From Citizens' Deliberation To Popular Will Formation?
From Citizens' Deliberation To Popular Will Formation?
From Citizens' Deliberation To Popular Will Formation?
Working Paper
No. 12, November 2011
ARENA Working Paper (print) | ISSN 1890-7733
ARENA Working Paper (online) | ISSN 1890- 7741
Keywords
EU – Europolis – Democracy
Introduction
This article discusses how deliberative experiments taking place in a
transnational and pluri-lingual setting can claim to generate democratic
legitimacy. Such experiments, like citizens’ assemblies, citizens’ juries, town
meetings, and deliberative polls provide a microcosmic snapshot of
deliberative practice between lay citizens (Dryzek 2010; Fung 2003). As such,
they often rest on an assumption that the mini-public can have a tangible and
lasting impact on mass politics (Fishkin 2009). This is grounded on the idea
that the representativeness of the bounded deliberative event is secured
through some form of random sampling from the relevant population (Fishkin
2009).
The question of how to link the ‘micro’ of mini-publics with the ‘macro’ of the
larger political system can be examined by focusing on deliberative ‘successes’
in terms of how they have fostered equal participation and informed opinion-
making among the participants (Goodin and Dryzek 2006). This article takes a
more critical stance. We take issue with the idea that a statistically
representative sample of the relevant population of a mini-public – the claim
of internal validity – is by itself sufficient for acknowledging its potential
macro-consequences. Based on an analysis of the results and organisation of
Europolis, a transnational deliberative poll on the EU level, we confront the
internal validity of the results of the scientific experiment with the
requirements for the generation of democratic legitimacy.
There has been a long discussion on how to assess the discursive quality of
deliberative mini publics and the validity claims generated by them (Grönlund
et al. 2010; Steiner et al. 2004). The main aspects of discursive quality within a
deliberative mini public are based on the following main assumptions:
discussions should a) pay respect to each participant and offer a fair chance to
be heard (securing political equality between participants); and b) be ruled by
the informational and the substantive value of the arguments (focused on
epistemic value).
In addressing this question, this article moves at the interface between what
Chambers (2009) has labeled the two branches of deliberative theory:
democratic deliberation and deliberative democracy. Democratic deliberation
can be defined as non-coercive face-to-face dialogue marked by equality
between participants in terms of inclusion in the debate and justificatory
practice through arguments and reason-giving (see e.g. Elster 1998: 8;
Habermas 1996: 305-306). While deliberation in bounded settings is always in
some form dialogical and inter-personal, deliberative democracy on the other
hand refers to a general model of legitimacy, public discourse, and mass
politics (Chambers 2009: 333; see also habermas 1996).
validity claims (Boltanski and Thévenot 2006). In applying this ‘new realism in
legitimation research’ (Gaus 2011) to deliberative polling we do not want to
arrive at a normative reformulation of democratic legitimacy as applied to the
EU. We rather spell out the conditions under which a social practice of
democratic legitimation can operate and create substantive societal resonance
(Parkinson 2003: 83). In other words, this definition of democratic legitimacy
and deliberation runs counter to the risk of assuming ‘[...] that the outcomes of
actual deliberations instantiate a “sufficiently close” approximation of ideal
deliberation’ (Rummens 2011: 7). In assessing the democratic impact of
deliberation in mini-publics the focus should rather be put on the uptake of
micro-deliberation in public deliberation, both in normative and substantive
terms.
In modern mass democracies, inclusion defined in these broad terms can only
be met by relating group deliberations back to criteria of representation and
publicity. It is only by embedding deliberative procedures within the public
sphere that agreements based on sound reasoning in deliberative bodies can
be linked back to the more diffuse opinions of those citizens that cannot be
present in the deliberative rounds. Deliberative settings are then discussed in
the literature as ideal situations which must stand the validity test of
representation and publicity (Bohman 1996; Manin 1987; Stasavage 2007).
Through representation, the claims that are raised in small group discussions
and the conclusions reached are held to be valid for a broader constituency.
Through publicity, the validity of these claims can also be externally contested,
further justifications need to be provided and conclusions revised. In the
words of Simone Chambers (2009: 344), citizens’ forums are ‘fully democratic
[…] only to the extent that they can convince the general public that they have
made policy choices worth pursuing.’ In the next section we analyse the
results of Europolis deliberative polling in light of this double requirement of
internal scientific validity of the experiment and democratic legitimacy.
The picture changes, however, when turning to the issue of class. Here, the
sample was clearly less representative. In Europolis there was a strong over-
representation of so-called ‘upper middle class’ (38,17% against 24,88% in the
control group) and equally strong under-representation of participants from a
‘working class’ background (23,96% against 38,28% in the control group). This
aspect is crucial for our assessment of Europolis, not the least as it is more
difficult to pinpoint the popular constituency of EU democracy than in a
national setting. Several studies on popular opinion have indeed highlighted a
class and educational divide regarding support for the EU and European
integration (Diez Medrano 2003; Eichberg and Dalton 2007; Gabel 1998; Gabel
and Palmer 2006; Petithomme 2008).
