{"title":"Round Table. From Lisbon to Porto: taking stock of developments in EU social policy: Why politics matter","authors":"P. Pochet","doi":"10.1177/10242589211061083","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article argues that the political landscape at the national level is an important element in the development and failures of European social policy. Our understanding of the European social dimension cannot be limited to the various interests of groups of bureaucrats or the goodwill of the Commission (or some of its members). It must take into account the bigger picture of the evolution of national electorates and the place of social issues in national and European elections, which in turn impacts the political balance in the EU institutions. National politics resound at European and transnational level in different global projects (to name the major ones: neoliberal, neomercantilist, social democrat and now green) (Van Apeldoorn and Horn, 2019. Bulmer and Joseph, 2016). However, this article will not explore how these EU/global transnational hegemonic projects are developing and interacting. This article demonstrates the complex impact, shaped by many factors, of the political left/right balance on developments in EU social policy and integration over the past 20 years. Almost 25 years ago, the Treaty of Amsterdam (1997) unwittingly initiated a new stage in European social policy. At the time, attention was focused on the new (social) changes that were being made to the Treaty of Maastricht, which had launched the risky and unstable venture of the single currency without prior political union. This was also the year of political victory for two, albeit very different, parties of the European Left: the French Socialist Party of Lionel Jospin and Tony Blair’s New Labour in the United Kingdom. It marked the beginning of a brief period of domination of centre-left governments in the European political landscape, between 1997 and 2004 (Manow et al., 2004; Pochet, 2019) but without a fully shared vision on how to develop a Social Europe project.","PeriodicalId":23253,"journal":{"name":"Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research","volume":"45 1","pages":"521 - 526"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2021-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/10242589211061083","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
This article argues that the political landscape at the national level is an important element in the development and failures of European social policy. Our understanding of the European social dimension cannot be limited to the various interests of groups of bureaucrats or the goodwill of the Commission (or some of its members). It must take into account the bigger picture of the evolution of national electorates and the place of social issues in national and European elections, which in turn impacts the political balance in the EU institutions. National politics resound at European and transnational level in different global projects (to name the major ones: neoliberal, neomercantilist, social democrat and now green) (Van Apeldoorn and Horn, 2019. Bulmer and Joseph, 2016). However, this article will not explore how these EU/global transnational hegemonic projects are developing and interacting. This article demonstrates the complex impact, shaped by many factors, of the political left/right balance on developments in EU social policy and integration over the past 20 years. Almost 25 years ago, the Treaty of Amsterdam (1997) unwittingly initiated a new stage in European social policy. At the time, attention was focused on the new (social) changes that were being made to the Treaty of Maastricht, which had launched the risky and unstable venture of the single currency without prior political union. This was also the year of political victory for two, albeit very different, parties of the European Left: the French Socialist Party of Lionel Jospin and Tony Blair’s New Labour in the United Kingdom. It marked the beginning of a brief period of domination of centre-left governments in the European political landscape, between 1997 and 2004 (Manow et al., 2004; Pochet, 2019) but without a fully shared vision on how to develop a Social Europe project.
本文认为,国家层面的政治格局是欧洲社会政策发展和失败的一个重要因素。我们对欧洲社会层面的理解不能局限于官僚集团的各种利益或欧盟委员会(或其某些成员)的善意。它必须考虑到国家选民演变的更大图景,以及国家和欧洲选举中社会问题的地位,这反过来又影响欧盟机构的政治平衡。国家政治在欧洲和跨国层面上在不同的全球项目中回响(举几个主要的例子:新自由主义、新重商主义、社会民主主义和现在的绿色)(Van Apeldoorn和Horn, 2019年)。Bulmer and Joseph, 2016)。然而,本文将不探讨这些欧盟/全球跨国霸权项目是如何发展和相互作用的。这篇文章展示了在过去的20年里,政治上的左右平衡对欧盟社会政策和一体化发展的复杂影响,受到许多因素的影响。大约25年前,《阿姆斯特丹条约》(1997)在不知不觉中开启了欧洲社会政策的一个新阶段。当时,人们的注意力集中在《马斯特里赫特条约》(Treaty of Maastricht)正在发生的新的(社会)变化上,该条约在没有事先建立政治联盟的情况下启动了冒险而不稳定的单一货币。今年也是欧洲左翼的两个政党(尽管非常不同)取得政治胜利的一年:莱昂内尔•若斯潘(Lionel Jospin)领导的法国社会党和托尼•布莱尔(Tony Blair)领导的英国新工党。它标志着1997年至2004年间中左翼政府在欧洲政治格局中短暂统治时期的开始(Manow et al., 2004;Pochet, 2019),但在如何发展社会欧洲项目方面没有完全共同的愿景。