19 July 2021
Polexit or judicial dialogue?
In the world of EU law, Poland and the rule of law, it was a wild third week of July. A series of events unfolded in Warsaw and Luxembourg, adding to the saga of Polish rule of law travails before courts. All levels of Polish government and bodies controlled by the ruling party have decried CJEU interim orders and judgments, indicating a complete lack of will to comply with EU law and CJEU rulings. Is a "Polexit" looming? Continue reading >>
0
Die Stunde des Gesetzgebers
Im vergangenen Jahr aber hat der Zweite Senat des Bundesverfassungsgerichts mit dem PSPP-Urteil eine Dynamik in Gang gesetzt, die das Kraftfeld zwischen nationaler und supranationaler Verfassungsgerichtsbarkeit zur Entladung zu bringen und damit die gesamte Europäische Union irreparabel zu beschädigen droht. Tatsächlich legen dieser und weitere Konflikte gravierende Mängel in der Architektur des Verfassungsgerichtsverbunds offen – und zwar auf allen Seiten. Für die Bundesregierung liegt darin eine unerwartete Chance. Continue reading >>All Eyes on LGBTQI Rights
In Fedotova v Russia, the ECtHR found that Russia overstepped the boundaries of its otherwise broad margin of appreciation because it had “no legal framework capable of protecting the applicants’ relationships as same-sex couples has been available under domestic law”. The case foreshadows a future wherein the familiar line of cases advancing the protection of same sex couples will need to be complemented by a jurisprudence that engages with the backslash against LGBTQI rights. Continue reading >>
0
Die nackte weibliche Brust als Sittlichkeits- und Rechtsproblem
Ende Juni löste eine in Berlin lebende Frau einen Polizeieinsatz aus, weil sie bei hochsommerlichen Temperaturen am Wasserspielplatz „Plansche“ im Plänterwald mit freiem Oberkörper ruhte und ihre Brust auf Aufforderung der Parkaufseher hin nicht bedecken wollte. Das Argument, sie wolle mit Männern mit freiem Oberköper gleichbehandelt werden, wurde nicht akzeptiert. Ist ein Polizeieinsatz wegen einer unbedeckten weiblichen Brust an einem öffentlich zugänglichen Wasserspielplatz mit Liegewiese im Park eine staatlich zu verantwortende gleichheitswidrige Sexualisierung der weiblichen Brust? Continue reading >>18 July 2021
Zündstoff für die Gleichheitsrechtsdogmatik
Gut vier Jahre nach den vieldebattierten und -kritisierten „Kopftuch-Entscheidungen“ Achbita und Bougnaoui hatte der EuGH am 15. Juli 2021 erneut über Kopftuchverbote in Form betrieblicher Neutralitätsregelungen zu entscheiden. In seiner jüngsten Entscheidung hat der EuGH seine offene Haltung gegenüber betrieblichen Kopftuchverboten durch seine zumindest punktuell relativiert, und liefert zugleich neuen Input für die Debatte um die Einordnung von Kopftuchverboten als unmittelbare oder mittelbare Diskriminierung, der die Rechtsposition kopftuchtragender Musliminnen langfristig stärken könnte. Continue reading >>16 July 2021
Bedarfsorientierte Sanktionen
In einer überraschenden Entscheidung hat das BVerfG die Sanktionen im Asylbewerberleistungsgesetz nicht für verfassungswidrig befunden: Im Mai, auf den Tag genau vier Jahre nach der angegriffenen Entscheidung des Bundessozialgerichts, hat die 3. Kammer des 1. Senats die hiergegen gerichtete Verfassungsbeschwerde nicht zur Entscheidung angenommen. Noch überraschender ist, dass der Nichtannahmebeschluss die in der Sanktionen-Entscheidung entwickelten Maßstäbe nicht aufgreift. Continue reading >>Drei sind eins und eins sind wir
In einer Entscheidung vom 27. April argumentiert der Zweiten Senat des Bundesverfassungsgerichts, dass die für ihn relevanten Grundrechtsebenen in Europa –Grundrechte-Charta der EU, EMRK und Grundgesetz – im Wesentlichen deckungsgleich seien und daher eine Prüfung unabhängig vom konkreten Maßstab zum selben Ergebnis führe. Wenn aber alle Grundrechtsebenen in Europa dem Grundgesetz entsprechen, kann das Bundesverfassungsgericht den Anspruch formulieren, dass seine Maßstabsbildung für den gesamten europäischen Grundrechtsschutz gelten soll. Continue reading >>Will Russia Yield to the ECtHR?