As Europolis was set up to gauge not only substantive policy issues, but also
to prod citizens’ views on European institutions and the distribution of
competences between the EU and national levels, this deviation in terms of
class background may have contributed to biases in the deliberative process
and in the participants’ responses. Hence, while Europolis can clearly
document isolated opinion change due to participation in the deliberative
event itself, it is less obvious that we can draw sound conclusions regarding
the EU polity dimension and thereby the democratic legitimacy of the small-
scale deliberation in public terms. Europolis participants also had a much
higher score in voting intention (82,27% intended to vote, 9,8% not to vote) in
the EP elections than the control group (65,18% intended to vote, 20,18% not to
vote). This may be an attribute of relatively higher education and the specific
class belonging of participants. As such, it seems that self-selection has created
a certain bias in Europolis towards individuals that on average are more
politically engaged; both in terms of choosing to participate in a political event
like the deliberative poll and in terms of electoral participation.
expressed and the choices made by citizens after deliberation can be more
reasoned and different from the actual voting results (Fishkin 2009: 137).
A second, more serious argument is that the forum of citizens that is selected
by random representative sampling is not legitimate per se, but needs to be
authorised by the broader constituency (Brown 2006). Authorisation
comprises several components: the selecting agents, the selection procedure
and the results. Not only the participants of public deliberation must be
recognised as legitimate speakers, also the selection agents (in this case the
scientists) and the deliberative setting must be recognised as appropriate by a
Despite random sampling participants of deliberative polling are not cut off
from political representation. There is a potential disjuncture between
‘representativeness’ in the statistical sense and ‘representation’ seen from a
traditional principal-agent perspective (Parkinson 2006: 139). Even if random
sampling under the conditions specified by deliberative polling is accepted as
an alternative mechanism of selection to elections 8, the experimental setting
encourages the participants in numerous ways to take the role as
representatives of the larger citizenry. This was clearly the case with
Europolis, evident even in the title of the project. The experiment was framed
by the scientific conveners as a ‘deliberative polity-making project’.
Participants were gathered not only to address specific policy issues, but to
emerge as a common public with an enhanced European identity. Still, the
transnational character of the deliberative poll was also prevalent in this sense.
National diversity was equally important to European unity. The nationality
of participants was highlighted in the small group discussions. While all
8Selection by lot is not unprecedented in the history of democracy, and indeed was the
preferred mode of Athenian democracy to select representatives from the body of citizens
(Manin 1997).
The transnational setting has seemingly affected the conditions for meeting the
criteria of public deliberation. The generalized validity of arguments and
opinions has to be defended and political equality has to be justified as the
inclusion of all potentially affected citizens in public will formation. To meet
these criteria, the mirror image of a European citizenry that is created through
statistical representativeness also needs to ‘shine back.’ It needs to create
public resonances within the wider audience of citizens that ‘reflects’ about the
validity of the propositions made in the democratic experiment.
deliberative poll is meant to offer a mirror for citizens, a mirror that permits
them to consider themselves as ideal citizens and which serves the important
role of indicating the policy choices of an informed citizenry to the politicians.
Media broadcasts are therefore seen as a ‘helpful adjunct to the design – a way
of motivating both the random sample and the policy experts and policy
makers to attend, of educating the broader public about the issues, and,
perhaps, of nudging public opinion in the direction of the results’ (Fishkin and
Luskin 2006: 184).
At first look, Europolis had ample opportunity to address this public aspect of
deliberation. The choice to launch the event close to the 2009 European
parliamentary elections was taken on purpose to enhance the public relevance
and salience of the event. In disseminating its results and informed opinions at
the level of mass political communication, the event encountered a couple of
additional hurdles that need to be discussed in relation to the specifics of the
transnational setting. One problem relates to the character of EP elections as
‘second order elections’ (Marsh 1998; Reif and Schmitt 1980). The Europolis
experiment evokes an imaginary EU constituency, for which EP elections
would take a new meaning as first order elections. This is contrasted by the
debates held at the level of mass politics with low degrees of contestation, a
main focus on national topics and actors, and finally the spread of
Euroscepticism in interpreting the relevance of the EU.9 Europolis thus creates
an idealised contrast image of a European public sphere, which, following the
dominant logics of mass political communication, cannot be simply amplified
by national mass media. The topics addressed by the deliberative poll were
obviously of transnational political relevance, but cannot generally be easily
reconnected to the wide-ranging and domestically oriented questions that
tend to dominate national debates.
9This is based on findings from a parallel analysis of online media debates at the level of
mass communication of the 2009 EP election campaigns in 12 member states (Michailidou
and Trenz 2010).
