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The United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland provide a fascinating comparative case study into how member states, or rather the machinery of central government, adapt to the ever-changing demands and opportunities of European Union membership. Both states acceded to the European Communities in 1973 and as latecomers to the negotiating table have been forced to adjust to the institutional designs of the founding six member states. Although the two countries have pursued separate and distinctive trajectories with respect to their European diplomacy, in recent years there has been a remarkable degree of political congruence between the two. In particular, general elections in May and June 1997 heralded the arrival of new governments (Labour in the UK, and Fianna Fáil/Progressive Democrats in Ireland) and prime ministers (Tony Blair in the UK and Bertie Ahern in Ireland), both committed to the projection of a constructive EU policy and both of whom survived in power for over a decade. Analysis of domestic change over this critical period of EU-level institutional and policy upheaval therefore provides the perfect canvas upon which to paint a picture of how two of Europe's longest serving premiers sought to adapt their respective national policy-making systems in order to further their strategic interests and agendas in Brussels. It is this challenge that provides the principal motivation and focus for this book.
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