Annotating Arguments in a Parliamentary Corpus: An Experience
Mare Koit
Institute of Computer Science, University of Tartu, Narva Mnt 18, Tartu, Estonia
Keywords: Parliamentary Corpus, Argument, Annotation, Knowledge Representation.
Abstract: Estonian parliamentary corpus includes verbatim records of sessions held in the Parliament of Estonia
(Riigikogu) in 1995-2001. An important task of the Riigikogu is the passing of acts and resolutions. A bill
initiated in the Riigikogu will pass three readings, during which it is refined and amended. Negotiation is an
important part of parliamentary discussions. Arguments for and against of the bill and its amendments are
presented by the members of the Parliament in negotiation. In the paper, arguments used in negotiation are
considered. Every argument consists of one or more premises, and a claim (or conclusion). The arguments
and the relations between them (rebuttal, attack, and support) are determined with the aim to create a corpus
where arguments are annotated. Some problems are discussed in relation with annotation. Our further aim is
the automatic recognition of arguments and inter-argument relations in Estonian political texts.
1 INTRODUCTION
Parliament data has always been in the center of the
humanitarian and societal interest with its influential
language and content for the social and political
environment. There are many ongoing initiatives for
compiling digital collections of parliamentary
resources. An overview of the existing resources is
given in CLARIN-PLUS survey on parliament data
(Survey, 2020).
As a rule, parliamentary discussions include
numerous arguments. Analyzing argumentation from
a computational linguistics point of view has recently
led to a new field called argumentation mining. The
review of Atkinson et al. (2017) considers the
development of artificial tools that capture the human
ability to argue. Such systems, being able
automatically extract arguments and relations
between them, can be used when modelling political
argumentation.
Stab and Gurevych (2014) present an approach to
model arguments, their components and relations in
persuasive essays in English. The annotation scheme
includes the annotation of claims and premises as
well as support and attack relations for capturing the
structure of argumentative discourse. The authors
conduct a manual annotation study with three
annotators on 90 persuasive essays. The corpus
updated in (Stab and Gurevych, 2017), consists of
402 argument-annotated persuasive essays.
Amgoud et al. (2015) propose a language for
representing arguments that captures the various
forms of arguments encountered in natural language,
and demonstrate that it is possible to represent attack
and support relations between arguments as formulas
of the same language.
Haddadan et al. (2018) introduce the annotation
guidelines defined for annotating arguments in
political debates. Their annotation scheme includes
the annotation of claims and premises as the
components of arguments.
Menini et al. (2018) have created a corpus of
political speeches where argument pairs are annotated
with the support and attack relations.
Lawrence and Reed (2019) provide a review of
recent advances in argument mining techniques.
In the current paper, we examine negotiations in
the Estonian Parliament (Riigikogu) based on
verbatim records of the sittings. In the records,
repetitions and disfluencies are omitted, while
supplementary information such as speaker names are
added. The records (in Estonian) are accessible on the
Web. A corpus is formed that includes a part of the
records from 1995 to 2001 (in total, 13 million
tokens), both for download and on-line searching. We
are looking for arguments presented by the members
of the Parliament (MPs) in negotiations when
proceeding a bill. Our further aim is to create a corpus
where arguments and inter-argument relations are
annotated.
Koit, M.
Annotating Arguments in a Parliamentary Corpus: An Experience.
DOI: 10.5220/0010135102130218
In Proceedings of the 12th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management (IC3K 2020) - Volume 2: KEOD, pages 213-218
ISBN: 978-989-758-474-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
213
Figure 1: General structure of proceedings on a bill (source: https://www.riigikogu.ee/en/introduction-and-history/riigikogu-
tasks-organisation-work/what-does-riigikogu/legislative-work/).
The corpus with annotated arguments will be used
to prepare the automatic annotation. We are looking
for formal indicators in Estonian political texts that
can be used to annotate arguments automatically.
The first attempt to analyze and model the formal
structure and relations of arguments in Estonian
political discourse was made in (Koit, 2020). The
current paper continues the analysis and brings out
some problems of annotating arguments.
The remainder of the paper is structured as
follows. In Section 2, we examine randomly selected
discussions in the Riigikogu by using verbatim
records of the sittings. We consider the arguments
presented by the MPs, annotate the premises and
claims of the arguments and determine the inter-
argument relations (attack, rebuttal, and support). We
also consider some problems of annotating the
arguments and relations. Section 3 discusses creating
a corpus where arguments are annotated. Further aim
of creating the corpus is to prepare the automatic
recognition of arguments (argument mining). Section
4 draws conclusions and figures out future work.
2 ARGUMENTS IN POLITICAL
NEGOTIATIONS
In this section, we examine discussions in the
Riigikogu based on verbatim records of the sittings.
