Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
NATIONAL PARLIAMENTS ARE CENTRAL ACTORS IN THE SCRUTINY AND implementation of European Union (EU) legislation. Member state legislatures provide a channel for incorporating public opinion into the governance of the Union. Their importance has become more evident during the 1990s as debate has focused on the democratic deficit and deparliamentarization of European governance.
National parliaments are involved in EU decision-making in three ways: they 1) participate in national policy formulation on Union legislation; 2) monitor the behaviour of member state representatives in the Council of Ministers and the European Council; and 3) have functions specifically regulated in the treaties, such as ratification of treaty amendments and implementation of directives. The third function differs from the first two as the treaties impose rights and duties on the national parliaments, whereas there is no EU law on national policy formulation on Union legislation or on the scrutiny of ministers. During the 1996-97 Intergovernmental Conference (ICC) the member states saw no need for such European-level regulation. Thus it is up to each national parliament – within the limits set by member state constitutions and other constraints – to decide how it deals with the challenges brought by EU membership.
An earlier version of this article was presented in the Workshop on ‘EU Decision-making and European Democracy’ at the conference The Treaty of Amsterdam Evaluated, University of Twente, Enschede, 12-14 February 1998. I would like to thank the participants, Hans Hegeland (Swedish Riksdag) and the anonymous referee for their comments.
2 The role of national parliaments in European integration has recently received much‐needed attention among political scientists. See Bergman, Torbjörn, ‘National Parliaments and EU Affairs Committees: Notes on Empirical Variation and Competing Explanations’, Journal of European Public Policy, 4:3 (1997), pp. 373–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Judge, David, ‘The Failure of National Parliaments’, West European Politics, 18:3 (1995), pp. 79–100 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Norton, Philip (ed.), ‘National Parliaments and the European Union’, Journal of Legislative Studies, 1:3 (1995)Google Scholar; Laursen, Finn and Pappas, S. A. (eds), The Changing Role of Parliaments in the European Union, Maastricht, EIPA, 1995 Google Scholar; Smith, Eivind (ed.), National Parliaments as Cornerstones of European Integration, London, Kluwer Law International, 1996 Google Scholar.
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7 Information on European Affairs Committees is mainly taken from ‘De särskilda organen för EU‐fragor vid medlemsstaternas parlament’, Generaldirektorat för utskott, kommittéer och delegationer, Europaparlamentet, June 1995.
8 Bergman, op. cit.
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11 Report on the XVth COSAC Meeting, Ireland, 15–16 October 1996, Houses of the Oireachtas.
12 ‘Report on the Relations Between the European Parliament and National Parliaments’, Committee on Institutional Affairs, Rapporteur Ms Annemie Neyts‐Uyttebroeck, 22 May 1997, PE 221.698/fin.; ‘Resolution on the Relations Between the European Parliament and National Parliaments’, A4‐0179/97, PE 260.312.
13 See European Parliament, ‘Summary of the Positions of the Member States and the European Parliament on the 1996 Intergovernmental Conference’, Secretariat Working Party: Task‐Force on the ‘Intergovernmental Conference’, Luxembourg, 12 July 1996, JF/bo/239/96; and European Parliament, ‘Role of the National Parliaments’, Intergovernmental Conference, Briefing No. 6, 25 March 1996.
14 ‘Protocol on the Role of National Parliaments in the European Union’, Treaty of Amsterdam, European Communities, Luxembourg, October 1997.
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