Lecture 9 - EU Law
Lecture 9 - EU Law
Lecture 9 - EU Law
However: The Court had to alter its position because of the primacy of Union law and its
precedence over national law.
This primacy can only be firmly established if Union law is sufficient in itself to
guarantee the protection of basic rights with the same legal force as under the national
constitutions.
3. Development of Fundamental rights in the
EU
• Initially, the Court developed its safeguards for fundamental rights from a number of
provisions in the treaties.
• The Court of Justice has steadily developed and added to these initial attempts at
protecting fundamental rights through Union law.
How?
By recognising and applying general legal principles, drawing on the concepts that are
common to the constitutions of the Member States and on the international
conventions on the protection of human rights to whose conclusion the Member States
have been party. Prominent among the latter is the ECHR, which helped to shape the
substance of fundamental rights in the Union and the mechanisms for their protection.
3. Development of Fundamental rights in the
EU
• On this basis, the Court has recognised a number of freedoms as basic rights
secured by Union law.
• Particular value is also attached to greater transparency, which means that decisions
should be taken as openly as possible, and as closely as possible to the citizen.
An important aspect of this transparency is that any EU citizen or legal person registered in
a Member State may have access to Council or Commission documents. All grants and
subsidies from the EU budget must also be disclosed to natural or legal persons by means
of databases accessible to every Union citizen.
3. Development of Fundamental rights in the
EU
• However, this process of deriving ‘European fundamental rights’ had a serious
disadvantage: the ECJ was confined to the particular case in point.
- unable to develop fundamental rights from the general legal principles for all areas
in which this appeared necessary or desirable.
- unable to elaborate the scope of and the limits to the protection of fundamental
rights as generally and distinctively as was necessary.
• The Commission sent this draft to the ECJ and requested an opinion on its
compatibility with EU law.
The Court concluded that, in the form proposed, the draft agreement on
the accession of the EU to the ECHR was not compatible with EU law.
4. EU and ECHR
• Critical arguments made by the ECJ:
- If the EU were to accede to the ECHR, the ECJ would have to submit to the
decisions of the ECtHR.
- The Union’s CFSP would also be subject to the human rights supervision of
the ECtHR.
The judges took the view that this was contrary to important structural
principles of the EU.
Although, in theory, accession of the European Union to the ECHR remains
possible after this decision, in practice it is more complicated as a number of
technical details in the accession draft need to be amended beforehand.
EU Charter
1. From the ECHR to the Charter
• Irrespective of the EU’s accession to the ECHR, the Treaty
of Lisbon made a further, decisive step towards the creation
of a common constitutional law for the EU and put the
protection of fundamental rights in the EU on a new footing.
For example, the Charter applies when EU countries adopt or apply a national law
implementing an EU directive or when their authorities apply an EU regulation directly.
• In cases where the Charter does not apply, the protection of fundamental rights is
guaranteed under the constitutions or constitutional traditions of EU
countries and international conventions they have ratified.
• The Charter does not extend the scope of the EU to matters not part of its normal
remit.
EU Charter and ECHR
EU Charter ECHR
• The main task of the agency is to collect and publish relevant, objective,
reliable and comparable information and data on the situation of
fundamental rights in all EU countries within the scope of EU law. The
agency also promotes dialogue with civil society in order to raise public
awareness of fundamental rights and disseminate its work.
3. Fundamental rights beyond the Charter
• The protection of fundamental rights is also ensured through specific EU laws
such as the General Data Protection Regulation, legislation that aims to
prevent discrimination on the grounds of sex, race, ethnicity, religion,
disability, age or sexual orientation, and laws protecting whistle-
blowers and victims of crime.
• Art. 47 EU Charter:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms guaranteed by the law of the Union are violated has the right to an
effective remedy before a tribunal in compliance with the conditions laid down in this Article.
Everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial
tribunal previously established by law. Everyone shall have the possibility of being advised, defended and
represented.
Legal aid shall be made available to those who lack sufficient resources in so far as such aid is necessary to
ensure effective access to justice. »
• Art. 48 EU Charter:
“1. Everyone who has been charged shall be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.
2. Respect for the rights of the defence of anyone who has been charged shall be guaranteed.”
Revision Exercises
• What happens when a national court is unsure of the application of the
EU law?
• If a provision of EU law, for instance a Treaty article or a provision of a
directive, has ______ _________ , it can be enforced by individuals in
the national court.
• If a MS fails to fulfil its obligations under the Treaties, can another MS or
an EU institution bring an action before the ECJ?
• What is the difference between primary and secondary EU law?
• What is the ‘indirect effect’ of EU law?
• Both regulations and directives are directly applicable. True or false?
Exercise - Match the principles with their
definition
• Primacy/Supremacy a) The EU acts only within the limits of
the competences that EU countries
have conferred upon it in the Treaties.
• Conferral b) Individuals can immediately invoke a
European provision before a national
• Subsidiarity court.
c) The EU should not take action unless it
is more effective than action taken at
• Direct effect national level.
d) EU law takes precedence over national
law
Exercise: Match the institution with its role
• Parliament a. proposes and implements (with Member
States)
• Council e. co-legislator
Revision Exercises
• Which informal negotiation has in practice influenced the legislative process and the
adoption of texts after the first reading?