Maija Setälä and Theo Schiller: Citizens’ Initiatives in Europe: Procedures an Consequences of Agenda-Setting by Citizens

Review

Citizens’ Initiatives in Europe: Procedures and Consequences of Agenda-Setting by Citizens
By Maija Setälä and Theo Schiller (eds.)
Palgrave Macmillan 2012, 280 pp

Providing an insightful analysis of citizens’ initiatives across 11 European countries, including the new EU-level European Citizens’ Initiative, book editors Maija Setälä and Theo Schiller focus on institutions that allow citizens to raise new political proposals and oppose acts passed by parliaments. The volume’s contributors examine two types of initiatives: full-scale initiatives followed by ballot votes (referendums), and agenda initiatives addressed by representative bodies. Schiller and Setälä examine the variations in impact and effectiveness of citizens’ initiatives due to the differences in legal frameworks and procedural requirements, as well as the strength of civil society across European countries. But the main obstacles to the success of citizens’ initiatives are actually procedural requirements such as admissible subject matter, turnout and approval quorums.

Schiller and Setälä write:

“The institution of citizens’ initiative seems to provide formally equal rights for citizens to raise issues on the political agenda and thus enhance equal opportunities for all citizens to participate in public deliberation (10).”

The key phrase in the above quote is “formally equal rights”. As Schiller and Setälä go on to argue, although the initiatives provide formally equal rights for citizens, whether citizens can actually put those rights into practice remains another matter. Citizens do not have equal opportunities to take advantage of national, let alone supranational, initiative institutions such as the European Citizens’ Initiative. Initiatives require access to significant resources and wide-reaching networks in order to be successful. Improvements in procedural design, the editors contend, will be the key to enhancing the role of citizen initiatives in the democratic process.

Citizens’ initiatives have had the most success in Switzerland. Georg Lutz’s chapter about the Swiss experience with direct democracy analyses the historical emergence of citizens’ initiatives in Switzerland and their impact on the political agenda and policymaking. Full-scale legislation on citizens’ initiatives was adopted in 1891. Currently, initiative organisers in Switzerland have 18 months to collect the required 100,000 signatures (approximately 2% of the population). In 2010 alone, 281 initiatives were submitted to the parliament, of which 174 went to a popular vote leading to 18 accepted initiatives. This is quite a high figure and no other country examined in the book even comes close to this number of submitted initiatives. In Switzerland, Lutz argues, “direct democracy co-exists well with elements of representative democracy” (32) and initiatives act as a “reality check” on political parties and elites. They expand the space for politics and avoid the complete monopolization of the political agenda by a small circle of political actors.

On the other end of the spectrum is Lithuania, which is a newer democracy than Switzerland and has more stringent procedural requirements for citizens’ initiatives. In Lithuania organisers of citizens’ initiatives have three months to collect 300,000 signatures (11.4% of population). These requirements have dampened enthusiasm for initiatives, and in 2010 no initiatives were submitted. Algis Krupavičius discusses how two decades after the collapse of communism in Lithuania, direct democratic instruments of law and decision-making are now legally recognized in the domestic political framework. Yet, in spite of the presence of such legal frameworks and instruments, the political impact remains highly questionable. Krupavičius argues that the major obstacles stem from the underdevelopment, weakness and passivity of civil society and scepticism toward the “possibilities of citizens to influence politics, deep distrust towards politicians and political institutions, and lack of habits of political and social activity” (148).

Moving from specific national contexts to the EU level, the chapter by Bruno Kaufmann examines the introduction of the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI), which was passed by the European Commission in April 2012. The ECI is an invitation to the European Commission to propose legislation on matters where the EU has competence to legislate. A citizens’ initiative has to be backed by at least 1 million EU citizens, coming from at least seven out of the 27 member states. As the book was published before the ECI went into effect, this chapter primarily offers a background into and history of the ECI and analyses its constitutional and statutory framework. Kaufmann considers the “practical challenges of the near future, when more than half a billion Europeans potentially gained the power to influence politics between elections”. (228) This ECI has been hailed by supporters as a move towards direct democracy in Europe and was seen as a way to make up for the democratic deficit of EU decision-making. Critics are cautious and argue that the stringent procedural requirements mean that ECI is unlikely to lead to widespread citizen action and that it may become an instrument primarily used by large NGOs, consulting firms and lobbyists. It is too soon to tell what impact, if any, the ECI will have on citizens’ participation in the EU.

Overall this is a very informative and well-organised edited volume. The strength of the book is its breadth and scope. The editors have maintained consistency by asking contributors to focus their discussions on standard areas – including the historical context, motivations, institutional design, procedural requirements and political impact of initiatives. The comparative approach allows for examination and analysis of the reasons for “failure” or “success” given certain normative criteria as well as the political and social contexts.

Although there is a comprehensive discussion of theories of democracy, I would have liked a stronger engagement and consideration of civil society as an analytical framework. There is an implicit recognition that the strength or weakness of civil society matters to the success of initiatives, but this matter is not fully explored or analysed. And a related issue is that the discussion of the initiatives was largely normative. I would have liked a more-critical analysis by the editors in the introduction or conclusion of how initiatives can be used or abused by well-organized and well-funded parties or lobbyists for their narrow ends. Apart from these two points, I found the book to be very informative and I believe it will be a useful resource for scholars, policymakers and activists interested in the institution of citizens’ initiatives and the processes of collective action.

This review was originally published on the LSE Review of Books:

www.lsereviewofbooks.com

Image: http://europa.eu/citizens-2013/en/news/worlds-largest-citizens-postcard-commissions-headquarters

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