
Published online:
22 September 2011
Published in print:
18 November 2010
Online ISBN:
9780191729508
Print ISBN:
9780199595013
Contents
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1. Process 1. Process
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2. The President(s) of the Union 2. The President(s) of the Union
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(a) One President or two: hats and labels (a) One President or two: hats and labels
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(b) The President(s) of the Union: power and authority (b) The President(s) of the Union: power and authority
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(i) The far-reaching vision: the UK paper and the Giscardian vision (i) The far-reaching vision: the UK paper and the Giscardian vision
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(ii) The limited vision: the Commission and the IGC (ii) The limited vision: the Commission and the IGC
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(iii) A via media: the Lisbon Treaty (iii) A via media: the Lisbon Treaty
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3. The High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy 3. The High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
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4. The Commission 4. The Commission
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(a) The Commission President: election and legitimacy (a) The Commission President: election and legitimacy
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(b) The Commission: size and appointment (b) The Commission: size and appointment
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(i) The Convention: conflicting pressures (i) The Convention: conflicting pressures
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(ii) Commission response: opposition and modification (ii) Commission response: opposition and modification
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(iii) Constitutional Treaty and Lisbon Treaty: size of the Commission (iii) Constitutional Treaty and Lisbon Treaty: size of the Commission
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(iv) Constitutional Treaty and Lisbon Treaty: appointment of the Commission (iv) Constitutional Treaty and Lisbon Treaty: appointment of the Commission
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5. Agencies 5. Agencies
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(a) Agencies: pre-Lisbon (a) Agencies: pre-Lisbon
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(b) Agencies: post-Lisbon (b) Agencies: post-Lisbon
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6. The Post-Lisbon World: The Disposition of Executive Power 6. The Post-Lisbon World: The Disposition of Executive Power
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(a) The argument against shared executive power (a) The argument against shared executive power
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(b) The argument for shared executive power (b) The argument for shared executive power
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7. The Post-Lisbon World: The Reality of Shared Executive Power 7. The Post-Lisbon World: The Reality of Shared Executive Power
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(a) Commission, Council, and European Council: priorities and agenda setting (a) Commission, Council, and European Council: priorities and agenda setting
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(i) Legal frame (i) Legal frame
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(ii) Political frame (ii) Political frame
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(b) Commission, Council, and European Council: development of policy choices (b) Commission, Council, and European Council: development of policy choices
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(i) Legal frame (i) Legal frame
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(ii) Political frame (ii) Political frame
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(c) Commission, Council, and European Council: the High Representative (c) Commission, Council, and European Council: the High Representative
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(i) Legal frame (i) Legal frame
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(ii) Political frame (ii) Political frame
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(d) EU institutions: financial resources and the budget (d) EU institutions: financial resources and the budget
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(i) Legal frame (i) Legal frame
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(ii) Political frame (ii) Political frame
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(e) Council and Commission: agencies (e) Council and Commission: agencies
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(i) Legal frame (i) Legal frame
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(ii) Political frame (ii) Political frame
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8. The Post-Lisbon World: Accountability and Shared Executive Power 8. The Post-Lisbon World: Accountability and Shared Executive Power
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(a) Legal accountability: closing the gaps (a) Legal accountability: closing the gaps
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(b) Political accountability: securing political responsibility (b) Political accountability: securing political responsibility
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(i) Accountability and appointment (i) Accountability and appointment
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(ii) Accountability, setting the political agenda and priorities (ii) Accountability, setting the political agenda and priorities
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(iii) Accountability, legislation and individual policy choice (iii) Accountability, legislation and individual policy choice
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(iv) Accountability, implementation and administration (iv) Accountability, implementation and administration
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9. Conclusion 9. Conclusion
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Chapter
3 Executive Power, Contestation, and Resolution
Get access
Pages
78–121
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Published:November 2010
Cite
Craig, Paul, 'Executive Power, Contestation, and Resolution', The Lisbon Treaty: Law, Politics, and Treaty Reform, 1st edn (Oxford , 2010; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Sept. 2011), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199595013.003.0003, accessed 25 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
The most divisive issues in the debates that led to the Constitutional Treaty concerned executive power, and the ‘solutions’ embodied in that Treaty were largely carried over into the Lisbon Treaty. This chapter examines the tensions concerning executive power and the way in which they were ‘resolved’ in the Lisbon Treaty, the focus being on the legal provisions and the political implications of the new regime.
Subject
EU Law
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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