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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Crises and the EU’s Response: Increasing the Democratic Deficit?

Anne Elizabeth Stie

subject

Maastricht TreatyDemocratic deficitParliamentmedia_common.quotation_subjectPolitical economyPolitical sciencemedia_common.cataloged_instanceTechnocracyEuropean unionLegitimacyDemocracymedia_common

description

Since the adoption of the Maastricht Treaty and the end of the permissive consensus, the European Union (EU) has—with varying intensity and emphases—been criticized for its democratic deficits. Whereas previous crises often ended up in further integration and strengthening institutions with popular anchoring (notably the European Parliament), this time many commentators are in doubt as crises pile up and common solutions seem hard to find. The EU’s problem is that the technocratic, non-majoritarian bodies dominate policymaking and, on top of that, are not anchored in other sources of legitimacy than its ability to deliver desirable outcomes. In other words, the crises highlight the fact that input legitimacy cannot be separated or disconnected (to the extent that is the case in the Union today) from output legitimacy.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51791-5_42