Koechler Eu Constitution Sybil 2005
Koechler Eu Constitution Sybil 2005
Koechler Eu Constitution Sybil 2005
by HANS KÖCHLER∗
3 See Hans Köchler, ed., The United Nations and International Democracy (Vienna: Jamahir Society for Culture
and Philosophy, 1995), and Hans Köchler, The United Nations and International Democracy: The Quest for
UN Reform, Studies in International Relations, XXII (Vienna: International Progress Organization, 1997).
4 Treaty establishing the European Coal and Steel Community, 18 April 1951, 261 U.N.T.S. 140, this treaty
expires by its own terms on 23 July 2002; Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
25 March 1957, 298 U.N.T.S 259; Treaty establishing the European Economic Community, 25 March 1957,
298 U.N.T.S. 3; Treaty Establishing a Single Council and a Single Commission of the European Communities,
8 April 1965, 1967 J.O. 152/1.
5 For details, see Hans Köchler, “Decision-making Procedures of the European Institutions and Democratic
Legitimacy: How Can Democratic Citizenship Be Exercised at Transnational Level?” in Concepts of democratic
citizenship (Strasbourg: Council of Europe Publishing, 2000) at 147-165.
6 See Svein S. Andersen & Kjell A. Eliassen, eds., The European Union: How Democratic Is It? (London/
Thousand Oaks, California/New Delhi: SAGE Publications, 1996), Winfried Kluth, “Die demokratische Legit-
imation der Europäischen Union: Eine Analyse der These vom Demokratiedefizit der Europäischen Union
aus gemeineuropäischer Verfassungsperspektive” (The Democratic Legitimation of the European Union: An
Analysis of the Thesis of the Democracy Deficit of the European Union from the Perspective of the Com-
mon European Condition) (in German) in Schriften zum Europäischen Recht (Writings on European Law) (in
German), vol. 21 (Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 1995), Gerda Falkner & Michael Nentwich, European Union:
Democratic Perspectives after 1996 (Vienna: Service Fachverlag, 1995) and Stratos V. Konstadinidis, ed., A
People’s Europe: Tuning a concept into content. (USA/Singapore/Sydney: Ashgate/Dartmouth, 1999).
7 Treaty on European Union, 7 February 1992, 31 I.L.M. 253.
8 Treaty of Amsterdam Amending the Treaty on European Union, the Treaties Establishing the European
Communities and Certain Related Acts, 2 October 1997, 37 I.L.M. 56.
9 Treaty of Nice Amending the Treaty on European Union, the Treaties Establishing the European Communities
and Certain Related Acts, 26 February 2001, 2001 O.J. (C 80).
9 SYBIL THE EUROPEAN CONSTITUTION AND THE IMPERATIVES 3
One of the basic aims underlying the Constitution appears to be the unification of the
various normative systems underlying the European treaties and the creation of a common
point of reference in international affairs, providing legal personality to the EU as such10 —
a status that until then had been enjoyed by the European Commission. Furthermore,
according to Art. IV-438(1) of the Constitution, the EU is declared as “successor to the EU
established by the Treaty on European Union and to the European Community”.11
As successor to the multidimensional organisations and supranational arrangements
of the previous treaties, the Union to be established by the “Constitution for Europe”12
inevitably represents different levels and forms of cooperation between the member states,
which in turn relate to distinct decision-making procedures with different notions of democ-
racy. The “mixed” character of the EU can nonetheless be analysed at three different levels
of international cooperation: (1) intergovernmental as practiced by the Council of Ministers
(which is the traditional form of cooperation between states as sovereign entities on the basis
of equality);13 (2) transnational as represented by the European Parliament— an institution
which, through the decisions of its directly elected representatives, expresses positions that
increasingly transcend political considerations exclusively related to the nation-state and,
thus, contributes to the emergence of genuine transnational views within the European
political space; and (3) supranational as regards the functioning of the European Commis-
sion the members of which “shall neither seek nor take instructions from any government
or other institution, body, office or entity” (Art. I-26[7]), thus acting outside and above
the framework of the nation-state, being only committed to the bonum commune of the
Union.14
As regards the rules of decision-making within the normative framework of the Union,
one may ask whether a hybrid form of democracy is required for this hybrid structure of
international organisation envisaged by the Constitution for Europe. The complex web of
institutions and related sets of decision-making rules that form the EU are neither exclusively
intergovernmental nor fully transnational or supranational. Furthermore, the unique form
of international cooperation that is to be enacted by the EU on the basis of the Constitution
implies that democratic rules determine the decision-making not only between sovereign
