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Constraining the European Commission to please the public: responsiveness through delegation choices
[journal article]
Abstract When and how does public opinion affect the delegation choices of legislators in the EU? We argue the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers limit the discretion of the Commission in response to EU-wide scepticism and politicisation of EU policies. Public opposition to EU policies, their c... view more
When and how does public opinion affect the delegation choices of legislators in the EU? We argue the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers limit the discretion of the Commission in response to EU-wide scepticism and politicisation of EU policies. Public opposition to EU policies, their contestation, and potential scrutiny motivate the EU legislators to minimise the discrepancies between the adopted and implemented policies. They do so to avoid bearing the costs of disregarding public preferences over the level of EU integration. Our analysis of legislation adopted between 2009-2019 relying on a novel dataset on public policy preferences and agency discretion supports this expectation. The results offer evidence of previously unexplored responsiveness of the EU institutions emerging in the policy implementation that might entail efficiency losses.... view less
Keywords
European Commission; Eurobarometer; public opinion; delegation of tasks; politicization; EU; EU policy; European Parliament; European Council of Ministers; legislation
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
European Politics
Free Keywords
principal-agent; Eurobarometer 27 (Mar-May 1987) (ZA1712); Eurobarometer 28 (Nov 1987) (ZA1713)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 2775-2799
Journal
Journal of European Public Policy, 31 (2024) 9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2023.2224399
ISSN
1466-4429
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed