Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box

Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) have a multitude of parliamentary duties and, accordingly, have to prioritize some parliamentary activities over others. So far, we know comparably little about this prioritization process. Based on principal–agent theory, we argue first, that MEPs’ parliame...

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Main Authors: Eva-Maria Euchner, Elena Frech
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-02-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2553
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spelling doaj-55b1c0dbac624fcaba9512e56ae4ab102020-11-25T02:06:20ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632020-02-0181728410.17645/pag.v8i1.25531296Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-BoxEva-Maria Euchner0Elena Frech1Geschwister-Scholl Institute for Political Science, LMU Munich, GermanyDepartment of Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva, SwitzerlandMembers of the European Parliament (MEPs) have a multitude of parliamentary duties and, accordingly, have to prioritize some parliamentary activities over others. So far, we know comparably little about this prioritization process. Based on principal–agent theory, we argue first, that MEPs’ parliamentary activities are systematically determined by the “visibility” and usefulness of parliamentary instruments for their key principal; second, we expect the exclusiveness of candidate selection procedures of an MEP’s national party—the nomination and the final list placement—to determine her/his key principal (i.e., elites or members of national parties). Combining multi-level mixed effects linear regression models and expert interviews, we show that MEPs who are nominated and whose final list placement is decided by an exclusive circle of national party elites prioritize speeches, whereas MEPs who are nominated or whose final list placement is decided by more inclusive procedures prioritize written questions and opinions or reports. In other words, speeches seem particularly useful to communicate with national party elites, while other activities are used to serve larger groups of party members. These findings open up the black-box of the “national party principal” and illustrate how a complex principal–agent relationship stimulates very specific parliamentary activity patterns in the EU’s multi-level system.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2553candidate selectioneuropean parliamentmulti-level systemprincipal–agent relationshipparliamentary activity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva-Maria Euchner
Elena Frech
spellingShingle Eva-Maria Euchner
Elena Frech
Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
Politics and Governance
candidate selection
european parliament
multi-level system
principal–agent relationship
parliamentary activity
author_facet Eva-Maria Euchner
Elena Frech
author_sort Eva-Maria Euchner
title Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
title_short Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
title_full Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
title_fullStr Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
title_full_unstemmed Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
title_sort candidate selection and parliamentary activity in the eu’s multi-level system: opening a black-box
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) have a multitude of parliamentary duties and, accordingly, have to prioritize some parliamentary activities over others. So far, we know comparably little about this prioritization process. Based on principal–agent theory, we argue first, that MEPs’ parliamentary activities are systematically determined by the “visibility” and usefulness of parliamentary instruments for their key principal; second, we expect the exclusiveness of candidate selection procedures of an MEP’s national party—the nomination and the final list placement—to determine her/his key principal (i.e., elites or members of national parties). Combining multi-level mixed effects linear regression models and expert interviews, we show that MEPs who are nominated and whose final list placement is decided by an exclusive circle of national party elites prioritize speeches, whereas MEPs who are nominated or whose final list placement is decided by more inclusive procedures prioritize written questions and opinions or reports. In other words, speeches seem particularly useful to communicate with national party elites, while other activities are used to serve larger groups of party members. These findings open up the black-box of the “national party principal” and illustrate how a complex principal–agent relationship stimulates very specific parliamentary activity patterns in the EU’s multi-level system.
topic candidate selection
european parliament
multi-level system
principal–agent relationship
parliamentary activity
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2553
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