governments (which is the traditional feature of intergovernmental organisation), but also
within the transnational political space of the Union (without direct reference to the national
interests of member states).15 One of the major challenges facing the nascent EU will be how
the Constitution will resolve the possible inconsistencies between the intergovernmental,
transnational and supranational levels, and how it will be able to deal with the systemic
contradiction resulting from the fact that the EU aspires to be a union of states as well as of
peoples.16
First and foremost, however, the future of the democratic project at the European level17
will be determined by whether a genuine European polity will emerge that is more than
the sum total of the polities of the member states. Can democracy within the Union be
realised in the absence of a supranational, pan-European polity? So far, during all the years
of existence of the European Community and, later, the “pre-constitutional” EU (created
by the Treaty of Maastricht and amended by the Treaty of Amsterdam), no socio-culturally
homogenous political community—δ ήµoς (demos)—has emerged. Instead, a multitude of
δ ήµoι (demoi) has simultaneously existed in each of the member states. Will the quasi-polity
of the EU eventually develop towards a pan-European political identity? Will the coming
into force of the European Constitution eventually trigger a mutually reinforcing process
in the course of which the “European citizen” will emerge? Is there indeed a cohesive
European polity in the making? Or will the Constitution open up a genuine “third way”
for Europe in the form of what has been called a European “demoi-cracy,”18 suggesting
that the problem of a European polity can be solved on the basis of “unity in diversity”
and beyond the dichotomy of nation-state and supranational entity (or federal state)? The
problem of democratic citizenship in Europe19 is intrinsically linked to these questions.
Against this background, the basic question will be whether a form of “post-national”
democracy will be able to provide legitimacy to Europe’s new constitutional system. Does
the adaptation of the concept of democracy to the political-normative system of the EU
indeed require the hybrid form of democracy as suggested earlier? Will a “redefinition of
the democratic principle on the basis of the multinational and multicultural character of
the ‘European people”’20 be the solution to the democratic legitimacy problem that the EU
faced prior to the adoption of the Constitution for Europe—or may still face in a unified
constitutional framework? These are questions that have to be addressed if one intends to
explore the prospects of transnational democracy in Europe.
As regards the imperatives of transnational democracy, the Constitution for Europe will have
to be scrutinised in all those areas where genuine democracy has remained a desideratum
during all the years of existence of the European Communities and the supranational entity
proclaimed by the Treaty on European Union. This leads to a long list of questions; they
relate, inter alia, to:
— the evolving European polity and democratic citizenship (democracy versus “demoi-
cracy”?);
— the mechanisms of representative democracy in the framework of the European
Constitution;
16 This systemic contradiction is also to be found in the UN. The Preamble of the UN Charter proclaims the
establishment of the organisation in the name of “We the Peoples of the United Nations” while the organisation
itself is one of sovereign states without any form of popular representation.
17 Whenever we speak of “Europe” or “European” in this text, the meaning relates to the political and
constitutional framework of the EU.
18 Kalypso Nicolaïdis, The New Constitution as European Demoi-cracy?, The Federal Trust for Education and
Research, Online Paper 38/03, December 2003, online: <www.fedtrust.co.uk/eu_constitution> .
19 On the notion of democratic citizenship, see Hans Köchler, “Decision-making Procedures of the European
Institutions and Democratic Legitimacy. How Can Democratic Citizenship Be Exercised at Transnational
Level?” in Concepts of democratic citizenship (Strasbourg: Council of Europe Publishing, 2000) at 147-165.
20 Xenophon Contiades, The Democratic Principle as an Organisational Basis of the European Union, at 5, online:
Inter-Disciplinary Net <http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/AUD/contiades%20paper.pdf>.
9 SYBIL THE EUROPEAN CONSTITUTION AND THE IMPERATIVES 5
24 This was one of the basic demands of the Laeken Declaration of the European Council of 15 December 2001.
The Declaration identified bringing the Union “closer to its citizens” as one of the basic challenges the Union
faces within its borders.
25 Art. I-34[1], supra note 12.
26 According to Art. I-34[1] of the Constitution, supra note 12, under the ordinary legislative procedure, both
institutions are bound to reach an agreement: “If the two institutions cannot reach agreement on an act, it shall
not be adopted”.