On 13 July 2021, the European Court of Human Rights published its judgment in Fedotova and Others v. Russia, a case which concerned the lack of legal recognition of same-sex relationships in the Russian legal system. The judges found the Russian laws to be in violation of Article 8 – the right to respect for private and family life and Article 14 – prohibition of discrimination. However, it is highly unlikely that Russia will enforce the judgment. Continue reading >>15 July 2021
Ein Dilemma, kein Staatsstreich
Jetzt ist es also tatsächlich passiert: Das polnische Verfassungsgericht verneint in einem zentralen Bereich die Bindung an Entscheidungen des EuGH. Mit dem prinzipiellen Vorrang des Europarechts steht damit eine der fundamentalen Säulen der europäischen Integration in Frage. Ist der Vorgang vergleichbar mit dem, was das deutsche Bundesverfassungsgericht im PSPP-Urteil getan hat? Continue reading >>Kampf oder diplomatischer Ausgleich?
Nachdem nun die Europäische Kommission angekündigt hat, sie werde das Urteil des BVerfG zum Gegenstand eines Vertragsverletzungsverfahrens machen, hat der frühere Gerichtspräsident Andreas Vosskuhle die Vermutung geäußert, dass die Europäische Kommission und der EuGH in einem kollusiven Zusammenwirken danach strebten, die Europäische Union unter der Hand in einen europäischen Bundesstaat zu verwandeln. Die Auseinandersetzung zwischen den beiden höchsten Gerichten entwickelt sich damit zu einem subkutan ausgetragenen Verfassungsdrama, das allmählich auch eine breitere Öffentlichkeit beunruhigen muss. Continue reading >>14 July 2021
Klimaschutz oder Sozialstaat?
Die Entscheidung des Bundesverfassungsgerichts zum Klimaschutz vom 24. März 2021 hat der Bundestag mit Gesetzesbeschluss vom 24. Juni 2021 mit dem Ziel umgesetzt, den monierten verfassungswidrigen Zustand zu beseitigen. Parallel zur Umsetzung nimmt eine Debatte über die soziale Dimension des Klimaschutzes Fahrt auf: Der soziale Ausgleich müsse beim Klimaschutz mit bedacht werden. Continue reading >>
0
Human Rights As Hate Speech
On 15 June 2021, the Hungarian Parliament passed Act no. LXXIX of 2021 which pursued a homophobic and transphobic agenda, curtailing the rights of LGBTQI people. The law was received with unprecedentedly harsh criticism, to which the Hungarian government responded in a resolution, adopted on 6 July. In it, human rights arguments are dismissed as a form of Western indoctrination. Continue reading >>
0
An Appeal to Polish Authorities
On 23 June, Bartosz Kramek, a Polish activist and the Chair of the Supervisory Board of the Open Dialogue Foundation (ODF), a Poland-based international NGO on the frontlines of the fight for the rule of law in the country, was arrested by he Internal Security Agency. Mr Kramek is currently under unconditional pre-trial detention. The court approved placing him under detention with a bail of 300,000 PLN to be delivered by 8 July 2021. The prosecutor filed an objection, which means that, irrespective of the payment, Mr Kramek will not be released until the court’s decision becomes final, that is, until the second-instance court examines the prosecutor’s appeal. If the court agrees, a well-known government critic and civic activist will be put behind bars for at least 3 months, making him a political prisoner in an EU Member State. Continue reading >>
0
13 July 2021
Machines Learning the Rule of Law
On 21 April 2021, the European Commission proposed the world’s first Artificial Intelligence Act, with the intention to explicitly protect the rule of law against the “rule of technology”. Despite this expressed goal, the normative power of the regulation raises serious concerns from the perspective of fundamental rights protection. Continue reading >>Two Almost Identical Chambers Doing the Same Job Twice
On July 8th, the Italian Parliament adopted in the last reading an amendment to the constitution which lowers the voting age in Senate elections from 25 to 18 years. At first glance, an ode to democracy: the amendment eventually grants the right to vote for the upper chamber of the national Parliament to some 4 million young citizens. In reality, the amendment is the (so far) last step of a fragmented and schizophrenic set of reforms that are gradually dismantling the logic of the constitution of 1948 without proposing an alternative constitutional strategy. Continue reading >>
0
12 July 2021
An Ordinary Result for the Rule of Law
Late on Wednesday 7 July, former South African President Jacob Zuma turned himself in to police. He thus just about complied with the Constitutional Court’s judgment on 29 June, which found him in contempt of court and sentenced him to 15 months’ imprisonment. This is not a victory for the rule of law. It simply is the rule of law. Continue reading >>
0
The Limits of Indirect Deterrence of Asylum Seekers