The point to be made here is not to question the experimental design as such,
but rather to emphasise the discrepancy between an idealised deliberative
mini-public and the structural weaknesses and fragmentation of the general
public at the level of mass political communication. When the participants of
Europolis were convoked in Brussels in May 2009, there were relatively high
hopes for the media impact of the event and thus widespread dissemination of
its purpose, design, and results. The news value of the deliberative experiment
was, however, drowned out by the nationalised debates of the European
parliamentary elections. Symptomatically, the transnational deliberative poll
did not receive substantial public and media attention. On the two press
conferences held before and after the event, the Brussels-based media
correspondents were difficult to mobilise. Moreover, EU correspondents
clearly have limited impact on EP election campaigning, which is mainly
reported by domestically based journalists. This latter group was even more
difficult to reach, since no systematic media contacts could be built at member
10See Mansbridge et al (2010) for a general critique of blending off self-interest from
deliberation.
11 Consider the framing of information material around two competing collective good
problems (economic growth versus environmental sustainability and free movement versus
security respectively). Also in responding to the questionnaire, the participants are not asked
what is at stake for them but how they think the topic affects their community of belonging:
‘Some people think that immigrants have a lot to offer to [COUNTRY]’s cultural life.
Suppose these people are at one end of a 1-7 scale, at point 1. Other people think that
immigrants threaten the [NATIONALITY] culture.’ ‘Some people think we should do
everything possible to combat climate change, even if that hurts the economy. Suppose these
people are at one end of a 1-to-7 scale, at point 1. Other people think that we should do
everything possible to maximize economic growth, even if that hurts efforts to combat
climate change’.
12See http://www.europolis-project.eu/ under the heading ‘Experiment Results’ for data on
voting intentions before and after the deliberative poll.
Yet, it has been argued that the role of the media might not always be
beneficial for the public resonance and legitimacy of mini-publics (Parkinson
2006: 179). The results from the deliberative process might be distorted and too
much emphasis put on, say, polarisation or conflict rather than the consensus
and common ground that developed in a deliberative forum. But this only
holds in cases where there was at least a modicum of public and media
interest in the process and results from a deliberative experiment. When this is
lacking, the accountability problem of micro-deliberation that Parkinson (2006:
100) highlights is in fact exacerbated: ‘[…] accountability […] is only generated
between participants, not between participants and non-participants.’ The
upshot of this in theoretical terms is that while the internal validity of
bounded deliberative settings can more or less be controlled ex ante through
specified procedures and statistical sampling of participants, the conditions for
the ex post transmission of its results at the level of mass political
communication will remain contingent. The scientific validity of the
deliberative experiment should therefore not be confounded with democratic
legitimacy, which is generated through the public deliberations, which validate
and scrutinise the results of the polling experiment. For that latter objective to
be achieved, publicity needs to be created through the intermediation from the
mini-public of 348 randomly selected citizens to the general public of some 500
million Europeans.
Conclusion
The Europolis deliberative poll provides important insights into the
mechanism and dynamics of generating democratic legitimacy in the EU. As
part of the experiment, several hundred lay citizens were deeply engaged in
discussions that to a significant degree transformed their opinions on specific
policy issues and increased their intention to vote in the subsequent European
elections. This was perhaps all the more surprising as Europolis took place
under pluri-lingual and multicultural conditions. As the EU is ridden by
deficits in many directions – democratic, legitimacy, participation to name
some – these results from the bounded deliberative venue of Europolis could
lead us to conclude that this is part of a solution to the problem. In this view,
the engaging of ordinary citizens through deliberative experiments could be
one way to deal with the conundrum of public discontent with EU policies
and institutions. EU politics are increasingly politicised and Europolis brings
with it evidence that the opportunity to engage in real debate is a more
effective means to mobilise political participation than endless media
campaigns and public relations exercises courtesy of EU institutions that
address passive, and, for the most part, non-attentive citizens. By giving
citizens the opportunity to discuss and voice opinion in respectful dialogue,
deliberative polling raises awareness of the complexities of political decision-
making and democratic legitimacy. In short, it could be argued that Europolis
has provided a microcosmic European ‘public’.
publics. Social scientific instruments can only to some extent safeguard the
internal validity but not the public legitimacy of deliberative polling.
In line with Simone Chambers (2009: 331) we can therefore conclude with a
note of caution that deliberative mini-publics also in a transnational, pluri-
lingual setting cannot replace representative democracy: ‘Unless we have a
good grasp of how the broader democratic context can be shaped to
complement, or at least not undermine, deliberative experiments, then many
of the democratic advantages of mini-publics will be lost’. Focusing on the
application of the critical yardsticks of representation and publicity, this article
has drawn attention to the mechanisms through which the lost link between
democratic deliberation and deliberative democracy can be re-established.
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