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commentary

Europe’s Democracy Trilemma

The EU faces a democracy trilemma. Only by enhancing transnational democratic interdependence, national democratic legitimacy, and local democratic vitality will the EU fix it.

by Kalypso Nicolaïdis and Richard Youngs
published by
International Affairs
 on November 12, 2014

Source: International Affairs

Since the European Parliament (EP) elections of May 2014 and the naming of a new team of European Commissioners and a new European Council president, debate has intensified over how the European Union should be reformed. The rise of Eurosceptic representation in the EP, in particular, has nudged conversations about the EU’s future into a different phase, crystallizing themes that had been slowly gathering during five years of economic crisis. There is now an apparent consensus that the model of integration must be more flexible, better rooted in local legitimacy, and more responsive to social concerns. The worst tremors of the eurozone crisis may have subsided for now, but the tensions of recent years suggest that interdependence between EU member states needs in the future to be managed in a more democratic fashion. Such observations are, of course, not new. The question is how to give these long-ruminated principles more tangible life. Our aim in this article is not to add our own list of ‘solutions’ or democratic add-ons to the many suggested since the crisis began. Rather, we hope to contribute a simple framework for thinking about the issues at stake. In doing this we caution against the tendency to advocate easy, short-term fixes to the EU’s travails; such measures have too often prevailed in the past. There is no big bang theory of European democratization.

In this spirit, we argue that the EU faces a democracy trilemma, as reform options need to combine three features: transnational democratic interdependence; national democratic legitimacy; and local democratic vibrancy. We use the concept of trilemma to convey the challenge of strengthening democratic principles on all three fronts and the tensions that may arise in doing so. Indeed, measured against this trilemma, we point out that several aspects of current reform proposals are misconceived or at least insufficient. We then suggest how democratic legitimacy can be reinvigorated through the empowerment of citizens in democratic processes, combining national representation with local participation while recognizing that democratic interdependence sometimes needs to be managed at the supranational level. Many familiar options for EU reform are now high on the policy agenda; but if the tide of frustration with the EU is to be turned back, the means of implementing these must be rethought and widened.

Read the full text of this article on International Affairs.

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