The ECtHR judgment M.A. v. Denmark is significant for several reasons. Firstly, because it adds to an already growing international criticism of Denmark’s asylum and immigration policy. Secondly, because the judgment helps clarify the Court’s position on an issue, family reunification for refugees, where case law has hitherto been somewhat ambiguous, and where several European States have introduced new restrictions since 2015. Third, and finally, the judgment represents – to paraphrase Harold Koh - another “way station…in the complex enforcement” of migrant and refugee rights by international human rights institutions. Continue reading >>09 July 2021
Visibility and Crime at Sea
On 30th June 2021, search-and-rescue activists from Sea-Watch witnessed a brutal attack by the so-called Libyan Coast Guard against a migrant vessel carrying 64 during an attempted pushback. Now, prosecutors in Sicily have launched an investigation against the Libyan Coast Guard for “attempted shipwreck.” This the first time, a European court opens an investigation against the Libyan Coast Guard, and the fact that an Italian court should do so bears legal and political importance. Continue reading >>
0
Rights that are not Illusory
On 8 July, the European Court of Human Rights ruled in case Shahzad v. Hungary, concerning the denial of access to an asylum procedure and the forced removal of a Pakistani national by Hungarian police officers. The court found that the acts violated the prohibition of collective expulsion as well as the right to an effective remedy. With this decision, the Court on the one hand straightens out some possible misunderstandings, on the other hand returns to the line of argument opened in N.D. and N.T. v. Spain in ways that should be considered more closely. Continue reading >>
0
Verfassungswidrige Staatsnähe
Am 22.06.2021 haben die Bundestagsabgeordneten der Fraktionen Bündnis 90/Die Grünen, der FDP und der Linken beim Bundesverfassungsgericht einen Antrag auf abstrakte Normenkontrolle im Hinblick auf eine Regelung des saarländischen Mediengesetzes eingereicht. Diese sieht die Wahl und die vorzeitige Abberufung des Direktors der Saarländischen Medienanstalt durch den Landtag vor. Das ist mit dem Grundsatz der Staatsferne der Medien nicht vereinbar. Continue reading >>
0
08 July 2021
Taking the Law Seriously?
One might wonder whether the Commission’s attack on its “friends” in Germany is designed simply to detract attention away from its impotence in the face of growingly-explicit authoritarianism in the Orbán and Kaczyński orbits. We might dismiss the matter with a wry smile were it not for that fact that the Commission is also attacking honest efforts to solve the rule of law dilemmas posed by the original sin of the construction of Economic Union, as well as the well-meaning judicial search for solution to the impossible supremacy-sovereignty conundrum. The PSPP Judgment is far from perfect and has unleashed sometimes rough controversies; however, the tacit approval given to the Commission by so many in their silence about the new proceedings can surely only act to shore up authoritarian egos, concomitantly foreclosing creative judicial responses to our on-going European dilemma of how to maintain and strengthen the rule of law in integration. Continue reading >>
0
07 July 2021
The EU Cannot Save Us
Many EU and comparative constitutional law scholars have condemned the Polish and Hungarian governments and urged the EU to address the democratic decay and the rule of law deterioration in Poland and Hungary. When the EU fails to deliver, they harshly criticize them and put forward reform proposals. In substance, I agree with much of that. Nevertheless, I would put forward two arguments. The first is that we should be realistic about what we expect these reforms could achieve. The second is that constitutionalists should stop urging the EU to crack down on Poland and Hungary. Instead, they should focus on helping the resilient factors within these countries. Continue reading >>
0
Strasbourg and San José Close Ranks
At the end of 2020, for the first time in its more than 40 years of jurisprudential history, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights declared the arbitrary dismissals of two public prosecutors to be unconventional. Not only judges but also prosecutors are increasingly subject to threats to their independence, both in Latin America and Europe, as well as in other regions. This article addresses the question of whether the same judicial guarantees apply to public prosecutors and attorneys as to judges and looks at how the Inter-American Court sought inspiration from the precedents of the European Court of Human Rights. Continue reading >>
0
The New EU Climate Law
On 30 June 2021, the European Parliament and the Council signed the EU Climate Law. The Law has drawn a lot of attention, stirred not least because of its head-line grabbing name. Was it merely meant to be a symbolic law to enshrine the EU’s climate objectives into law and celebrate the EU Green Deal? Or was it meant to be a new governance framework that changes the way decisions are taken on EU and Member State level? Continue reading >>
0
06 July 2021
Quarantäne für vollständig geimpfte Reiserückkehrer?