27 On the power constellation as it has evolved (in the pre-constitutional framework) within the Council of the
European Union (in the new Constitution: Council of Ministers), see the empirical study by Torsten J. Selck &
Michael Kaeding, “Divergent Interests and Different Success Rates: France, Germany, Italy, and the United
Kingdom in EU Legislative Negotiations” (2004) 2 French Politics 81.
28 See, for instance, the provisions on decisions on budgetary matters.
9 SYBIL THE EUROPEAN CONSTITUTION AND THE IMPERATIVES 7
In certain cases, unanimous action by the Council is required, in other cases the Council acts
by a qualified majority the democratic implications of which will be analysed below. The
matters to be decided on the basis of this procedure are spread over the entire Constitution
and relate to the most essential competences such as the Union’s budget.
In marked distinction from the legislative competences of the Council of Ministers, the
legislative authority of the European Parliament, insofar as it acts under the special legislative
procedure, is exclusively tied to the consent of the Council. Apart from the aspect of
relative authority (the adoption of a law being conditional upon the Council’s consent),
only three cases to be decided through a “European law of the European Parliament” can
be found in the constitution, relating to relatively unimportant issues: Art. III-330(2) subjects
regulations on the duties of Parliament Members to this special procedure; Art. III-333 deals
with provisions governing the exercise of the right of inquiry; and Art. III-335 provides for
rules governing the duties of the European Ombudsman. In decisions on all three cases, the
Parliament acts “after obtaining the consent of the Council”.
In view of the unequal balance of power between the European Parliament and the Coun-
cil of Ministers in the exercise of the legislative function described above, the question as to
the status of the Parliament as a genuine legislative body is to be posed. Under the ordinary
legislative procedure, the Parliament has to act jointly with the Council,29 which is nothing
unusual in procedural terms since national parliaments are in most cases bound to obtaining
the consent of a second chamber for a law coming into force. It is, however, unusual in
material terms of the separation of powers between the legislative and the executive branches
since, in the case of the Union, the group of representatives of the member states’ executive
branches (the Council of Ministers)30 acts as second chamber. As regards the tópos of the
“democratic deficit” at the Union level, another aspect must not be overlooked—unlike
national parliaments, the European Parliament, under the ordinary legislative procedure,
cannot initiate any laws by itself. According to Art. I-26(2), “Union legislative acts may be
adopted only on the basis of a Commission proposal, except where the Constitution pro-
vides otherwise …” As we have documented above, the cases calling for a special legislative
procedure whereby the Parliament acts on its own initiative are small in number and only
symbolic in importance.
Apart from those procedural arrangements limiting the Parliament’s competence, some
of the vital issues of the Union such as the common foreign and security policy,31 as well
as issues of defence (“solidarity clause”), are exclusively handled by the representatives of
the executive branches of the member states, the European Council32 and the Council of
Ministers, in the form of “European decisions” as “non-legislative acts”.33 This also applies
to eventual joint preventive action against a terrorist threat on the basis of the solidarity
clause.34 The European Parliament’s role is that of a mere observer. It shall either be
regularly “consulted”, as in the case of the foreign and security policy35 or “informed”, as
in the case of implementation of the solidarity clause.36
29 Where “the two institutions cannot reach agreement on an act, it shall not be adopted”, states Art. I-34[1],
supra note 12.
30 Art. I-23(2) of the Constitution, supra note 12, states: “The Council shall consist of a representative of each
Member State at ministerial level, who may commit the government of the Member State in question and cast
its vote”.
31 Arts. I-40 and I-41, supra note 12.
32 Art. I-21(1) of the Constitution, supra note 12, expressly states that the European Council, consisting of
the heads of state or government of the member states plus its President and the President of the European
Commission, “shall not exercise legislative functions”.
33 According to the provisions of Art. I-35, supra note 12.
34 Art. I-43[1][a], supra note 12.
35 Arts. I-40[8] and I-41[8], supra note 12.
36 Art. III-329[2], supra note 12.
8 SINGAPORE YEAR BOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (2005)
The rather weak position of the Parliament in this constitutional set-up is arguably also
due to the EU not being a federal state, but a union of sovereign states “on which the Mem-
ber States confer competences to attain objectives they have in common”.37 The limited
competence of the Parliament within the Union’s “internal” division of powers aside, the
EU’s competences are first and foremost limited “externally”: the Constitution states as one
of the “fundamental principles” that the “limits of Union competences are governed by the
principle of conferral”.38 Although the law adopted by the institutions of the Union “shall
have primacy over the law of the Member States”,39 the related supranational structure is
not that of a “United States of Europe” and, for that reason, may not be considered equiv-
alent to a sovereign state as a subject of international law—in spite of the Union possessing
legal personality.40 This is also evidenced in the member states’ right of withdrawal from
the Union,41 an option that would not be available should the Union be modelled according
to the paradigm of the nation-state. In addition, unlike what is argued by some critics of the
constitutional project,42 a “Constitution” established by an intergovernmental treaty does
not eo ipso create a (federal) state. In view of these facts, the fears voiced by those con-
cerned about the independence and sovereignty of the state members of the Union appear
unfounded.43
The essence of the supranational structure of the EU lies in the delegation of specific com-
petences agreed upon among the member states to institutions of the Union. The question
as to the democratic legitimacy of laws passed and decisions made within the framework of
the Union must not be directed to the Parliament alone. That representative institution of
first order must not be compared on a one-to-one basis to national legislatures; the question
has to be asked more precisely in regard to the decision-making mechanisms between the
Parliament and the Council, and also within the Council itself, taking into consideration
that the group of representatives of the governments of the member states at the ministerial
level acts either as a second legislative chamber44 or as a surrogate legislature,45 particularly
in all sensitive areas that touch upon the national interests of the member states.
Because of the role played by the Council as an organ of the Union’s legislature, the
decision-making rules within that body are of special relevance when it comes to the issue
of democratic legitimacy at the level of the Union. A representation of member states on the
basis of the principle of “one state, one vote” (as in the case of the UN General Assembly)
would definitely not be compatible with democratic equality, which is rooted in the collective
will of the citizens forming the state as a sovereign entity. A carefully balanced system of
“weighted voting”, taking into consideration the different sizes of the populations of the
member states, will be indispensable to democratic legitimacy within the framework of the
Constitution for Europe. Only such a procedure will be able, at least to a certain extent,
to “neutralise” the potential negative effects of a policy of the national interest that will be
pursued almost unavoidably by the executive branch of each state. This consideration may
be seen as the rationale behind the requirement of a “qualified majority” for the decisions
of the Council of Ministers according to Art. I-25.46 (For certain administrative and special
legislative decisions such as the one referred to in Art. I-54[3] on the Union’s own resources,
the Constitution requires unanimity among the Council members.)
The provisions of Art. I-25 on a kind of “double majority” within the Council of Minis-
ters, applying also to the European Council which does not exercise a legislative function,
are meant to balance the sovereign equality of the member states against the equality of
the citizens. As a general rule, the double majority (“qualified majority”) required for a
decision to be adopted by the Council is defined as “at least 55% of the members of the
Council, comprising at least fifteen of them47 and representing Member States comprising
at least 65% of the population of the Union.” This rather complicated weighted voting
formula (which is definitely far more complex and more democratic, for that matter, than
the one for the Security Council which provides special voting rights for certain member
states)48 is further modified in cases “when the Council does not act on a proposal from
the Commission or from the Union Minister for Foreign Affairs” where the consent of 72%
of the member states is required.49 Seen in their entirety, those regulations are aimed at
reconciling the interests of the nation-state members with the rights of the Union’s citizens,
who are the primary source of legitimacy of the decisions adopted by the institutions of
the EU—insofar as the Constitution claims to reflect “the will of the citizens and States of
Europe to build a common future”.50 The juxtaposition of “States” and “citizens” in the
proclamation of the establishment of the Union again highlights the hybrid character of the
democratic model at the European level referred to earlier.
Because of this state of affairs it is imperative that transnational democracy51 be defined
in the sense of transcending traditional models of state representation insofar as those are
based on the fiction of the “sovereign equality” of states. What is at stake at the pan-
European and beyond the nation-state level is the sovereign equality (in the sense of equal
rights) of the citizens making up those states and the balancing of their sovereign will against
the national interests of those very states. The notion of European citizenship according to
which each citizen of a member state shall enjoy inalienable rights not only as a citizen of
the respective state, but as citizen of the Union,52 directly results from this understanding
of popular sovereignty as basis of state sovereignty.53
46 The need for such “balancing arrangements” is evidenced in the empirical study quoted earlier on the “relative
success rates” of major member states, and in particular the United Kingdom, in preserving their interests in the
legislative policymaking process of the Union. See Torsten J. Selck & Michael Kaeding, “Divergent Interests
and Different Success Rates: France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom in EU Legislative Negotiations”,
supra note 27.
47 This provision is intended to deal with the actual membership status of the Union (as of 2005, the 55%
requirement would mean 14 member states).
48 On the lack of democratic legitimacy of Security Council resolutions, see the author’s analysis in The Voting
Procedure in the United Nations Security Council: Examining a Normative Contradiction in the UN Charter
and its Consequences on International Relations (Vienna: International Progress Organization, 1991).
49 Art. I-25[2], supra note 12.
50 Art. I-1[1], supra note 12.
51 The term “transnational” is used here to describe the application of democracy outside the framework of the
sovereign nation-state in general (and not merely as a sub-category of the organisation of international relations
as set out in Chapter I above).
52 Para. 1, Art. I-10, supra note 12 states that: “Every national of a Member State shall be a citizen of the Union.
Citizenship of the Union shall be additional to national citizenship and shall not replace it”. On the notion
of democratic citizenship in the wider European context, see the author’s paper “Decision-making Procedures
of the European Institutions and Democratic Legitimacy: How Can Democratic Citizenship Be Exercised at
Transnational Level?” supra note 5.
53 On the status of the citizen as subject of international law, see the author’s treatise, The Principles of Interna-
tional Law and Human Rights: The Compatibility of Two Normative Systems (Vienna: International Progress
Organization, 1981).
10 SINGAPORE YEAR BOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (2005)
For the sake of bringing the Union closer to the people, the novel feature of represen-
tative democracy within the framework of the EU—namely an elaborate system of checks
and balances within the Council and between the Council and the Parliament, with the
center of gravity shifting in the direction of the Council— would have to be complemented
by mechanisms of participatory democracy such as a pan-European referendum on essen-
tial matters of the Union, including amendments to the Constitution. As in many states,
and some member states of the Union too, the inclusion of this instrument (particularly
the compulsory referendum on constitutional matters) in the Constitution has remained a
desideratum and will remain so for the foreseeable future. In order to be realistic, however,
one should not expect a higher democratic standard for the organisation of decisions within
a union of sovereign states than for that within the domestic systems of the majority of its
constituent parts, the member states; this is a general maxim of international organisation.
The Constitution for Europe juxtaposes the “principles” of representative and partici-
patory democracy,54 while “founding” the very functioning of the Union on representative
democracy alone. It assigns participatory democracy mainly to the area of lobbying and
public relations in the traditional sense. Article I-47 states that the institutions of the Union
shall give the citizens and N.G.Os (“representative associations”) the opportunity to make
known their views, and obliges those institutions to maintain an open dialogue “with rep-
resentative associations and civil society”. Apart from information and consultation, the
Constitution provides only for one rudimentary form of citizen’s participation, namely a
“citizens’ initiative” for “inviting” the European Commission to submit a legislative pro-
posal in cases where citizens consider “that a legal act of the Union is required for the purpose
of implementing the Constitution”.55 Such a demand may be submitted to the European
Commission if it gets the support of at least one million citizens from a “significant num-
ber of Member States”.56 Too much excitement has been expressed about this “European
referendum”57 which, in fact, does not provide for any legislative authority of the citizens
in the sense of direct democracy, but merely defines a right to request the Commission to
make proposals for certain acts of legislation. In the strict sense of the term, this provision
is not one of participatory democracy. It might well be perceived as a kind of placebo58
handed out to European citizens’ groups that have desperately lobbied for the insertion of
provisions of direct democracy into the European Constitution.59
As regards the exercise of “participatory” democracy, it is noteworthy that the Consti-
tution places citizens and “representative associations” on an equal level. However, “civil
society” should not be represented by transnational lobbies and economic interest groups.
The ambiguity of Art. I-47 of the Constitution in regard to the nature of civil society (namely
its constituent elements) makes the need for genuine procedures of direct democracy even
more obvious. The importance of such measures is further underlined by the predominant,
though unavoidable, role of national executive power in the shaping of European legis-
lation (according to the mechanisms described earlier). Only the possibility, in principle,
of direct citizens’ participation in the legislative processes (without the interference of lob-
bies and interest groups) could provide the democratic leverage that is necessary to make
the European project succeed in the long term. Thus, one of the imperatives of transna-
tional democracy in what is so far the strictly representative context of the EU would be the
insertion of genuine forms of participatory democracy into the Constitution, such as a pan-
European referendum, measures that are complementary to, not in lieu of, the representative
models of decision-making.
