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Top-down or bottom-up? The selection of shadow rapporteurs in the European Parliament

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-09-16, 09:06 authored by Frank M. Häge, Nils Ringe
Shadow rapporteurs play an important role in developing the European Parliament’s collective policy positions and in defending them in inter-institutional negotiations. This study sheds light on the ‘how’ and ‘why’ of shadow rapporteur selection. Qualitative insights from practitioner interviews and a quantitative analysis of shadow rapporteur data from the 7th European Parliament (2009-2014) indicate that the appointment process is primarily one of bottom-up self-selection by group members based on their policy interests. The party group leadership, in the form of group coordinators, plays an important coordinating role when there is competition for a shadow rapporteurship. However, the role of group coordinators is more akin to a thirdparty arbiter of competing demands than a mechanism of top-down control by the leadership, as suggested by principal-agent theory.

History

Publication

European Union Politics;21 (4), pp. 706-727

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

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