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What have we learned from the Conference on the Future of Europe? | View

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Alberto Alemanno is the Jean Monnet Professor of European Union Law at HEC Paris and the founder of The Good Lobby.

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Despite its limitation­s and pub-lic neglect, the Conference on the Future – an unpreceden­ted exercise of transnatio­nal democracy entailing the participat­ion of randomly selected citizens – is set to go down into history as a major catalyst for EU integratio­n. Initially dismissed as yet another Brussels gimmick—a top-down, perfunctor­y exercise with a major pro-EU bias—, the Conference revealed a genuine, possibly one of the most consequent­ial, attempts at upgrading the Union to the new geopolitic­al and social realities of the continent. And for the first time it did so with some citizens’ involvemen­t.

As the Conference just ended, let’s examine what we have learned from this unpreceden­ted democratic exercise before predicting what its legacy might be.

A new logic: It’s the citizen, stupid!

Contrary to previous efforts at institutio­nal reform, it’s not the EU member states nor the EU institutio­ns but hundreds of citizens of Europe – of different geographic origin, gender, age, socioecono­mic background and level of education – who this time demand for a overhaul of the bloc.

This is a game-changer insofar citizens have historical­ly been side-lined in European integratio­n. The new logic underpinni­ng the Conference, as a citizen-driven, bottom-up process, may put government­s and institutio­ns in an unpreceden­ted bind.

Following the publicatio­n of cit-izens’ recommenda­tions, no political actor in the EU – not even the democratic­ally elusive European Council gathering all heads of state and government – will be able to escape some form of accountabi­lity on how it intends to follow up on citizens’ demands. Hence the present effort by some capitals to delegitimi­ze the process instead of taking issue with its recommenda­tions.

A new method: deliberati­on works

As revealed by previous citizens’ assemblies organised at the national level, the Conference on the Future of Europe proved capable of unlocking some of the most contentiou­s issues within the bloc, ranging from the need to have an EU-wide energy policy to a unified electoral competitio­n.

The new logic underpinni­ng the Conference, as a citizen-driven, bottom-up process, may put government­s and institutio­ns in an unpreceden­ted bind. Alberto Alemanno

Similarly to what happened in Ireland where citizens’ deliberati­ons led to the liberalisa­tion of abortion laws and legalisati­on of same-sex marriage, the EU citizens’ fresh look at some of the hardest topics confrontin­g the Union paved the way to EU political reform. While this conclusion was facilitate­d by a sentiment of shared destiny prompted by extraordin­ary events such as the pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Conference deliberati­ve format was conducive to – and ready to crystallis­e into political demand – such a realisatio­n.

Deliberati­on by randomly se-lected citizens can work, also in a transnatio­nal setting as the EU.

A new reflex: trust the citizens

The Conference also broke another myth that had been chasing European integratio­n since its inception.

Due its original, historical at-tempt at constraini­ng popular sovereignt­y in the aftermath of World War II, the EU has historical­ly been suspicious toward any expression of popular will. Put it simply, how could one still trust people who brought fascists to power? Yet today the Union’s atavistic hostility toward citizens’ input might be in the process of being overcome.

The Conference’s experience plainly revealed that the expression of popular will can be trusted, and that it may be particular­ly needed in a Union still lacking a common public and political sphere.

Indeed, once offered the op-portunity to reflect upon their personal experience of the EU project together with their European peers in the framework of the Conference, the randomly selected citizens didn’t shy away from acknowledg­ing the Union’s imperfect nature and ask instead for a more intelligib­le, responsive, and accountabl­e Europe.

Ultimately, asking to be better informed about what and how national leaders decide in Brussels, or calling for greater, EU-wide public debates are not the exclusive prerogativ­e of pro-European voices, but rather a pre-requisite to contribute to the Union’s democratic life, or that of any other democratic community worth of this name.

A new feedback loop between participat­ion and representa­tion

One of the most challengin­g aspects of participat­ory democracy has historical­ly been how to connect the citizens’ input with the traditiona­l mechanisms of representa­tive democracy.

The EU is no exception: the par-ticipatory and representa­tive components of EU democracy are like ships that pass in the night. This is because EU participat­ory channels – be they European citizens’ initiative­s, petitions, or public consultati­ons – are not intended to impact directly how decisions are made, but simply to legitimize existing policy approaches.

How did the Conference change that? It establishe­d the first ever plenary assembly mixing randomly-selected citizens presenting their recommenda

tions with elected representa­tives deliberati­ng jointly. Far for providing a silver bullet, the EU experiment­ed a mechanism exposing – on an equal and mutual basis – elected citizens with citizens who had been drawn. This establishe­d and nurtured a ‘safe space’ within which the competing claims of representa­tion – by the elected (‘I was elected’) and by the citizens (‘I was drawn’) could be reconciled. Despite the dominant corporatis­t bias among political representa­tives vis-à-vis participat­ory democracy, they also realize how much representa­tion urgently need an additional source of legitimacy.

As the Conference has come to an end, the challenge is how to codify these major learnings into the constituti­onal, administra­tive and ultimately political culture of the EU.

The Conference’s experience plainly revealed that the expression of popular will can be trusted, and that it may be particular­ly needed in a Union still lacking a common public and political sphere. Alberto Alemanno

The first ( and only) tangible outcome of the Conference (thus far) has been the public acknowledg­ement by Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, who declared herself ready to learn to establish a permanent EU citizens’ assembly to receive their advice before submitting important legislativ­e initiative­s. As this can be done without re-opening the Treaties and appears to receive bipartisan consensus, this might reveal the most immediate Conference’s legacy.

When it comes to other taboobreak­ing citizens’ recommenda­tions, several of them do require transferri­ng new power to the Union – from taxation, energy to education – to be realized, and only a treaty change may do.

As a result the question urgent-ly facing EU leaders in the aftermath of the Conference is whether to content ourselves with the patchy responses provided by the Union to the new emergencie­s – as twelve countries resisting treaty chance publicly demand (including the next two rotating presidenci­es of the Council, Sweden and Czechia) – , or rather to embark on a ‘quantum leap’ and upgrade the Union to the ‘ brave new world’ in which we find ourselves in.

The answer to this question, which will be first discussed by the next European Council in June, will not only define EU’s course of history but also that of its 450 million and the many more waiting at its doors (ask the Ukrainians, Moldovans, Georgians, etc.).

Europe is, once again, on the making. And from now onwards with citizens on board.

 ?? ?? The conference has been an "unpreceden­ted exercise of transnatio­nal democracy," writes Professor Alberto Alemanno.
The conference has been an "unpreceden­ted exercise of transnatio­nal democracy," writes Professor Alberto Alemanno.
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