One important step in that direction could have been a direct-democratic procedure on the
“meta-level”, namely the presentation of the Constitution for ratification in a pan-European
referendum, in addition to the acts of ratification at the level of the member states. This
would have provided added legitimacy to the future Constitution and strengthened the rule
of law at the Union level (in so far as it could have provided, irrespective of the different
domestic regulations, a unified procedure for the coming into force of the Constitution).
Under the prevailing circumstances, the Constitution will eventually come into force through
the application of “double standards” of democracy. While in certain member states the
Constitution will be subjected to a popular referendum, in the majority of the states the
ratification will be decided by representative bodies,60 something which is indicative not
only of the different democratic traditions within the member states, but also of an essential,
possibly irreconcilable, difference regarding the requirements of constitutional legitimacy,
i.e. the relationship between democracy and the rule of law in general.
The additional provisions about the “democratic life of the Union” (Part I, Title VI of
the Constitution) will not completely dispel the concerns about a “democratic deficit” in
the EU. Art. I-46(4) explicitly acknowledges the role of “political parties at European level”
as contributing to forming a European political awareness and “expressing the will of the
citizens of the Union”.61 So far, this indispensable element of a “European democratic
space” (which would finally allow the European polity to transcend, in the exercise of the
representative function at least, the confines of the nation-state) has remained a desidera-
tum. As regards the other provisions listed under Title VI, neither the establishment of the
institution of a European Ombudsman62 nor the Constitution’s recognition of the role of
“social partners” and the commitment to “social dialogue”63 will enable the citizens of the
Union to participate in the decision-making processes. Virtually all measures dealt with
under the heading “democratic life of the Union” (with the exception of the provisions of
Art. I-46[1] and [2]) relate merely to information and consultation.
Similarly, in our assessment, the provisions of the Protocol on the application of the
principles of subsidiarity and proportionality (annexed to the Treaty establishing a Consti-
tution for Europe)64 do not constitute a real “democratic corrective” from the part of the
national parliaments as organs of representative democracy of the member states. While
60 In some countries, a referendum (of consultative nature in most cases) will be held in addition to the
parliamentary vote.
61 On the implications of this issue for the emergence of a European polity and the cohesion of the supranational
structures of the Union, see Amie Kreppel, The European Parliament and Supranational Party System: A Study
in Institutional Development (Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002).
62 Art. I-49, supra note 12. On the role of the Ombudsman within the new constitutional framework of the
Union, see P. Nikiforos Diamandouros, “The European Ombudsman and the European Constitution” (Speech
by the European Ombudsman, P. Nikiforos Diamandouros, to the 34th Session of the Asser Colloquium on
European Law on “The EU Constitution: The Best Way Forward?” at The Hague, October 2004), online:
<http:// www.euro-ombudsman.eu.int/speeches/en/2004-10-15.htm>.
63 Art. I-48, supra note 12.
64 Protocols and Annexes I and II annexed to the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe. Conference of
the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States. Brussels, 13 October 2004, Doc. CIG8704
ADD 1 REV 1, Protocol 2.
12 SINGAPORE YEAR BOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (2005)
stating that the member states are bound “to ensure that decisions are taken as closely as
possible to the citizens of the Union”, the Protocol only provides for a right of national
parliaments to demand a review of “draft European legislative acts” from the Commission
or other European bodies and institutions65 if those are perceived to breach the principle
of subsidiarity. This right may be exercised under the condition that “reasoned opinions”
demanding such a review represent at least one third (in certain cases, one fourth) of the
votes fictitiously allocated to the national parliaments66 of the member states.67 Apart from
the rather complicated procedures (which appear not to be really compatible with the idea of
“closeness” to the citizens), this measure, like many others in the constitutional framework
of the Union, is not one of effective checks and balances according to the imperatives of
transnational democracy; it only obliges the respective European bodies and institutions to
give reasons for the decision they have taken regarding the request for review of a legislative
proposal—while they have complete freedom to decide “to maintain, amend or withdraw
the draft”.68 Similar to the provisions on participatory democracy, those on respect for the
principle of subsidiarity essentially relate to the areas of information and consultation, not
to actual legislative authority. This is also true for the provisions of the Protocol on the role
of national parliaments in the European Union (Protocol 1). Thus, no effective remedy to
a use of Union authority which is detrimental to the competences of national, regional or
local institutions—in cases where a Union objective might be better achieved by measures
at national level69 —seems to be available within the Union’s framework of representative
democracy.
