The European Parliament, its powers, and the 1979 European elections

Author (Person)
Author (Corporate)
Publisher
Series Title
Series Details PE 759.605
Publication Date February 2024
Content Type

Summary:

This briefing traces the evolution of the debates on the European Parliament's powers, and their (dis)connection to the organisation of the first direct European elections in 1979. It spans the period leading up to 1979, and also assesses the aftermath of these landmark elections. It shows that well into the 1970s, Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) put great effort into de coupling the debates on organising Parliament's direct elections from those on expanding its institutional powers. MEPs' main fear was that demanding both as a package deal would be too much for Member State governments to swallow, creating a risk of ending up with neither. Separately pursuing more powers and direct elections was considered the smarter strategy. Yet by the end of the 1970s, with progress being made on both fronts, it had become difficult for MEPs to maintain this distinction. Increasingly, MEPs pushed a discourse of a self reinforcing, virtuous circle of empowerment and elections. They developed this discourse further after the 1979 elections, when a disappointingly low voter turnout dictated a re coupling of the issues in order to maintain the momentum of the Parliament's growing empowerment. The briefing concludes by connecting this historical debate to contemporary issues, highlighting how the question of Parliament's powers has become intimately connected with questions of democracy, representation and elections.

This briefing is part of the European Parliament History Series.

Source Link https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2024/759605/EPRS_BRI(2024)759605_EN.pdf
Alternative sources
  • https://www.europarl.europa.eu/thinktank/en/document/EPRS_BRI(2024)759605
Subject Categories ,
Subject Tags
International Organisations