ABSTRACT
This article challenges two orthodox views of Political Scientists concerning the roots of Euroscepticism. First, it contests that Euroscepticism originated in the UK in 1980s and was primarily advocated by British political parties and the Thatcher government. If defined as an opposition to the federalist European idea, Euroscepticism can indeed be traced back to the very beginning of the European integration process after the Second World War and can then be continuously followed up until today. Second, it questions the so-called end of the permissive consensus in the 1990s and argues that, if public opposition against the EU has indeed amplified since then, this is primarily due to the frequent organization of referenda. Third, whereas Eurosceptic political parties have gained increasing support in the European elections since the 2000s, the possibility of the European people to express their anti-European feelings has already existed since the introduction of European direct elections in 1979. Finally, the article identifies a rather paradoxical link between European elections and Euroscepticism, especially when considering the high degree of abstentions.
Keywords: Euroscepticism; Anti-Europeanism; resistances to Europe; permissive consensus; history of opposition to Europe.
RESUMEN
Este artículo cuestiona la corriente ortodoxa en las ciencias políticas sobre el origen del euroescepticismo. En primer lugar, niega que el euroescepticismo nació en el Reino Unido en la década de 1980 y que fuera promovido principalmente por partidos políticos británicos y el Gobierno de Thatcher. Si se define como oposición a la idea de una Europa federal, el euroescepticismo puede remontarse, en efecto, a los comienzos del proceso de integración europea después de la Segunda Guerra Mundial y puede ser seguido continuamente hasta nuestros días. En segundo lugar, el artículo cuestiona el fin del «consenso permisivo» en la década de 1990, argumentando que, si bien la oposición de la población europea frente a la UE ha aumentado desde entonces, esto se debe más bien a la organización frecuente de referéndums. En tercer lugar, mientras que los partidos políticos euroescépticos han ganado progresivamente su apoyo en las elecciones europeas desde la década del 2000, la posibilidad de que los ciudadanos europeos expresen sus sentimientos antieuropeos ya ha existido desde la introducción de las primeras elecciones europeas por sufragio universal en 1979. Por último, el artículo identifica un vínculo más bien paradójico entre las elecciones europeas y el euroescepticismo, especialmente cuando se considera el elevado índice de abstenciones.
Palabras clave: Euroescepticismo; antieuropeísmo; resistencias a Europa; consenso permisivo; historia de la oposición a Europa.
CONTENTS
In 2016, the outcome of the “Brexit” referendum has plunged the European Union (EU) into a new crisis which seems to reveal an ever growing trend towards Euroscepticism. Almost sixty years after the signature of the Treaty of Rome in 1957 creating the European Economic Community (EEC), a Member-State, the United Kingdom (UK), has for the first time in history decided to leave the EU. Since then, the breeding grounds of anti-European movements have been growing exponentially, as the last elections to the European Parliament in June 2019 have shown: in almost every EU Member-State, Eurosceptic parties clearly increased their share of the votes, occupying more than a third of the seats in the new Parliament[1]. It was an ironic and almost absurd situation that those who were supposed to leave were legally obliged to participate in these elections, due to the failure to reach an agreement on Brexit in time. It was even more ironic that the majority of the new British Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) werz indeed “Brexiters”, with the Brexit party gaining 30,5 % of votes and 29 out of 73 seats[2]. The rise of Anti-Europeanism was painfully illustrated during the opening session of the Parliament, when these MEPs turned their back in disregard of the European anthem being played[3].
How under these circumstances not to agree with the mainstream view of Political Scientists that Euroscepticism seems to be a mainly British phenomenon and that it has originated in the UK? Whereas this article does not question British Euroscepticism as such, it does however challenge two orthodox view concerning the roots of anti-Europeanism. First, it contests that Euroscepticism has originated in 1980s, primarily being advocated by British political parties and by the Thatcher government. If defined as an opposition to the federalist European idea, Euroscepticism can indeed be traced back to the very beginning of the European integration process after the Second World War and can then be continuously followed up until today. Historians therefore prefer to use the umbrella term of “resistances to Europe” to designate Euroscepticism, as this term allows for a larger approach to the phenomenon deliberately moving away from its restrictive application to political parties. Second, it questions the so-called end of the permissive consensus in the 1990s. It argues, that, if public opposition against the EU has indeed amplified since then, this is primarily due to the frequent organization of referenda and the increasingly anti-European votes at European elections. However, it reveals a rather paradoxical link between European elections and Euroscepticism, as the latter are at the same time an expression of the democratic legitimacy of the European idea and of the rise of Euroscepticism.