We consider the arguments presented by the members
of the parliament in negotiations and determine the
inter-argument relations.
2.1 Empirical Material
Our empirical material is formed by the records of the
Parliament of Estonia Riigikogu. The records are
accessible on the Web (cf. Riigikogu, 2020). An
important task of the Riigikogu is the passing of acts
and resolutions. Acts are the result of work in
multiple stages. The first stage of legislation involves
the drafting of a bill. During the second stage, the bill
is initiated in the Riigikogu. The bill will then pass
three readings, during which it is refined and
amended. The proceeding of a bill is managed by the
relevant leading committee. After having been passed
by the Riigikogu, the act is sent to the President of the
Republic for proclamation, and is then published in
KEOD 2020 - 12th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development
214
State Gazette (Riigi Teataja). The general structure on
proceedings of a bill is shown in Figure 1.
The readings have a predetermined structure (cf.
Koit et al., 2019). Every reading includes negotiation.
Figure 2 shows the structure of the 1
st
reading. The
2
nd
and the 3
rd
readings also include voting on
amendments and final voting, respectively.
- - 1
st
reading
- - initiator – Government
Presenter (Minister): Report
{
MP: Question
Presenter: Giving information
}
Co-presenter (a member of leading committee): Report
{
MP: Question
Co-presenter: Giving information
}
- - negotiation
{
MP: argument
}
Figure 2: The structure of readings in the Riigikogu. The
winding brackets ‘{‘ and ‘}’ connect a part that can be
repeated; ‘- -’ starts a comment; MP – any member of
Riigikogu.
For this paper, arguments and inter-argument
relations were annotated in a part of the corpus
(27,768
tokens in total). The following examples are
taken from proceedings on the bill of alcohol. It
should be mentioned that we currently limit us with
annotating the arguments in the negotiation part of the
proceedings and do not consider the arguments that
have been presented in the reports. The examples in
Subsections 2.2 and 2.3 are taken from different
readings.
2.2 Annotating Arguments
An argument is a series of statements in a natural
language, called the premises, intended to determine
the degree of truth of another statement the claim
(or the conclusion). These parts can be presented in
one or more sentences. There are three types of
relations between the arguments: attack, support, and
rebuttal (Amgoud et al., 2015).
When analyzing persuading essays, Stab and
Gurevych (2014) distinguish the major claim of the
essay and the claim of an (arbitrary) argument. In
parliamentary discussions, we can make similar
distinctions. The major claim, together with its
premises, is given in the beginning of the 1
st
reading,
in the report of Minister and it is always ‘to approve
the bill’. As a rule, the claim of a supporting argument
presented in following negotiation, coincides with the
major claim. The claim of a rebutting argument is
opposite: ‘do not approve the bill’. The claim of an
attacking argument depends on a previous argument
that is under attack.
In the analyzed negotiations, premises and claims
of arguments and inter-argument relations were
manually annotated by the author of the paper,
following (Stab and Gurevich, 2013), (Amgoud et al.,
2015), and (Haddadan et al., 2018). Therefore, the
current annotation is rather subjective. Still, as a
further work, we plan to involve more annotators as
well as to calculate the inter-annotator agreement.
Following (Amgoud et al, 2015), we use an
annotation scheme where begins and ends of the
components of arguments are labelled. The next
examples illustrate annotations of arguments and
relations. The first two arguments are against and for
the major claim, respectively. The major claim isto
approve the bill on alcohol’.
Example 1: Argument rebutting the major claim.
<argument>
- - rebutting
<premise>
Täielikult puudub seaduseelnõus sotsiaalne
dimensioon. […]
The social dimension is fully missing in the bill.
[…]
</premise>
<claim>Seaduse vastuvõtmisega sel kujul
näitame oma rahulolevat suhtumist sellesse, et meil
alkoholi palju tarbitakse, ja sellesse, et meile on
pigem tähtsam saada miljard krooni riigikassasse kui
arvestada seda, mida alkohol teeb rahva tervisele,
perekondadele, kuidas ta soodustab kuritegevust.
If we approve the bill in the existing form then we
express our satisfaction with the high consumption of
alcohol and demonstrate that it is more important for
us to get a billion Kroon for the budget than taking
into account how the alcohol influences the health of
people and families and how it contributes to
delinquency.
</claim>
</argument>
Example 2: Argument supporting the major claim.
<argument>
- - supporting
<premise>
[…] joomarlus on Eesti rahvuslik õnnetus. […]
Excessive drinking is a national disaster in
Estonia. […]
</premise>
<claim>
Meil kui rahvaesindajatel on vaja näidata eelkõige
oma suhtumist ja arusaamist selle probleemi
olulisusest Eesti jaoks ja ka tahet seda probleemi
lahendada.
