Over the last decade, the EU’s fundamental values have been under threat at the national
level, in particular among several Central and Eastern European states that joined the EU since 2004.
During this time, the European People’s Party (EPP) has been criticised for its unwillingness to vote for
measures that would sanction the ...
Over the last decade, the EU’s fundamental values have been under threat at the national
level, in particular among several Central and Eastern European states that joined the EU since 2004.
During this time, the European People’s Party (EPP) has been criticised for its unwillingness to vote for
measures that would sanction the Hungarian Fidesz government, one of its members, in breach of key
democratic principles since 2010. In this paper, we seek to understand how cohesive the EPP group has
been on fundamental values related votes, how the position of EPP MEPs on these issues has evolved
over time, and what explains intra-EPP disagreement on whether to accommodate rule of law offenders
within the EU. To address these questions, we analyse the votes of EPP MEPs across 24 resolutions on
the protection of EU fundamental values between 2011-2019. Our findings reveal below-average EPP
cohesion on these votes, and a sharp increase in the tendency of EPP MEPs to support these resolutions
over time. A number of factors explain the disagreements we find. While the EPP’s desire to maintain
Fidesz within its ranks is central, this explanation does not offer a comprehensive account of the group’s
accommodative behaviour. In particular, we find that ideological factors as well as the strategic interests
of national governments at the EU level are central to understanding the positions of EPP MEPs, as
well as the evolution of these positions over time. These results further our understanding of the nature
of the obstacles to EU sanctions in rule of law abuse cases, and the role of partisanship in fuelling EU
inaction especially.