Political Scientists initially identified Euroscepticism as a British phenomenon entering
the political arena in the 1980s, notably with Margaret Thatcher’s rejection of the
EEC[4]. On the basis of an analysis of British party politics, they identified two types
of opposition against Europe: the rejection of the principle underlying European integration
itself (hard Euroscepticism) and opposition against its realization by the EEC and
later by the EU (soft Euroscepticism) Szcerbiak and Taggart ( Szcerbiak, A. and Taggart, P. (eds.) (2003). Theorising party-based Euroscepticism: problems of definition, measurement and causality.
Sussex: Sussex European Institute.
Taggart, P. (1998). A touchstone of dissent: Euroscepticism in contemporary Western
European party systems. European Journal of Political Research, 33 (3), 363-388. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.00387 Harmsen and Spiering ( Harmsen, R. and Spiering, C. (2004). Introduction: Euroscepticism and the evolution
of the European political debate. In R. Harmsen and C. Spiering (eds.). Euroscepticism: party politics, national identity and European integration (pp. 13-35). Amsterdam: Rodopi. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789401201087_002 Neumayer, R. A. and Zalewski, F. (eds.) (2008). L’Europe contestée. Espaces et enjeux des positionnements contre l’intégration européenne.
Paris: Lignes de Repères.
Dargent, C. (2002). Citoyenneté européenne: la concurrence des identités territoriales
et sociales. In B. Cautrès and D. Reynie (eds.). L’opinion européenne 2000 (pp. 47-69). Paris: Presses de Sciences-Po.
Harmsen ( Harmsen, R. (2008). The evolution of Dutch European discourse: defining the limits
of Europe. Perspectives on European Politics and Society, 9 (3), 316-341. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/15705850802223440 Díez Medrano, J. (2003). Framing Europe: attitudes to European integration in Germany, Spain and the United
Kingdom. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Theiler, T. (2004). The origins of Euroscepticism in German-speaking Switzerland.
European Journal of Political Research, 43 (4), 635-656. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6765.2004.00168.x Cautrès, B. (2000). Les attitudes des Français à l’égard de l’Union européenne: les
logiques du refus. In P. Brechon, A. Laurent and P. Perrineau (eds.). Les cultures politiques des Français (pp. 323-354). Paris: Presses de Science Po.
Vignaux, E. (2004). Les ressorts confessionnels de l’euroscepticisme. Facteurs religieux
et comportement politique dans les pays Nordiques. Nordiques, 5, 83-109.
From a historical perspective, Euroscepticism can be traced back much further: Contemporary
Historians claim indeed that opposition to Europe is as old as the idea of European
integration itself See for example: Bossuat ( Bossuat, G. (1998). La campagne de Daniel Mayer contre la CED, Matériaux pour l’histoire de notre temps, 51 (51-52), 33-45. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3406/mat.1998.404206 Dumas, R. (2009). Affaires étrangères, tome 1: 1981-1988. Paris : Fayard.
After the setting-up of the first European Organizations, Euroscepticism can then
be traced back to the different crises of the process of European unification Margret
Thatcher’s contestation of the British budgetary contribution, know under the slogan
“I want my money back” or her famous Bruges speech in 1988 constitutes just one of
these crises which have accompanied the process of integration from the start
When admitting that Euroscepticism has not necessarily originated from British party politics and that it is not merely an expression of opposition to the EEC/EU, it then follows that the terminology has to be reviewed from a historical perspective in a way to broaden the concept of what it means to “be against Europe”.
Not only Historians have realized that Euroscepticism seems too narrow as a term to englobe all sorts of anti-European attitudes. The research has therefore already given rise to a series of other terms that Political Scientists have used in order to constitute ever growing subcategories of Euroscepticism.
However, this terminological differentiation has not helped to define precisely what
is meant by the origins of Euroscepticism. To the contrary, the terminology in Political
Sciences has rather suffered from a “theoretical and terminological vagueness”
Historians however claim that we are not dealing with an objective analysis of the
process of European integration, but rather with the manifestation of a series of
negative emotions Frank ( Frank, R. (2004). Les identités européennes au XXe siècle. Diversités, convergences et solidarités.
Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4000/books.psorbonne.739 Girault, R. (1994). Identité et conscience européennes au XXe siècle. Paris: Hachette.
Bartolini ( Bartolini, S. (2005). Restructuring Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/0199286434.001.0001 Déloye, Y. (2000). Exploring the Concept of European Citizenship. A Socio-Historical
Approach. Yearbook of European Studies, 14, 197-219. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004333369_011
Following this historical approach, one also quickly realizes that there is no resistance
to Europe in general. Rather, opposition to Europe manifests itself against certain
representations of Europe Réungoat ( Réungoat, E. (2010). Les résistances partisanes à l’Europe dans les partis français
: enjeux de présentation de soi et de labellisation. In B. Wassenberg, F. Clavert
and P. Hamman (eds.). Contre l’Europe? Anti-européisme, euroscepticisme et alter-européisme dans la construction
européenne de 1945 à nos jours (vol. 1): les concepts (pp. 155-175). Stuttgart: Steiner Verlag.
Marès, A. and Rey, M. P. (2014). Mémoires et émotions : Au cœur de l’histoire des relations internationales. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne.
Pfister ( Pfister, E. (2010). Die Identität Europas und Europabilder in Wochenschauen nach 1945.
In B. Wassenberg, F. Clavert and P. Hamman (eds.). Contre l’Europe? Anti-européisme, euroscepticisme et alter-européisme dans la construction
européenne de 1945 à nos jours (vol. 1): les concepts (pp. 233-249). Stuttgart: Steiner Verlag.
Tréfàs, D. (2010). Die Vielfalt der Euroskeptizismen in der öffentlichen Kommunikation:
eine Analyse der Debatte um die europäische Verfassung 2005 in der deutschen und der
britischen Kommunikationsarena. In B. Wassenberg, F. Clavert and P. Hamman (eds.).
Contre l’Europe? Anti-européisme, euroscepticisme et alter-européisme dans la construction
européenne de 1945 à nos jours (vol. 1): les concepts (pp. 249-269). Stuttgart: Steiner Verlag.
When examining these different cases and periods of resistance to Europe, the question arises whether Euroscepticism as a whole has increased during time and if yes, whether this is due to the fact, as Political Scientists claim, that the British opposition to the EEC in the 1980s has led to the loss of a “permissive consensus” of the population on the very principle of European integration.
Concerning the elaboration of a sort of time scale for resistance to Europe, it seems
indeed evident that the phenomenon has strongly increased after the Treaty of Maastricht
in 1992, when the process of European integration became a matter of public interest.
The negative results in Denmark and slightly positive ones in France during the referenda
following this Treaty sounded a first note of warning: the Eurosceptic voices seemed
to suggest that Europe was made “from above” and did not take into consideration the
interests and views of the European peoples See interview with Hubert Védrine by Frédéric Clavert, Paris, 2008, availible at:
Political Scientists claim that this was the beginning of the loss of the so-called
“permissive consensus” on the principle of European unification i.e., the end of the
passive acceptance of this process by the European citizens Libera ( Libera, M. (ed.) (2016). L’Europe contestée. Paris: L’Harmattan. The European Constitution was rejected by the French with 54, 7 % and by the Danes
with 61, 6 %.
The Irish initially rejected the Lisbon Treaty actually with 67 % of the votes.
From a historical perspective, this argumentation can be questioned. From the beginning,
the process of Europe integration has not profited from a smooth public support or
a European consensus. As soon as in August 1949, when the first meeting of the Consultative
Assembly of the Council of Europe took place in Strasbourg, there were violent manifestations
by French communists and anti-German movements against the first European Organization
to the point that Robert Schuman introduced a Court case against them at the Prefecture
In general, it can be maintained that the “permissive consensus” was assumed to exist,
because there were not many referenda organized from 1957 until 1992. This was due
to the fact that the European Treaties were not modified until the Single European
Act in 1986 and that, consequently, the EEC Members-States did not need to organize
referenda on their adoption. Only from 1987 onwards, with the successive European
Treaty reforms there was a constitutional obligation for some EU Member-States to
consult their population Maastricht (1992), Amsterdam (1997), Nice (2001), the European Constitution (2004)
and the Lisbon Treaty (2007), see Beach ( Beach, D. (2018). Referendums in the European Union. Oxford Research Encyclopedias, Political Values, Beliefs, and Ideologies, World Politics.
Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.503
But Political Scientists also insist that the loss of the permissive consensus can
be proven by the growing success of anti-European political parties during European
elections, especially since the EU Eastern enlargement in 2005/2007 and the subsequent
economic crisis in 2008. It is indeed undeniable that in the late 2000s, Eurosceptical
forces have increased their share of seats in the European Parliament. The results
of the European elections in 2009, in 2014 and in 2019 clearly show an increase of
what are generally called “Eurosceptic” political forces and this in nearly all EU
Member-States Moreau and Wassenberg ( Moreau, P. and Wassenberg, B. (eds.) (2016a). European Integration and new Anti-Europeanism I. The 2014 European Election and the
Rise of Euroscepticism in Western Europe. Stuttgart: Steiner Verlag.
Moreau, P. and Wassenberg, B. (2016b). European Integration and new Anti-Europeanism II. The 2014 European Election and New
Anti-European Forces in southern, Northern and Eastern Europe. Stuttgart: Steiner Verlag.
The ECR regroups Eurosceptic conservative parties (for example the Czech Civic Democratic
Party, the German Alternative für Deutschland, the British Conservative Party and
the Finns Party).
The EFDD regroups national populist and far right parties (Danish People’s Party,
Italian Five Star Movement, Sweden Democrats).
The GUE-NGL regroups far left-wing political parties (for example the Cypriote Progressive
Party of Working People, the German Linke, the Irish Sinn Fein, or the Spanish Podemos).
Available at:
From a historical perspective, the rise in the share of seats won by Eurosceptic parties
does not necessarily mean that opposition to Europe has not before been represented
in the European Parliament. Indeed, when looking at the history of the European elections,
Eurosceptic forces have entered the European Parliament from the very start: after
the 1979 elections, the fraction of the European Conservatives (ED) composed of the
Eurosceptic British Conservatives held 64 seats and among the 44 MEPs of the group
of Communists and the Far Left, there were a strong proportion of “hard” Eurosceptics Libera et al ( Libera, M. (ed.) (2016). L’Europe contestée. Paris: L’Harmattan.
Besides, when identifying anti-European movements in the European Parliament, we have
to take into consideration, that within the political spectrum, the “classic” marginal
parties from the left or right wing extreme camp (neo-communist, post-communist, national-populist,
and right-wing extremist groups) might not be the exclusive advocators of Euroscepticism.
It is true, that since the 2000s, new anti-European parties have entered the scene
(for example the Five-Star-Movement in Italy Podemus in Spain or the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) in Germany), but the so-called mainstream parties (like the German Social Democrats,
the British Labour Party or the French neo-Gaullists) also increasingly champion Eurosceptic
positions Wassenberg ( Wassenberg, B. (2019). Euroscepticism at the EP elections in 2014: Reflection of the
Different Patterns of Opposition to the EU?. In O. Costa (ed.). The European Parliament in times of EU crisis. Dynamics and Transformations (pp. 275-299). Cham: Palgrave. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97391-3_13
One may however wonder why anti-Europeanism does assert itself with such magnitude at the time of the European elections. The history of the European elections reveals indeed a very complex, almost paradoxical situation concerning their link with Euroscepticism.
There are at least three paradoxes which can be revealed when analyzing resistances
to Europe through a historical perspective on the turnout of European elections and
which underline the argument that public opinion “cannot simply be characterized as
either Eurosceptic or not, but rather consists of different types”
The first paradox concerns the fact that the direct European elections were introduced
as an element of democratization of the EEC and to increase public support for the
European integration process, but this was apparently not the case, as the first direct
elections in 1979 showed. In principle, in the collective imagination, the direct
election of the European Parliament —a democratic act by definition— was supposed
to bring Europe closer to its citizens and strengthen their feeling of belonging to
the EEC. In the 1950s, the fathers of Europe therefore saw in this election by universal
suffrage the means of consolidating European integration. Robert Schuman was indeed
convinced that citizens were more in support of Europe than the politicians and he
repeatedly said that citizens must be relied on to advance European integration. As
early as 1956, he proposed a European Parliament elected by direct suffrage and this
was then taken up by a provision in the Treaty of Rome
When the decision was finally taken in the mid-1970s and preparations were made for
the European elections in June 1979, everyone expected it to be a qualitative leap
for European integration and a means to address the democratic deficit in the EEC
This brings to the surface another element to consider when analyzing the link between
European elections and Euroscepticism: the role and interpretation of the degree of
abstention. At first glance, abstention seems to come under indifference rather than
hostility. But it probably means a less benevolent indifference than that which Political
Scientists understand as “the permissive consensus” However, and the rising degree of abstention weakens the legitimacy of the European
Parliament, Costa ( Costa, O. (2001). Le Parlement européen, assemblée délibérante. Bruxelles: Éditions de l’Université de Bruxelles.
