Academic studies of the political groups of the European Parliament

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Academic studies of the political groups of the European Parliament refers to the studies of those groups by academics, the methods that they use and the conclusions that they reach.

Background

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The political groups of the European Parliament have been around in one form or another since September 1952 and the first meeting of the Parliament's predecessor, the Common Assembly. The groups are coalitions of MEPs and the Europarties and national parties that those MEPs belong to. The groups have coalesced into representations of the dominant schools of European political thought and are the primary actors in the Parliament.

Some of the groups (such as PES) have become homogeneous units coterminous with their Europarty, some (such as IND/DEM) have not. But they are still coalitions, not parties in their own right, and do not issue manifestos of their own. It may therefore be difficult to discern how the groups intend to vote without first inspecting the party platforms of their constituent parties, and then with limited certainty.

Additionally, national media focus on the MEPs/national parties of their own member state, neglecting the group's activities and poorly understanding their structure or even existence. Transnational media coverage of the groups per se is limited to those organs such as the Parliament itself, or those news media (e.g. EUObserver[1] or theParliament.com[2]) that specialise in the Parliament. These organs cover the groups in detail but with little overarching analysis. So although such organs make it easy to find out how a group acted on a specific vote, they provide little information on the voting patterns of a specific group.

As a result, the only bodies providing analysis of the voting patterns and Weltanschauung of the groups are academics.

Academics

Academics analysing the groups include Simon Hix (London School of Economics and Political Science), Amie Kreppel University of Florida, Abdul Noury (Free University of Brussels), Gérard Roland, (University of California, Berkeley), Gail McElroy (Trinity College, Dublin, Department of Political Science), Kenneth Benoit (Trinity College, Dublin - Institute for International Integration Studies (IIIS)[3]), Friedrich Heinemann, Philipp Mohl, and Steffen Osterloh (University of Mannheim - Centre for European Economic Research[4]).

Results

Positions on economy and euroscepticism

File:Hix-Lord model for EP 6 (June 2004 to December 2006 period) by roll-call votes.png
Hix-Lord model for first half of the Sixth Parliament (see description for sources)

Table 3[5] of the 3 January 2008 version of a working paper[6] from the London School of Economics/Free University of Brussels by Hix and Noury considered the positions of the groups in the Sixth Parliament (2004-2009) by analysing their roll-call votes. The results for each group are shown in the diagram on the right. The vertical scale is anti-pro Europe spectrum, (0% = extremely anti-Europe, 100% = extremely pro), and the horizontal scale is economic left-right spectrum, (0% = extremely economically left-wing, 100% = extremely economically right-wing). The results are also shown in the table below.

Group positions (Sixth Parliament)
Group Left-right spectrum Eurosceptic spectrum Sources
  EUL/NGL very left-wing very Eurosceptic [5]
  PES centre-left very Europhile [5]
  G/EFA left-wing Eurosceptic [5]
  ALDE centre Euroneutral [5]
  EPP-ED (EPP subgroup) centre-right Europhile [5]
  EPP-ED (ED subgroup) right-wing Eurosceptic [5]
  IND/DEM (reformist subgroup) centre very Eurosceptic [5]
  IND/DEM (secessionist subgroup) very right-wing Secessionist [5]
  UEN centre-right Eurosceptic [5]

Two of the groups (EPP-ED and IND/DEM) were split. EPP-ED are split on Euroscepticism: the EPP subgroup (       ) were centre-right Europhiles, whereas the ED subgroup (       ) were right-wing Eurosceptics.

IND/DEM was also split along its subgroups: the reformist subgroup (       , bottom-center) voted as centrist Eurosceptics, and the secessionist subgroup (       , middle-right) voted as right-wing Euroneutrals. The reformist subgroup was able to pursue a reformist agenda via the Parliament. The secessionist subgroup was unable to pursue a secessionist agenda there (it's out of the Parliament's purview) and pursued a right-wing agenda instead. Ironically, this resulted in the secessionist subgroup being less eurosceptic in terms of roll-call votes than other, non-eurosceptic parties. UKIP (the major component of the secessionist subgroup) was criticised for this seeming abandonment of its Eurosceptic core principles.[7]

Group cooperation

Table 3[8] of the 21 August 2008 version of the same working paper[9] gave figures for the level of cooperation between each group (how many times they vote with a group, and how many times they vote against) for the Fifth and Sixth Parliaments. The results are given in the tables below, where 0% = never votes with, 100% = always votes with.