In view of these procedural mechanisms which are meant to ensure the overall acceptance
of the Union by its citizens as well as the democratic accountability and transparency of
the decisions taken by its institutions, and because of the difficulties—doctrinal as well as
organisational—faced by the institutions in conforming to the Union’s democratic ideal,
the commitment to a system of values shared by all member states and, first and foremost,
supported by the citizens of the Union, is of paramount importance. In spite of the short-
comings and normative inconsistencies described earlier, such a commitment to a “common
democratic doctrine” may serve as a guideline for the advancement of democracy within the
Union.
At least within the secular civilisation of the West, commitment to universal values has
become an indispensable element of cohesion for any political organisation. The Consti-
tution identifies these values as “respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality,
the rule of law, and respect for human rights”, and declares them to be common in any
society that is characterised by pluralism, tolerance, and non-discrimination.70 At a time
when religion per se—or more specifically, religious confession—has ceased to be the com-
mon denominator of European society, the universal value of democracy, in connection
with other liberal values, has become the source of political legitimacy and the rule of law
within the constitutional framework of the Union.71 It is with this fact in mind that the
Preamble to the Constitution evokes the “cultural, religious and humanist inheritance of
Europe” without reference to a particular religion.
Within the secular political space of the EU, genuine transnational democracy (i.e.,
democracy transcending the limits of the sovereign state) has gained paramount impor-
tance for (a) ensuring the legitimacy of the Union and the acts of its institutions in the
eyes of its citizens; (b) enabling efficient co-ordination of policies among the member states
along the lines of clearly defined rules of decision-making (including rules of weighted vot-
ing); (c) guaranteeing a fundamental openness of the Union vis-à-vis other transnational
structures and civilisational realms within our multi-faceted global community.
By avoiding the potentially divisive issue of religion, the Constitution for Europe has
made an indirect contribution to the dialogue among civilisations that by now has become
a basic requirement of peace not only at the global level,72 but, in view of the multicultural
realities of our era, within the Union itself.73 A universal and credible commitment to
democracy, whether representative or participatory, at the European level negates eo ipso
the propagation of an exclusive ideology or religion as the basis of the Constitution’s validity.
Any such move would be divisive internally as well as externally, jeopardising not only the
cohesion of the very Union of sovereign states, but also complicating the Union’s relations
with non-member states and other transnational organisations.
The Union’s ideal of democracy, as outlined in the Preamble and Part I of the Constitution,
requires an inclusive approach based on the norms of peaceful co-existence. While the
constitutional system has to be neutral in matters of religion or Weltanschauung, it must
be explicit as regards the values of human dignity and the respect for human rights. Those
principles have the character of so-called “meta-values” (or meta-norms), values which are
the condition for the enjoyment of the basic individual rights and freedoms by every citizen
according to his/her specific convictions and value system, including religious confession.74
In view of the universality of its principles and of its avoiding the exclusivism of religion
in ideological and the nation-state in legal-political terms, it is to be hoped that, in our era of
globalisation, the Constitution for Europe will define a proper “transnational space”, thus
eventually establishing a new paradigm of peaceful co-existence among states and peoples
alike. In spite of the enormous complexity of its provisions and decision-making rules (due
to the diverging views and conflicting interests among the member states), the Constitution
has set the framework for efficient political organisation beyond the confines of the nation-
state—a task in which the UN, hostage of the power balance of an earlier era, has inevitably
failed.75
Whether the Constitution’s procedural regulations can finally be reconciled with the basic
goal of making the Union more democratic will have to remain an open question at least
for the time being. The “normative compromises” over the notion of democracy as the
guiding constitutional principle have obviously been dictated by the goals of efficiency and
of balancing the national interests among the sovereign member states. The quotation from
Thucydides II, 37 that headed the Preamble to the Draft Treaty, highlighting democracy (in
distinction to oligarchy) as the basic principle of the Union:76
has been removed from the text adopted by the Intergovernmental Conference. This omis-
sion may be a hint as to the compromises that had to be made in the interest of consensus
among the representatives of member states and that do not necessarily reflect the will of
the polity of those states. Those involved in European realpolitik may simply have shied
away from the far-reaching implications of the dictum.