Available at:
A third paradox is the fact, that the population might not even necessarily express
opposition to Europe when voting for anti-European political parties. This paradox
is a consequence of the very nature of the European elections and the way how they
are organized. Michel Hastings, who studied the 2004 elections, wrote: “This is not
a European poll”, meaning that in fact, it was rather a juxtaposition of a series
of national elections
Moreover, European elections are still considered unimportant by large parts of the
population because the European Parliament is still perceived by them as the weak
link in the institutional system, which it has indeed been for a long time. Since
Maastricht, treaty by treaty, however, the Parliament has gained a lot of power, even
if it is still not comparable to a national Parliament, for it is not the sole legislator
of the EU Greenwood and Roederer-Rynning ( Greenwood, J. and Roederer-Rynning, C (2019). Taming Trilogues: The EU-s Law-making
Process in a Comparative Perspective. In O. Costa (ed.). The European Parliament in times of EU crisis. Dynamics and Transformations (pp. 121-143). Cham: Palgrave. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97391-3_6
Joy, bright spark of divinity, Daughter of Elysium,
fire-inspired we tread thy sanctuary,
thy magic power re-unites all that custom has divided,
all men become brothers under the sway of thy gentle wings First strophe of the European hymn from the “Ode to Joy” of Beethoven’s Ninth symphony,
different versions of this hymn can be heard on the Council of Europe website under
“Symbols “,
When in 1972 the Council of Europe chose as European hymn, the excerpt from the “Ode to Joy” of Beethoven’s Ninth symphony, European idealism seemed to be at its top. The European unification practically became the sanctified, blessed undertaking, Europe a place of joy, surrounded by divine sparkles, an angelic place, in which through the spell of Gods men live in peace and unity.
The reality of today´s Europe is far away from this vision. Pessimism, Euroscepticism and opposition have for long made a stand against the idealized transfiguration of the European unification process. In the current context of “Brexit”, when anti-European declarations in the UK make the headlines of the media in Europe every day, one is tempted to see in this evolution the confirmation of what Political Scientists claimed in their first analysis of Euroscepticism: that we are dealing with a phenomenon that has originated in British party politics in the 1980s and has then spread to the rest of Europe, mainly with the progressive loss of the so-called “permissive consensus” by the European population.
When analyzing the history of European integration, this assumption needs to be qualified,
if not put into question. Opposition to Europe can indeed be traced back to the very
beginning of the European integration process in the 1950s, if not to the beginning
of the debates on the European idea in the 1920s. If defined as “resistances to Europe”,
Euroscepticism then turns out to be a very complex phenomenon: it is neither limited
to party politics, nor homogenous in its manifestations nor constantly represented
or equally strong in all European countries, nor static or unmovable, but on the contrary
a dynamic process changing from time to time, which develops further along the history
of European integration. Therefore, this phenomenon is nothing new: it is like a “headwind”
which accompanies and hinders the protagonists of the European unification process,
similar to a cyclist
Assuming that there has been a “permissive consensus” on European integration is underestimating the forces profondes that operate below the surface of what appears as the iceberg of the history of European integration. Therefore, if European referenda and the turnout of European elections since the Maastricht Treaty in 1992 do reveal a growing success of “no” voices and Eurosceptic political parties, this does not necessarily stem from a “loss of a permissive consensus” of the European population. Opposition against Europe has indeed already been expressed in referenda before 1992 and it has accompanied the European elections from their very start in 1979. Thus, Eurosceptic parties have always been represented in the European Parliament, reflecting the pluralistic value of democracy, even if it is true that the rejection forms or the enmity towards Europe, from being limited to political fringe groups, have now developed to a “normalized” attitude of the European population towards the European unification process and the European institutions. The paradox of European elections is that they have often been misused as an occasion to express general political disinterest or discontent with national politics rather that to vote for or against Europe.
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