Group cooperation (Sixth Parliament)
Group Number of times voted with (%) Sources
EUL/NGL G/EFA PES ALDE EPP-ED UEN IND/DEM NI
  EUL/NGL n/a 75.4 62.0 48.0 39.6 42.2 45.5 48.6 [8]
  G/EFA 75.4 n/a 70.3 59.2 47.4 45.1 40.3 43.0 [8]
  PES 62.0 70.3 n/a 75.3 68.4 62.8 42.9 52.3 [8]
  ALDE 48.0 59.2 75.3 n/a 78.0 72.4 48.0 53.7 [8]
  EPP-ED 39.6 47.4 68.4 78.0 n/a 84.3 54.0 64.1 [8]
  UEN 42.2 45.1 62.8 72.4 84.3 n/a 56.8 64.7 [8]
  IND/DEM 45.5 40.3 42.9 48.0 54.0 56.8 n/a 68.1 [8]
  NI 48.6 43.0 52.3 53.7 64.1 64.7 68.1 n/a [8]
Group cooperation (Fifth Parliament)
Group Number of times voted with (%) Sources
EUL/NGL G/EFA PES ELDR EPP-ED UEN EDD NI
  EUL/NGL n/a 79.3 69.1 55.4 42.4 45.9 59.2 52.4 [8]
  G/EFA 79.3 n/a 72.0 62.3 47.1 45.2 55.5 51.0 [8]
  PES 69.1 72.0 n/a 72.9 64.5 52.6 52.6 56.8 [8]
  ELDR 55.4 62.3 72.9 n/a 67.9 55.0 52.3 60.0 [8]
  EPP-ED 42.4 47.1 64.5 67.9 n/a 71.2 52.0 68.2 [8]
  UEN 45.9 45.2 52.6 55.0 71.2 n/a 62.6 73.8 [8]
  EDD 59.2 55.5 52.6 52.3 52.0 62.6 n/a 63.8 [8]
  NI 52.4 51.0 56.8 60.0 68.2 73.8 63.8 n/a [8]

EUL/NGL and G/EFA voted closely together, as did PES and ALDE, and EPP-ED and UEN. Surprisingly, given that PES and EPP-ED are partners in the Grand Coalition, they were not each other's closest allies, although they did vote with each other about two-thirds of the time. IND/DEM did not have close allies within the political groups, preferring instead to cooperate most closely with the Non-Inscrits.

Group positions

Table 2[10][11] of a 2005 discussion paper[12] from the Institute for International Integration Studies by Gail McElroy and Kenneth Benoit analysed the group positions between April and June 2004, at the end of the Fifth Parliament and immediately before the 2004 elections. The results are given below, with 0% = extremely against, 100% = extremely for (except for the left-right spectrum, where 0% = extremely left-wing, 100% = extremely right-wing)

Group positions (end of Fifth Parliament)
Group Issue on which position was analysed
Left-Right Tax Deeper Europe Federal Europe Deregulation Common Foreign and Security Policy Fortress Europe (immigration) Green issues Homosexual equality, abortion, euthanasia
  EUL/NGL 18.0% 75.5% 52.5% 46.0% 20.0% 39.0% 30.5% 65.5% 78.5%
  G/EFA 25.5% 71.5% 63.5% 58.0% 33.5% 44.0% 32.5% 85.5% 80.0%
  PES 37.0% 68.0% 68.5% 69.5% 37.0% 71.5% 36.5% 57.0% 72.0%
  ELDR 59.0% 34.5% 62.5% 68.5% 71.0% 68.5% 37.0% 45.5% 78.0%
  EPP-ED 63.0% 33.0% 63.0% 63.0% 67.5% 70.0% 60.0% 39.5% 30.5%
  UEN 82.5% 30.5% 11.5% 17.0% 65.0% 16.0% 87.5% 36.0% 24.5%
  EDD 85.5% 29.5% 5.5% 5.5% 73.0% 7.5% 87.5% 35.5% 24.5%
Source [10] [11] [11] [11] [10] [11] [10] [11] [11]

