2004 this 2007 book establishes that the opposite is in fact true: transnational parties in the European Parliament are highly cohesive and the classic 'left-right' dimension dominates voting behaviour. Furthermore, the cohesion of parties in the European Parliament has increased as the powers of the Parliament have increased. The authors suggest that the main reason for these developments is that like-minded MEPs have incentives to form stable transnational party organizations and to use these organizations to compete over European Union policies. They suggest that this is a positive development for the future of democratic accountability in the European Union.
Introduction
1. Development of the European Parliament
2. Democracy, transaction costs and political parties
3. Ideological not territorial politics
4. Participation
5. Trends in party cohesion
6. Agenda setting and cohesion
7. Who controls the MEPs?
8. Competition and coalition formation
9. Dimensions of politics
10. Investiture and censure of the Santer Commission
11. The takeover directive
Conclusion.
Subject Areas: EU & European institutions [JPSN2], Politics & government [JP]