Portugal und Russland gelten neben anderen Staaten ab dem 7. Juli 2021 nur noch als Hochinzidenzgebiete, nicht mehr als Virusvariantengebiete. Ansonsten bleibt es aber dabei: Für Reiserückkehrer aus Virusvariantengebieten besteht trotz vollständiger Impfung weiter eine Absonderungspflicht. Dies ist einerseits verfassungsrechtlich bedenklich, weil nicht klar ist, ob dieser Grundrechtseingriff überhaupt geeignet ist, den Zweck des Gesundheitsschutzes zu erfüllen. Zum anderen ist dies ein rechtspolitisch ungünstiges Signal für die Impfkampagne in Deutschland, die in absehbarer Zeit ins Stocken geraten könnte. Continue reading >>A New Constitutional Dawn for Unionism?
In the recent High Court decision on the legislation regarding the Northern Ireland Protocol, the court delivers a number of messages which are suitable to deepen divisions in Northern Ireland, and classes international treaties as merely political compromises not suitable for adjudication. If these views were confirmed before the UK Supreme Court, the EU or anyone else would be well advised to be very careful when concluding agreements with the UK, and to pay close attention to effective enforcement mechanisms beyond UK courts. Continue reading >>Staatstrojaner für Nachrichtendienste
Der Bundestag hat am 10. Juni 2021 das Gesetz zur Anpassung des Verfassungsschutzrechts verabschiedet, das künftig allen Nachrichtendiensten den Einsatz der reinen und der erweiterten Quellen-Telekommunikationsüberwachung (Quellen-TKÜ) erlaubt. Der Weg nach Karlsruhe ist naheliegend. Denn mit der erweiterten Quellen-TKÜ für Nachrichtendienste handelt es sich um eine noch eingriffsintensivere Maßnahme als bereits 2018 mit der Einführung der Quellen-TKÜ in der Strafprozessordnung. Continue reading >>
0
05 July 2021
Im selben Boot
Den Weltmeeren geht das Leben aus. Würden sich düstere Vorhersagen bewahrheiten, wären die Ozeane im Jahr 2048 leergefischt. Zur Überfischung tragen auch staatliche Subventionen bei. Am 15. Juli 2021 könnten sich die Mitgliedstaaten der Welthandelsorganisation (WTO) auf den Abschluss eines Abkommens über das Verbot von Fischereisubventionen einigen, um dieses Problem anzugehen. Ein Vertragsentwurf liegt seit dem 11. Mai 2021 vor. Doch der Teufel steckt wie üblich im Detail: Beim näheren Hinsehen offenbart der Entwurf Schwachstellen, die Zweifel daran aufwerfen, ob das Subventionsverbotsregime dem Leben unter Wasser spürbar dienen wird. Continue reading >>
0
04 July 2021
The Grande Synthe Saga Continues
France’s highest administrative court ruled that the French government had failed to take sufficient action to mitigate climate change and ordered it to take additional measures to redress that failure. The Grande Synthe II decision of 1 July 2021 follows the findings by the Conseil d’État in a previous decision that France’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets constitute legal obligations that are enforceable against the state. However, how, and when to redress France’s failure have been, to a broad extent, left to the discretion of the government. This all but ensures the Grande Synthe saga to continue. Continue reading >>
0
02 July 2021
So that the Name Hungarian Regain its Dignity
We believe that the replacement of the Fundamental Law is necessary, with a rule of law constitution that restores freedom. The new document should be one created by a democratic constituent power according to newly enacted rules, making every effort to avoid civil war and its usually accompanying violence. In its process of drafting the role of the 1989 round table can be a model, even if we cannot count on the acceptance of its new constitutional draft by 2/3 of the parliament elected in 2022. Continue reading >>
0
30 June 2021
Neglected Actors at the Conference on the Future of Europe
Judges are prominent actors with a significant impact on European integration. Yet, no references to them appear in the Joint Declaration on the Conference on the Future of Europe. This corresponds to a view, unsustainable in the age of extensive access to information, that judges sit in ivory towers and speak exclusively through their decisions that other actors then explain to the broader public. Continue reading >>
0
29 June 2021
Too little, too late
A few weeks after the ECtHR first stepped into the ring for the fight against rule of law backsliding in Poland via its Xero Flor judgment, it has now dealt a new blow to the Polish judicial reforms. In its Broda and Bojara ruling, the issue at hand was not the composition of the Constitutional Court, but the termination of judges’ mandates as court (vice) president. In its judgment, the Court showed once more its commitment to the safeguarding of domestic judges and the procedural protection they should enjoy. Yet, one can wonder whether the judgment will really have an impact and if it is not too little too late. Continue reading >>
0
Oblique Strategies
On June 25, 2021 Hungary’s two top judges – the president of the Constitutional Court, Tamás Sulyok and the chief justice of the Kúria, András Varga Zs. – warned attendants of a conference on the Fundamental Law of an impending constitutional coup. They were addressing the nation’s legal elite – including the speaker of the Parliament, the Minister of Justice and the Prosecutor in Chief – on the premises of the Kúria. The guardians of the Fundamental Law activated the language of militant democracy ahead of the 2022 elections. Continue reading >>
0
26 June 2021
Scheitert „Deutsche Wohnen & Co enteignen“ an ungültigen Stimmen?
