2016
DOI: 10.1177/0010414015621077
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Government Responsiveness in the European Union: Evidence From Council Voting

Abstract: * * * * Are governments responsive to public preferences when legislating in international organizations? This paper demonstrates that governments respond to domestic public opinion even when acting at the international level. Specifically, we examine conflict in the European Union's primary legislative body, the Council of the European Union (EU). We argue that domestic electoral incentives compel governments to react to public opinion. Analyzing a unique dataset on all legislative decisions adopted in the Co… Show more

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Cited by 126 publications
(150 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…We had expected the elections to be of significance, but perhaps the effect– if any exists – is more limited and similar to the findings reported in Hagemann et al . (). These authors found that governments are more likely to oppose the majority in the Council in response to public opinion only in areas that include decisions to expand the EU powers further.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We had expected the elections to be of significance, but perhaps the effect– if any exists – is more limited and similar to the findings reported in Hagemann et al . (). These authors found that governments are more likely to oppose the majority in the Council in response to public opinion only in areas that include decisions to expand the EU powers further.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…() find that the presence of strong economic domestic interests dictate when a government decides to vote “no” or “abstain” in the Council (see also Mühlböck and Tosun ()). Public opinion – in particular the public's attitude towards EU integration – has also been shown to have an effect in a number of core policy areas (Hagemann et al, ). Others have found that a North–South or a North–South‐East divide exists (Mattila, ), and that at times a left–right cleavage can also be detected (Hagemann and Hoyland, ; Mattila, ).…”
Section: Signals and Voting In The Eu Councilmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This allows us to focus on conflicts of interests between the parliament and government that arise from incentives the government faces in the consensus-oriented Council, rather than from policy disagreements. Hagemann et al (2017) and others have shown that governments are responsive to domestic policy preferences in the Council. Considering the parliament and government as having the same preferences is not inconsistent with these findings.…”
Section: Actors and Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Hagemann et al. () and others have shown that governments are responsive to domestic policy preferences in the Council. Considering the parliament and government as having the same preferences is not inconsistent with these findings.…”
Section: The Modelmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The findings are inconclusive when it comes to the role of party ideology (Bailer et al, 2015;Hagemann, 2008;Hagemann and Hoyland, 2008;Hagemann et al, 2017;Hosli et al, 2011;Mattila, , 2009. Several studies have made use of the voting records to gain information on conflict patterns.…”
Section: Postfunctional Intergovernmental Bargaining?mentioning
confidence: 99%