EUL/NGL and G/EFA were the most left-wing groups, UEN and EDD the most right-wing, and that was mirrored in their attitudes towards taxation, homosexual equality, abortion, euthanasia and controlling migration into the EU. The groups fell into two distinct camps regarding further development of EU authority, with UEN and EDD definitely against and the rest broadly in favor. Opinion was wider on the CFSP, with only PES, ELDR and EPP-ED in favor and the others against. Unsurprisingly, G/EFA was far more in favor of Green issues compared to the other groups.

Attitude to EU tax

Table 1[13] of an April 2008 discussion paper[14] from the Centre for European Economic Research by Heinemann et al. analysed each Group's stance on a hypothetical generalised EU tax. The results for each Group are given in the diagram on the right with the horizontal scale scaled so that -100% = totally against and 100% = totally for. The results are also given in the table below, rescaled so that 0% = totally against, 100% = totally for.

Group attitude to EU tax (2008)
Group Attitude to a hypothetical EU tax Source
  G/EFA 97.5% [13]
  PES 85.1% [13]
  ITS 62.5% [13]
  EUL/NGL 55.0% [13]
  ALDE 53.5% [13]
  EPP-ED 53.5% [13]
  UEN 34.8% [13]
  IND/DEM 0.0% [13]
  NI 0.0% [13]

G/EFA and PES were in favor of such a tax, IND/DEM and the Independents were definitely against, the others had no clear position.

Group cohesion

Cohesion is the term used to define whether a Group is united or divided amongst itself. Figure 1[15] of a 2002 paper from European Integration online Papers (EIoP) by Thorsten Faas analysed the Groups as they stood in 2002. The results for each Group are given in the diagram on the right with the horizontal scale scaled so that 0% = totally split, 100% = totally united. The results are also given in the table below.

Group cohesion (2002)
Group Cohesion Source
  PES approx 90% [15]
  ELDR approx 90% [15]
  G/EFA approx 90% [15]
  EPP-ED approx 80% [15]
  UEN approx 70% [15]
  EUL/NGL approx 65% [15]
  TGI approx 50% [15]
  NI approx 45% [15]
  EDD approx 35% [15]

G/EFA, PES and ELDR were the most united groups, with EDD the most disunited.

Proportion of female MEPs

The March 2006 edition of "Social Europe: the journal of the European Left"[16] included a chapter called "Women and Social Democratic Politics" by Wendy Stokes. That chapter[17] gave the proportion of female MEPs in each Group in the European Parliament. The results for each Group are given in the diagram on the right. The horizontal scale denotes gender balance (0% = totally male, 100% = totally female, but no Group has a female majority, so the scale stops at 50%). The results are also given in the table below.

Group percentage female (2006)
Group Percentage female Source
  G/EFA 47.6% [17]
  ALDE 41% [17]
  PES 38% [17]
  EUL/NGL 29% [17]
  EPP-ED 23% [17]
  UEN 16.8% [17]
  IND/DEM 9% [17]

G/EFA, PES and ALDE were the most balanced groups in terms of gender, with IND/DEM the most unbalanced.

Attitude to Turkish accession

Martin Olof Persson's D-uppsats thesis[18] for the Luleå University of Technology[19] entitled "Turkey as a member of the European Union: a discourse analysis of the views presented in the European Parliament"[18] considered each group's attitude towards Turkish accession. The results of that thesis are given in the table below.

Group attitude to Turkish accession (2007)
Group Broad position Specific position Source
  G/EFA For Supports full membership now [18]
  PES For Supports full membership now [18]
  EUL/NGL For Supports full membership now [18]
  ALDE For Supports full membership eventually but not yet [18]
  EPP-ED Against Supports associate membership (privileged partnership) but not full membership [18]
  IND/DEM Against Supports economic cooperation (strategic partnership) but not full membership nor associate membership [18]
  ITS Against Rejects economic cooperation, full membership and associate membership [18]
  UEN Unknown Unknown [18]

G/EFA, PES, EUL/NGL and ALDE supported Turkish accession either now or later, EPP-ED, IND/DEM and ITS permanently rejected it, and UEN's position was unknown.

