Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
This article makes a two-fold contribution to the European Parliament (EP) literature. First, it challenges the dominant assumption that post-Amsterdam the EP has experienced an increase in its powers. Through analysis of the Socrates case the article shows that the EP is now potentially weaker under the post-Amsterdam co-decision procedure (co-decision II), than it was under the earlier variant, co-decision I. Second, the article uncovers a hitherto overlooked aspect of internal divisions within the parliament, by revealing that there is scope for inter-committee conflict in the EP over budgetary allocations for multi-annual programmes. It is argued that such conflict can weaken the parliament in co-decision negotiations with the council, and that the negotiation of the EU's new multi-annual budgetary framework provides the perfect conditions for such internecine conflict to occur once more.
This article draws upon research funded by ESRC Grants R00429843318 and T026271246. The author would like to thank the commission, council and EP officials and MEPs who gave so freely of their time in order to answer questions, and allowed access to archives and files and the two anonymous referees for their helpful comments and suggestions.
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6 S. Hix, The Political System of the European Union, Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1999, pp. 94–8; Tsebelis and Garrett, ‘Legislative Politics in the European Union’; Tsebelis and Garrett, ‘The Institutional Foundations of Intergovernmentalism and Supranationalism in the European Union’.Google Scholar
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22 For details of representation on committees under co-decision II see Shackleton and Raunio, ‘Codecision Since Amsterdam’.Google Scholar
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30 Interview, EP Socialist Group official, 10 February 2000; Shackleton and Raunio, ‘Codecision Since Amsterdam’, p. 184.Google Scholar
31 Interview, Finnish COREPER official, 20 March 2000.Google Scholar
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