How support from other Member States affects influence in the Council of the European Union

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Series Details 18.09.17
Publication Date 18/09/2017
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Numerous studies have attempted to measure the relative bargaining power that each EU member state has when making decisions in the Council of the European Union. But as Klaas Staal writes, the extent to which a state’s preferences match those of other member states can be just as important as its bargaining power. Drawing on data from a new study*, he illustrates that large states such as Germany, Poland, and the UK regularly take positions that are against the majority, while the change in Council voting weights from the Nice to the Lisbon Treaty can also only be understood by measuring the change in voting weights for a state’s most frequent allies.

* Influence in the EU: Measuring Mutual Support (JCMS, August 2017)

Source Link http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2017/09/18/how-support-from-other-member-states-affects-influence-in-the-council-of-the-european-union/
Related Links
JCMS, August 2017: Influence in the EU: Measuring Mutual Support http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jcms.12586/full
ESO: Background information: Do votes matter? Voting weights and the success probability of member state requests in the Council of the European Union (Journal of European Integration Vol.39, No.6, September 2017, p673-687) http://www.europeansources.info/record/do-votes-matter-voting-weights-and-the-success-probability-of-member-state-requests-in-the-council-of-the-european-union/

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