Gestern, am 25. Juni, endete die Sammelfrist des Volksbegehrens „Deutsche Wohnen & Co enteignen“. Beim Zwischenstand waren von insgesamt rund 197.000 abgegebenen Unterschriften fast 30% ungültig. Der häufigste Grund: die fehlende deutsche Staatsangehörigkeit der Unterschreibenden. Doch ist das Berliner Volksbegehren „Deutsche Wohnen & Co enteignen“ nur für Deutsche, die in Berlin wohnen, zulässig? Continue reading >>
0
25 June 2021
The Guardian is Absent
What limits does European Union (EU) law impose on Member States invoking national security to temporarily re-introduce border controls within the Schengen Area? This question will be answered soon by the European court of Justice (ECJ) in the joined cases C-368/20 NW v Landespolizeidirektion Steiermark and C-369/20 NW v Bezirkshauptmannschaft Leibnitz. Continue reading >>Attack on the Rights of LGBTQIA+ People in Hungary: Not Just Words, but Deeds as Well?
On 15 June, the Hungarian parliament voted by an overwhelming majority to pass legislation that, in essence, and under the pretext of protecting minors, bans images or content that depicts or ‘promotes’ homosexuality or trans-identity from the public space. The new law adds to a long list of measures already adopted by Hungary over the past several years, that also have the objective of discriminating and stigmatising the LGBTQIA+ population. These measures moreover are part of a wider context of deliberate erosion of liberal democracy in Hungary. The European Union's toolbox reveals its limits here. Why, therefore, not turn to the Council of Europe, with its European Convention on Human Rights and European Court of Human Rights? Continue reading >>Constituent Process and Constituent Power
Chile’s constituent process is well underway. Last month, on 16 and 17 May 2021, the election for the 155 members of the Constitutional Convention, the organ responsible for drafting a new constitution, was held. Since then, however, the rules that govern the constituent process have become contested. 34 of the elected members of the Convention issued a declaration on 8 June 2021, claiming that the constituent organ has sovereign character and is not bound by the current constitutional order which came into force under Pinochet’s dictatorship. Continue reading >>
0
24 June 2021
Was heißt hier eigentlich ausufernd?
Über „Rasse“ und Rassismus im Recht wird in letzter Zeit so intensiv diskutiert wie nie zuvor in Deutschland. In welche Widersprüche man dabei geraten kann, wurde in dieser Woche im Bundestag sichtbar: Während im Rechtsausschuss der Begriff „rassistisch“ im Grundgesetz abgelehnt wurde, weil er „völlig unbestimmt“ sei und eine ausufernde Rechtsprechung zu befürchten sei, einigte man sich fast zeitgleich im Innenausschuss darauf eben diesen Begriff im Staatsangehörigkeitsgesetz als Ausschlussgrund für Einbürgerungen zu verwenden. Auch diese Episode der Rechtspolitik zeigt erneut, dass Deutschland beim Umgang mit „Rasse“ und Rassismus im Recht immer noch erheblichen Entwicklungsbedarf hat. Continue reading >>
0
Is UEFA on “the Other Side of the Rainbow”?