Annotating Arguments in a Parliamentary Corpus: An Experience
215
We as public delegates must express our
understanding of the importance of the problem for
Estonia as well as our intention to solve this problem.
</claim>
</argument>
The next three arguments support or attack some
presented amendments, respectively. It should be
mentioned that the amendments’ motions are not
accessible on the Web therefore it is unclear how they
have been formulated.
Example 3: Argument supporting (some)
amendments.
<argument>
- - supporting
<premise>
Poliitiku […] vastutus ja kohustus seisneb selles,
et tagada riigis sellised seadused, mis toimiksid ja
garanteeriksid elujõu kõigile, kes meie riigis elavad,
ja lõppkokkuvõttes turvalisuse kogu rahvale. […]
[…] Responsibility and obligation of a politician
is to guarantee such laws that ensure normal life for
all inhabitants of the country and the safety for all
people. […]
</premise>
<claim>
Ma kutsun täna kõiki hääletama selliste
ettepanekute poolt (ja neid on palju), mis tagavad
Eestis turvalisuse, mis tagavad selle, et meil joodaks
vähem, et alkohol ei oleks nii kättesaadav, et
sotsiaalselt ebaküps noor ei võiks seda iga kell igalt
poolt hankida.
I invite you all to vote for these (numerous)
amendments that will provide the safety in Estonia, in
order to decrease drinking, to decrease the
availability of alcohol and ensure that socially
immature young people can’t get it every time
everywhere.
</claim>
</argument>
Example 4: Argument attacking (some) amendments.
<argument>
- - attacking
<premise>
Me näeme, et Eestis on alkoholi liigtarbimine
probleem, kuid probleeme ei ole võimalik lahendada
keelamisega. […]
We see that drinking is a problem in Estonia but
the problems can’t be solved by prohibition. […]
</premise>
<claim>
Seetõttu ei toeta me ettepanekuid, mis
vähendavad alkoholimüügi võimalusi ja samal ajal
võiksid kaasa tuua salaalkoholi leviku kasvu.
Therefore, we do not support the amendments for
reducing the sale of alcohol that can bring along the
growth of spreading the illegal alcohol.
</claim>
</argument>
Example 5: Argument attacking an amendment. The
premise comes after the claim.
<argument>
- - attacking
<claim>
[…] ma ei ole nõus sõnastusega, et alkohol on
toidugrupp või kuulub toidugruppi.
[…] I don’t accept the definition of alcohol as a
food group.
</claim>
<premise>
On selge, et siin on tegemist alkoholiäriga,
tarbimisele ja tootmisele paremate võimaluste
loomisega, siin ei ole arvestatud inimeste tervisega.
It is clear that there is the alcohol business that
creates better opportunities for consumption and
production, which don’t account the health of people.
</premise>
</argument>
2.3 Problems of Annotation
Following (Stab and Gurevych, 2013) and (Haddadan
et al., 2018) we started with annotation of claims of
arguments and determined whether the argument is
supporting, attacking or rebutting another argument
or one of its components. Then we determined
premises and linked them with claims. Haddadan et
al. (2018) have suggested some indicator phrases
which were commonly used while making claims or
premises. Stab and Gurevych (2017) also give certain
linguistic patterns for recognizing the components of
arguments.
In the negotiations on the bill of alcohol, 14
arguments (out of 28) have exact indicators to
recognize premises and/or claims, e.g. kui … siis (if
then), sest, sellepärast et, seetõttu (because, in
that). Nevertheless, the argumentation in the political
debates is not always nicely signalled linguistically,
or even and intuitively clear (cf. Visser et al., 2018).
MPs in the Riigikogu often use figurative language
(Example 6).
Example 6. An emotional claim.
Aga kas selle eest peaks siis risti lööma ainult
putkad ja bensiinijaamad, kas nemad on siis Jeesus
Kristuse rollis, kes kogu alkoholi õuduse ja patu
peavad kinni maksma?
But should we only crucify booths and service
stations, do they have the role of Saviour who buys
out the horror and enormity of alcohol?
KEOD 2020 - 12th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development
216
Some talks are ironic or sarcastic (Example 7).
Example 7. An ironic claim.
See seadus on väga hea alkoholiäri seadus.
This law is very good just for alcohol business.
Some MPs in the Riigikogu implement special
strategies to present their arguments (cf. Abbott et al.,
2016), including rhetorical questions or conditional
(Example 8).
Example 8. Rhetorical question and conditional in
argument.