Group switching

Party group switching in the European Parliament is the phenomenon where parliamentarians individually or collectively switch from one party group to the other. The phenomenon of EP party group switching is a well-known contributor to the volatility of the EP party system and highlights the fluidity that characterizes the composition of European parliamentary groups. On average 9% of all MEPs switch during legislative terms. Party group switching is a phenomenon that gained force especially in the legislatures during the 1990s, up to a maximum of 18% for the 1989-1994 term, with strong prevalence among representatives from France and Italy, though by no means limited to those two countries. There is a clear tendency of party group switches from the ideological extremes, both left and right, toward the center. Most switching takes place at the outset of legislative terms, with another peak around the half-term moment, when responsibilities rotate within the EP hierarchy.[20]

References

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  4. http://www.zew.de/en/
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 "After Enlargement: Voting Patterns in the Sixth European Parliament", by Simon Hix and Abdul Noury, LSE/ULB, 3 January 2008 original figure estimated from "Figure 3. Spatial Map of EP6"
  6. [1][dead link]
  7. Leader of the UKIP accused of selling out, The Sunday Times, May 27, 2007 Archived May 17, 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  8. 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 8.11 8.12 8.13 8.14 8.15 8.16 "After Enlargement: Voting Patterns in the Sixth European Parliament", by Simon Hix and Abdul Noury, LSE/ULB, 21 August 2008 original figure taken from "Table 3. Party Competition and Coalition Patterns"
  9. [2] Archived April 24, 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 "Party Groups and Policy Positions in the European Parliament" by Gail McElroy and Kenneth Benoit, Trinity College, Dublin, 10 March 2005 original figure taken from "Table 2. Policy Positions of European Party Groups", figure converted from 0 to 20 scale to 0% to 100% scale
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 11.6 "Party Groups and Policy Positions in the European Parliament" by Gail McElroy and Kenneth Benoit, Trinity College, Dublin, 10 March 2005 original figure taken from "Table 2. Policy Positions of European Party Groups", figure converted from 0 to 20 scale to 0% to 100% scale and subtracted from 100% to have scale start at "extremely against"
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 13.5 13.6 13.7 13.8 13.9 Discussion Paper No.08-027 "Who’s afraid of an EU tax and why? - Revenue system preferences in the European Parliament", by Friedrich Heinemann, Philipp Mohl and Steffen Osterloh, ZEW Mannheim, April 2008 original figure taken from "Table 1: General EU tax preference (Q1) – comparisons of means", figure converted from -4 to +4 scale to 0% to 100% scale
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 15.8 15.9 "Why Do MEPs Defect? An Analysis of Party Group Cohesion in the 5th European Parliament" by Thorsten Faas, 12 March 2002 original figure estimated from "Figure 1: Cohesion in the EP by Party Groups"
  16. http://www.social-europe.eu/fileadmin/user_upload/journals/SocialEurope-4.pdf
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 17.6 17.7 "Social Europe: the journal of the european left", issue 4, March 2006 original figure taken from chapter "Women and Social Democratic Politics" by Wendy Stokes, Senior Lecturer in Politics, London Metropolitan University
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 18.6 18.7 18.8 18.9 http://epubl.ltu.se/1402-1552/2007/079/LTU-DUPP-07079-SE.pdf
  19. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  20. Evans, A.M. and M. Vink (2012). Measuring Group Switching in the European Parliament: Methodology, Data and Trends (1979-2009). Análise Social, XLVII (202), 92-112. See also mcelroy, G. (2008), “Intra-Party politics at the trans-national level: Party switching in the European Parliament”. In D. Giannetti and K. Benoit (eds.), Intra-Party Politics and Coalition Governments in Parliamentary Democracies, London, Routledge, pp. 205-226.