UEFA's stance on the rainbow flag has generated attention around the world. The disciplinary proceedings against Manuel Neuer by UEFA show: sport governing bodies still massively limit the freedom of political expressions by the athletes during big sporting events. Continue reading >>
0
Unpersuasive but Wise
On 16 June, by two parallel orders, the EU Court of Justice said the last word on the legality of advocate general Sharpston’s divestment. In the end, the Court did little more than reiterate the press statement it made in response to the member states’ declaration on the subject. The member states made a legitimate decision based on an old custom, and the Court could do nothing but oblige. Continue reading >>The Northern Ireland Protocol “Sausage Wars”
Five years after the Brexit referendum, the legal stalemate on the Protocol on Ireland and Northern Ireland the impasse between the UK and the EU continues, despite the conclusion of the Withdrawal Agreement and the Trade and Cooperation Agreement. While the concept of “state civil disobedience” could be applied to the UK government’s actions since, this is an inappropriate means to conceptualise the conflict. Instead, the more familiar concept of legally justified exceptions to obligations would have been a more appropriate means of pre-empting the dispute during the creation of the Protocol. Continue reading >>The Digital Services Act wants you to “sue” Facebook over content decisions in private de facto courts
According to Art. 18 of the Commission’s draft for a Digital Services Act [Art. 21 of the final text], Member States shall certify out-of-court dispute settlement bodies which might - at the request of online platform users - review platform decisions. While well-intentioned, this introduction of quasi-courts is incompatible with European Law. Continue reading >>
0
23 June 2021
Military Justice, Journalism and Free Speech in Brazil
On 17 June, 2021, the Attorney-General of the Brazilian Federal Supreme Court affirmed that, in the government's view, the Military Justice has competence to try civilians accused of criminal offences against the honor of military institutions. He proposed that crimes related to the freedom of speech should be tried by a special military branch of the judiciary. The attacks on free speech by the government through the Attorney-General is another sign of the democratic erosion process. Continue reading >>
0
22 June 2021
Ein stumpfes Schwert
Im Vordergrund steht bei den neuen Transparenzregeln für Bundestagsabgeordnete das Anliegen, Interessenverknüpfungen transparent(er) zu machen, die für die parlamentarische Arbeit bedeutsam sein können. Diese Stoßrichtung ist zu begrüßen und dürfte auf der Grundlage der Leitentscheidung des Bundesverfassungsgerichts zum Status der Abgeordneten aus dem Jahre 2007 grundsätzlich nicht zu beanstanden sein. Allerdings fehlt weiterhin eine unabhängige Kontrollinstanz, die die Einhaltung der verschärften (nichtstrafrechtlichen) Regeln prüft, weshalb die Maßnahmen sich einmal mehr als ein stumpfes Schwert zu erweisen drohen. Continue reading >>
0
Chile’s Kaleidoscopic Constituent Assembly
Chile is getting rid of Pinochet — at long last. Last month, Chileans elected a constituent assembly that will draft a constitutional text to replace the current Constitution, which the dictator imposed in 1980. Though the result of the deliberative process that will soon commence is uncertain, one thing is sure: Chile’s constituent assembly resembles the country in ways that no political arrangement had allowed so far. Continue reading >>
0
21 June 2021
Irrationale Farbenlehre
Reichs- und Reichskriegsflaggen tauchen nicht zuletzt auf Corona-Demonstrationen vermehrt auf. Die Bundesinnenministerkonferenz hat diese Woche einen Mustererlass beschlossen, der Eingriffsmöglichkeiten gegen solche Flaggen bereitstellen soll. Dabei ergibt sich ein Abwägungskonflikt zwischen der öffentlichen Ordnung als symbolischer Ordnung und einer formal verstandenen Meinungsfreiheit. Continue reading >>20 June 2021
Predictable and Unsatisfying
Most EU lawyers have already seen it looming on the horizon: On 16 June 2021, former Advocate General Eleanor Sharpston lost the legal dispute against her former employer, the European Court of Justice. Although the outcome in this regard was predictable, the decision is overall somewhat unsatisfying. The CJEU seems to be of that opinion in finding that Sharpston’s mandate ended automatically with the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the EU. The Court does so without revealing its legal considerations and interpretation of EU primary law in its reasoning. Continue reading >>
0
19 June 2021
CJEU’s Independence and Lawful Composition in Question (Part V)
The Sharpston Affair is over, at least as a matter of proceedings before the CJEU. The litigation had aimed at saving the CJEU’s dignity, but the opposite result has been achieved. At the critical juncture when the CJEU’s authority stands contested by the courts of established democracies, the phony panels of the ‘illiberal’ ones, as well as the immature in-betweens, the CJEU managed to pour oil into the fire and signed off its own lack of independence: when it is needed the most, its legitimacy is in the doghouse. Continue reading >>18 June 2021