Tallberg, Jonas.
2008. Party Politics in the European Council. Journal of European
Public Policy, 15(8): 1222-1242.
Abstract:
This
article explores the extent to which the growing party politicization
of the EU extends to the European Council. We advance the argument
that three central factors shape the extent to which party politics
influences European Council outcomes: the salience of an issue along
the left-right dimension, the partisan composition of the European
Council, and the cohesion and mobilization of transnational parties.
We explore the influence of these factors empirically through an
inventory of eacutelite interview evidence as well as two case studies
- the employment chapter of the Amsterdam Treaty and the Lisbon agenda.
We conclude that the conditions for party influence in the European
Council are demanding, and that the scope for party politicization
is less extensive than in the other major EU institutions. The issues
on the agenda of the European Council often cut across partisan divides,
the heads of government are seldom mobilized along transnational
party lines, and decision outcomes instead tend to reflect issue-specific
coalition patterns.