Globális és nemzetközi kormányzás, nemzetközi jog, emberi jogok
Migráció
Nemzetközi együttműködés
Why do governments oppose seemingly favourable policy changes? This paper engages
with this broader question by analys- ing the behaviour of EU Member States during
the Pact on Migration and Asylum negotiations. Specifically, it looks at the Visegrád
Group countries – Czechia, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia – which were the only states
not supporting any files of the Pact, despite it introducing harsher immigration rules
in line with their policy positions. The paper explores three potential explanations,
deliberate obstructionism conceptualised as ‘unpoli- tics,’ domestic political pressures,
and genuine policy red lines, using semi-structured elite interviews and Council of
the EU pre- paratory documents. It finds that high-level political disagreements and
divergent negotiation strategies meant that the Visegrád Group ceased to be a relevant
collective actor in EU migration policy. Similarly, the rationale for their voting
decisions also varied on a case-by-case basis. The results support emerging findings
on the vote-seeking motivation for populist obstructionism in Council decision-making.