<argument>
<premise>
Samuti, miks ei võiks riik oma alkoholi- ja
alkoholimonopoli poodidega minna Eesti
suurematesse keskustesse, et pakkuda turul
konkurentsi alkoholile, mille kasumimarginaali on
eraettevõtjad llaltki kõrgeks ajanud? Why not
would the state open alcohol shops in bigger centres,
in order to initiate competition with private
entrepreneurs?
</premise>
Siis Then
<claim>
oleks võimalik saada kätte suhteliselt odavamat
alkoholi, kvaliteetset alkoholi, mitte salaviina. it
would be possible to receive relatively cheaper and
better alcohol, instead of illegal vodka.
</claim>
</argument>
The components of the arguments have the order
either ‘premise(s)-claim’ (Examples 1-4, 8) or ‘claim-
premise(s)’ (Example 5). Likewise, there are some
nested arguments where one argument is a premise of
another, e.g. Example 9 (cf. Amgoud et al., 2015).
Example 9. Nested arguments.
<argument0>
<premise>
<argument1>
Siin öeldi, et kui It was said that if
<premise>
me teatud reegleid karmistame, we introduce
some sanctions
</premise>
siis then
<claim>
kohe läheb taksoviinamajandus lahti, nagu oli
Gorbatšovi ajal. alcohol business from taxi-cabs will
start like it was in Gorbachov’s time.
</claim>
</argument1>
<claim>
Kuid siis olid teised ajad ja teised suhtumised. But
then the times and the attitudes were different.
</claim>
</argument0>
A problem is how to recognize the inter-argument
relations. We have determined the attack, rebuttal and
support relations between an argument and the claim
of another argument (incl. the major claim), e.g.
Examples 1 to 5, like in (Stab and Gurevych, 2017).
However, it has been difficult to determine another
argument related to the argument under consideration
like in (Amgoud et al., 2015). To do this, all
arguments (incl. the ones presented in the reports and
discussions preceding the negotiation) have to be
annotated. However, we are here only looking for the
arguments presented in negotiations.
3 DISCUSSION
The paper describes an experience of annotating
arguments in Estonian parliamentary discourse. The
empirical material is formed by the corpus that
consists of verbatim records of sittings held in the
Riigikogu. The components of arguments (premises
and claims) and inter-argument relations (attack,
support, and rebuttal) are annotated in a part of the
corpus.
As an example, proceedings on the bill of alcohol
are considered. The discussions in the Riigikogu have
been intensive, the total number of questions asked
after reports presented by the representatives of the
government and the leading committee is 81. The
number of presented amendments is 97 (still, only 39
of them were approved by MPs after voting). In total,
28 arguments have been presented by 12 MPs in
negotiations. The arguments supporting the bill are
prevailing over the counterarguments (by their
weightiness, not the number) and the act is approved
in the Parliament.
Every argument consists of two parts one or
more premises and a claim. In our parliamentary
discussions, the presented arguments typically
include more than one premise in many sentences.
That is different as compared with persuasive essays
where premise(s) and a claim are often located in the
same sentence (Stab and Gurevych, 2014, 2017). In
the negotiations on the bill of alcohol, 21 arguments
(out of 28) consist of more than one sentence.
Microstructures of arguments (basic, convergent,
serial, divergent, and linked) proposed in (Stab and
Gurevych, 2017) have not been considered in our
parliamentary corpus, it needs an additional study.
Our current work on annotation of arguments is only
the first step towards creating an argument corpus.
More annotators must be involved in order to achieve
reliable results. Some tools can be used for (manual)
annotation of the arguments and for visualising the
Annotating Arguments in a Parliamentary Corpus: An Experience
217
inter-argument relations, e.g. OVA+ (Janier et al.,
2014).
The definition of suitable NLP methods for the
automatic identification of the argument components
and the relations between them also needs an
additional study. A challenging further research
question is a comparative study of political
argumentation in Estonian parliament and in other
parliaments as well as in different political cultures
and different languages.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Verbatim records of sittings of the Parliament of
Estonia can be accessed online. Readings in the
Riigikogu have a predetermined structure, including
negotiations as one part. In this paper, discussions on
the bill of alcohol are considered in order to illustrate
arguments and their relations. The arguments used in
the process of adopting the act and inter-argument
relations are annotated. The structure of arguments
and the relations are analyzed. Some problems of
annotation are considered.
This study is a step towards automatic analysis of
political arguments in Estonian parliamentary
discussions. The current task has been the
development of the annotation scheme and creation
of a corpus with annotated arguments and inter-
argument relations. Future work includes the
finalization of the annotation process of a dataset of
political debates, and the definition of suitable NLP
methods for the automatic identification of these
argument components and the inter-argument
relations.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was supported by the European Union
through the European Regional Development Fund
(Centre of Excellence in Estonian Studies).
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