But there are also reasons for a more optimistic assessment. Due to the elaborate reg-
ulations ensuring the separation of powers in the Union’s set-up of intergovernmental,
transnational and supranational mechanisms and institutions—in an entirely novel fash-
ion, when compared to other forms of international organisation—the Constitution for
Europe may eventually strengthen the rule of law in the unique normative framework of a
union of states that goes well beyond traditional intergovernmental arrangements.
Thus, the Constitution for Europe may set a precedent for the democratisation of inter-
national affairs in general and provide a fresh impetus for democratic reform of the UN.
What is feasible, in terms of democracy, separation of powers and power-sharing between
the centre and its constituent parts in a Union of twenty five states may, in principle, also be
achievable for a global organisation; the imperatives of transnational democracy are essen-
tially the same. For instance, the European Constitution’s provisions for weighted voting in
the Council of Ministers may provide the terms of reference for a reform of the voting proce-
dure in the UN Security Council.77 The Constitution, albeit within the regional framework
of Europe, may well be seen as providing the paradigmatic organisational framework for a
new form of supranational organisation in our post-national era.78 In terms of political doc-
trine, the Constitution’s peculiar form of “hybrid democracy” which we have diagnosed in
75 On this obvious predicament of the UN, see Hans Köchler, The United Nations and International Democracy:
The Quest for UN Reform, supra note 3. See also Hans Köchler, “The Dialectic of Power and Law: The
United Nations and the Future of World Order” (Address to I.P.O. Roundtable on the United Nations and
International Power Politics, June 2004).
76 “Our constitution … is called a democracy because power is in the hands not of a minority but of the greatest
number.” Draft Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe. Adopted by consensus by the European Con-
vention on 13 June and 10 July 2003. The European Convention, Secretariat. Brussels, 18 July 2003. Doc.
CONV 850/03, Preamble, p. 3.
77 For details, see the author’s proposal in The United Nations and International Democracy: The Quest for UN
Reform, supra note 3. See also the European Public Debate on “The European Union and the Reform of the
United Nations” organized by the Union of European Federalists in December 2004. International Progress
Organization Information Service, News Release, P/RE/18965c-is, “The European Union and the Reform of
the United Nations” (3 December 2004).
78 See José María Beneyto, “What Is the European Constitution? The Declaration on the Future of the Union
and Setting Up of a Common Constitutional Order” (Public Debate on the Future of Europe, European Com-
mission, Secretariat General, Ref. 17, October 2001), online: EU <http://www.europa.eu.int/futurum> and
Xenophon Contiades, The Democratic Principle as an Organisational Basis of the European Union, online:
Inter-Disciplinary Net <http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/AUD/contiades%20paper.pdf>.
9 SYBIL THE EUROPEAN CONSTITUTION AND THE IMPERATIVES 15
reference to the “organisational pluralism” and multidimensionality of the Union may bring
about, to quote a recent essay on EU governance, “a radical re-definition of our democratic
and constitutional ideals”.79
The Laeken Declaration of 200180 has set a challenging task for a new constitution,
namely making the Union “more democratic, more transparent and more efficient” at the
same time. Some may consider reconciling democratic transparency with increased effi-
ciency in a complex framework of cooperation among nation-states, united under common
principles, but not federated under one central authority, as tantamount to the quadrature
of the circle. According to Valéry Giscard d’Estaing’s optimistic assessment as Chairman of
the European Convention, that mission has been accomplished in so far as the draft Consti-
tution “strikes the necessary balance between peoples, between States new and old, between
institutions and between dream and reality”.81 For the philosophical observer of interna-
tional politics, however, only the future will tell whether the project of the Constitution for
Europe is a mission impossible.
79 Oliver Gerstenberg & Charles Sabel, “Directly Deliberative Polyarchy: An Institutional Ideal for Europe?”,
supra note 15, at 5.
80 The Future of the European Union—Laeken Declaration. Adopted by the European Council in Laeken,
15 December 2001.
81 Rome Declaration. V. Giscard d’Estaing, Chairman of the European Convention. Rome, 18 July 2003,
Chapter III at 5.