Abstract
Trilogues have become the modus operandi of EU decision-making. They are an informal but institutionalised mechanism providing for in camera discussions of legislative texts between the three main EU decision-making institutions, with a view to securing legislative compromises. Trilogues present risks to an organ of parliamentary representation through their potential to depoliticise conflict and by reducing the accountability and transparency of the decision-making process. We examine how the European Parliament (EP) has responded to trilogues and what this response tells us about the development of the EP as an institutionalised organ of representative democracy. We compare these with arrangements for bicameral conflict resolution in the United States, where similar issues are presented by informal mechanisms of decision-making. We assess the institutionalisation of trilogues from a democratic perspective, highlighting achievements and future challenges, and the value of these findings for the ongoing reflection on the EP as a normal parliament and the role of informal institutions in EU law-making.
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Notes
- 1.
The authors acknowledge financial support from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), grant ES/N018761/1 received as part of the Open Research Area (ORA) grant 187/2015. Part of the material used in this chapter comes from the field research and interviews conducted by Christilla Roederer-Rynning in Washington, DC from April to July 2017.
- 2.
Commonly referred to as the Council of Ministers. We use the term ‘Council’ in the remainder of the text.
- 3.
The EP, the Council, and the European Commission.
- 4.
This figure includes files concluded at first or early second reading. Early second reading files typically reflect the inheritance of first reading positions adopted at the end of the preceding legislative term (European Parliament 2017). Early second reading is where ‘the agreement between the Council and Parliament is reflected in the Council’’s Common Position rather than the Parliament’’s first reading report. This may be because a compromise was reached between the two only after Parliament had adopted its first reading report’ (House of Lords n.d.)
- 5.
2007 inter-institutional agreement on codecision, concluded between the European Parliament, the Council, and the Commission.
- 6.
2012 and 2017 reforms of the EP rules of procedure.
- 7.
In EP8, the largest in the first half term involved 14, for the General Data Protection Regulation.
- 8.
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Greenwood, J., Roederer-Rynning, C. (2019). Taming Trilogues: The EU’s Law-Making Process in a Comparative Perspective. In: Costa, O. (eds) The European Parliament in Times of EU Crisis. European Administrative Governance. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97391-3_6
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