Abstract
We propose a method for identifying national interests in the European Parliament by comparing roll call vote results with MEPs’ expected ideological positions. We define a new measure – national shift index, corresponding to the magnitude of national delegation’s shift from the aggregate ideological position – which quantifies the influence of the national interest on the voting results. Using this measure, we identify issues characterized by strongest dominance of national factors and compare national delegations’ propensity to vote along national lines.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Similar content being viewed by others
Notes
- 1.
Felsenthal and Machover identify the three voting choices with −1, 0, and 1, respectively.
- 2.
Under the ordinary rules discussed here there is no voting quorum rule, i.e. the vote is valid irrespective of the number of MEPs present and voting (an absence of the quorum must be raised before the vote is held). In such case, abstentions are effectively equivalent to absence (while in the parliaments with a voting quorum rule they are distinct because they count towards attaining the quorum). However, distinguishing abstentions from absences is still useful, since abstentions always represent an MEP’s decision, while absences can result from circumstances beyond his control (and we cannot distinguish those politically motivated from the random ones). Alternatively, one can use an equivalent model based on the notion of quaternary voting game, where the “not participating” option is considered as the fourth one, see [16].
- 3.
If all members of the k-th political group taking part in the roll call are from the same national delegation, no ideological reference distribution exists for them. In such case, we discard their votes and do not take them into account in further stages of the proposed method. Because those cases are overwhelmingly rare, they do not significantly impact the overall results.
- 4.
It should be noted that this effect may arise when all members have voted according to their respective party lines, but also when some (or even all) members have defected, yet the defections have perfectly balanced each other.
- 5.
This conclusion makes sense from the political analysis point of view: Malta is the country with the stringest anti-abortion laws in the EU, and therefore arguably has an interest in rejecting calls on the EU to intrude (even on a rhetorical layer) on its sovereignty in this area, as such intrusions could in theory end in Malta being forced to change its laws on the subject against the will of its electorate.
References
Bailer, S.: Parliamentary party group discipline in comparison. 1st Annual General Conference of the European Political Science Association, Dublin (2011). http://www.afsp.info/congres2011/sectionsthematiques/st44/st44bailer.pdf
Callaghan, H., Höpner, M.: European integration and the clash of capitalisms: political cleavages over takeover liberalization. Comp. Eur. Politics 3(3), 307–332 (2005)
Cicchi, L.: The logic of voting behaviour in the European parliament: new insights on party group membership and national affiliation as determinants of vote. IMT Ph.D. thesis, Lucca (2013). http://e-theses.imtlucca.it/124/
Cohen, J.: A coefficient of agreement for nominal scales. Educ. Psychol. Measur. 20(1), 37–46 (1960)
Cohen, J.: Weighted kappa: nominal scale agreement provision for scaled disagreement or partial credit. Psychol. Bull. 70(4), 213–220 (1968)
Costello, R., Thomson, R.: Bicameralism, nationality and party cohesion in the European parliament. Party Politics (2014). doi:10.1177/1354068814563972
European Parliament: Rules of Procedure. 7th Parliamentary Term, July 2010. http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//NONSGML+RULES-EP+20100705+0+DOC+PDF+V0//EN
Faas, T.: To defect or not to defect? national, institutional and party group pressures on MEPs and their consequences for party group cohesion in the European parliament. Eur. J. Polit. Res. 42(6), 841–866 (2003)
Felsenthal, D.S., Machover, M.: Ternary voting games. Int. J. Game Theory 26(3), 335–351 (1997)
Hix, S.: How often do UK MEPs get their way? Datablog, The Guardian (2015). http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2015/dec/17/how-often-do-uk-meps-get-their-way
Hix, S.: Parliamentary behavior with two principals: preferences, parties, and voting in the European parliament. Am. J. Polit. Sci. 46(3), 688–698 (2002)
Hix, S., Noury, A., Roland, G.: Dimensions of politics in the European parliament. Am. J. Polit. Sci. 50(2), 494–520 (2006)
Hix, S., Noury, A., Roland, G.: Power to the parties: cohesion and competition in the European parliament, 1979–2001. Brit. J. Polit. Sci. 35(2), 209–234 (2005)
Hix, S., Noury, A., Roland, G.: Voting patterns and alliance formation in the European parliament. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B Biol. Sci. 364(1518), 821–831 (2009)
Kreppel, A., Tsebelis, G.: Coalition formation in the European parliament. Comp. Polit. Stud. 32(8), 933–966 (1999)
Laruelle, A., Valenciano, F.: Quaternary dichotomous voting rules. Soc. Choice Welfare 38(3), 431–454 (2011)
Lindstädt, R., Slapin, J.B., Vander Wielen, R.J.: Legislative position-taking with multiple principals: a Bayesian analysis of EP roll call data. Legislative Stud. Q. 36(1), 37–70 (2011)
Mühlböck, M.: National versus European: party control over members of the European parliament. W. Eur. Polit. 35(3), 607–631 (2012)
Noury, A.: Ideology, nationality and Euro-parliamentarians. Eur. Union Polit. 3(1), 33–58 (2002)
Ringe, N.: Policy preference formation in legislative politics: structures, actors, and focal points. Am. J. Polit. Sci. 49(4), 731–745 (2005)
Słomczyński, W., Życzkowski, K.: Mathematical aspects of degressive proportionality. Math. Soc. Sci. 63(2), 94–101 (2012)
Storgaard, H.R., Gottlieb, M.H.: Konfliktdimensioner, stemmedisciplin og Melodi Grand Prix i Strasbourg. Et kvantitativt studie af stemmeadfærd i Europa-Parlamentet 1999–2014. Speciale aflagt ved Institut for Statskundskab, Københavns Universitet (2014). https://diskurs.kb.dk/item/diskurs:71128:1/component/diskurs:71127/Speciale_Final.pdf
Thomassen, J., Noury, A., Voeten, E.: Political competition in the European parliament: evidence from roll call and survey analyses. In: Marks, G., Steenbergen, M.R. (eds.) European Integration and Political Conflict, pp. 141–164. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2004)
Vanbelle, S.: Agreement between raters and groups of raters. D.S. thesis, Dept. de Mathematique, Universite de Liege (2009). http://orbi.ulg.ac.be/bitstream/2268/39575/1/vanbelle-thesis-5-5-2009.pdf
Vanbelle, S., Albert, A.: Agreement between two independent groups of raters. Psychometrika 74(3), 477–491 (2009)
Voeten, E.: Enlargement and the ‘normal’ European parliament. In: Thomassen, J. (ed.) The Legitimacy of the European Union After Enlargement, pp. 93–114. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2016 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Słomczyński, W., Stolicki, D. (2016). National Interests in the European Parliament: Roll Call Vote Analysis. In: Nguyen, N., Kowalczyk, R., Mercik, J. (eds) Transactions on Computational Collective Intelligence XXIII. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 9760. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-52886-0_4
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-52886-0_4
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-662-52885-3
Online ISBN: 978-3-662-52886-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)