The strength of the rotating Presidency is that it keeps :轮值主席国的力量它使.doc
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1、The strength of the rotating Presidency is that it keeps the Presidency weakDRAFT PLEASE DO NOT QUOTE WITHOUT PERMISSIONDerek BeachAssociate ProfessorUniversity of Aarhus, Denmarkemail - derekps.au.dk web ps.au.dk/derekPaper presented to the UACES Conference, Edinburgh, Scotland, 1-3 September 2021.
2、1. IntroductionOne of the most important justifications for the adoption of the Treaty of Lisbon was that the introduction of a fixed President of the European Council would result in a more efficient Europe. During the negotiations serious attempts were made to strengthen the Presidency at the Coun
3、cil of Ministers level, including proposals to allow the European Council President to chair the General Affairs Council. Underlying these reform efforts is the argument that the Presidency as an institution is unable to supply effective leadership, and in particular that smaller member states are m
4、anifestly unable to lift the burdens of the Presidency in an enlarged Union.Yet is the Presidency broken? Should further efforts be made to reform the Presidency institution? Contrary to the popular wisdom, this paper questions the basic premise underlying the reform efforts by providing evidence th
5、at while the powers possessed by the Presidency are relatively weak, it is the very weakness of the Presidency that makes it an effective leader. Drawing upon recent advances in the study of informal norms in the Council and leadership theories, this paper first discusses what types of leadership ar
6、e demanded in the Council. It is argued that given the consensual and long-term iterated game nature of EU decision-making, consensual forms of leadership are the most effective at achieving maximum possible gains from cooperation. In this type of leadership, the leader manages the agenda in an acce
7、ptable fashion to all, and finds, formulates and brokers acceptable compromises. Acceptable is not the same as being neutral, and an instrumental leader can exploit its position for private gains, but it cannot be too blatant as it is in more hegemonic forms of leadership.While larger member states
8、(sometimes) believe that their great power resources enable them to adopt a more imposing style of leadership, smaller state Presidencies live under no such illusions. Smaller state Presidencies are forced by necessity to 1) adopt a more consensual style of leadership, as they lack the great power r
9、esources that could enable them to impose their preferred outcomes upon other delegations, and 2) rely more upon the Council Secretariat, as they lack the administrative and diplomatic resources necessary to fulfill all of the tasks of the Presidency. Yet relying on the Secretariat has advantages, a
10、s the Secretariat possesses a combination of unrivalled experience with finding and brokering compromises that match the consensus norms of the Council, and also enjoys a level of acceptance of their central role due to the disinterested status it has in most negotiations in the Council / European C
11、ouncil, along with their careful cultivation of a reputation for impartiality. The term efficiency is defined in this paper as achieving agreements where no significant gains are left on the negotiating table while also minimizing decision-making costs. Leadership relates to the provision of functio
12、ns aimed at overcoming collective action problems that relate to high transaction costs in negotiations. This term is similar to the term entrepreneurship as used by Young (1991) and Moravcsik (1999). Finally, I define smaller member states as those states that while they might possess many administ
13、rative resources do not have the economic and political muscle that the larger countries have. Therefore I define the Netherlands and Portugal and below as smaller member states, and larger countries as Spain and Poland and above. This dividing line is reflected in the large jump in the Nice voting
14、weights from 29 for the big five, 27 for Poland and Spain, and then 12-13 for countries like Belgium, Greece, the Netherlands, and Portugal. One could create a more realistic weighting of Presidencies, and also include relevant factors such as national wealth or size of administration in order to cr
15、eate a more valid measure of Presidency size, but given the quality of the data possessed on Presidency performance, these further distinctions do not make much sense at present.The argument in this paper is structured in four sections. In section two the contours of the debate on reforming the Pres
16、idency are introduced. Thereafter I introduce the theoretical justification for why Presidency weakness can in specific circumstances be a strength in terms of being able to supply the leadership demanded in Council / European Council negotiations. Two testable hypotheses are developed that relate t
17、o the effectiveness of consensual leadership styles and reliance upon the Council Secretariat. The paper then assesses whether the paradox of Presidency weakness is backed by empirical evidence. I undertake a two stage empirical analysis, where I first utilize quantitative data to assess whether sma
18、ller states are as effective leaders in terms of the legislative output of the Council of Ministers, and then investigate whether we see evidence that smaller member states utilize more consensual approaches. Given the difficulty in validly measuring the key independent variables using quantitative
19、data (leadership style adopted and reliance on the Council Secretariat) and the dependent variable (efficiency), the analysis is supplemented by a more in-depth qualitative investigation of intergovernmental negotiations within EU treaty reform negotiations (IGCs). The choice to investigate IGCs is
20、made in order to concentrate specifically on intergovernmental dynamics between governments, whereas in normal Council decision-making other supranational actors like the Commission also have a significant leadership functions. Further, while IGCs formally take place outside of the EU institutional
21、framework, governments behave in a similar manner as in normal EU business.The conclusions of the paper discuss the empirical findings that show that smaller member states are at least as effective leaders as larger member states, and in many circumstances are even more effective. These findings sug
22、gest that the attempts to fundamentally reform the Presidency have not been a product of rational institutional design concerns motivated by a need to improve the efficiency of EU decision-making, but instead should be seen as a part of the French-led strategy to create a more intergovernmental EU d
23、ominated by larger member states. 2. The debate on the need for a strong PresidencyThe debate on reforming the rotating Presidency flared up in the late 1990s as the prospect of a big bang enlargement with up to ten countries moved closer. The Trumpf-Piris report from 1999 argued that the six-month
24、rotation was a major handicap for the continuity of work in the Council, and that there often was a lack of experience and expertise amongst member state officials for shouldering the burden of the Presidency; a problem that would only be exacerbated in a Union of 25 to 30 members as the increase in
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