15 January 2020

Spain has a Problem with its Judiciary

According to the EU Justice Scoreboard of 2019 Spain is among the four EU countries with the worst perception about judicial independence among its citizens. The survey shows a trend that isn’t stopping: the perception about partiality of the judiciary is growing dangerously in the Spanish society. Causes are to be found in three elements: the political situation in the country; the shortcomings in the regulations on judiciary; the behavior of the judges themselves. 

Recently, the Spanish Supreme Court (Tribunal Supremo) has issued a decision dismissing the appeal of Mr. Oriol Junqueras against the refusal by the same court to allow him exiting briefly the prison were was kept in provisional imprisonment. Mr. Junqueras was in that moment just elected as member of the European Parliament, and the Spanish electoral authority (Junta Electoral Central) had decided that he could acquire the full status of MEP only by taking in person the oath to the Spanish Constitution on its premises. The Supreme Court prevented him of doing so – even though he wasn’t at the moment condemned of any crime – in order to avoid him enjoying any European immunity.

When the politician appealed the decision, the Court itself suspended the procedure in order to refer a question to the European Court of Justice to clarify the start and extension of the privileges and protections of elected members of the European Parliament. The European Court ruled that it was mandatory to allow Mr. Junqueras to leave the prison in order to start his functions as MEP. Alternatively, the ECJ said that if he was a dangerous criminal it was also possible to keep him in jail but in that case it would be mandatory to present a request to the Chamber before condemning him. The Spanish Supreme Court didn’t do either. Nevertheless the appeal of Mr. Junqueras has been by now dismissed, by the Tribunal Supremo considering that it took the right decision.

A lack of independence

This clear disobedience to the ruling of the European Court of Justice is just one more episode in a long series of decisions where the Tribunal Supremo has directly attacked German or Belgian courts in relation with the Catalonian conflict. The obstinate refusal of the highest Spanish judicial body to follow European standards regarding the criminal treatment of prosecuted Catalonian politicians is seen by many observers as an indicator of its lack of political independence.

Indeed the key problem for judicial independence in Spain is probably the way how judges of the Supreme Court are appointed. According to Spanish law (art. 127 of the law on the judicial power) these magistrates do not access to their position following any objective system of merits, but by appointment of the General Council of the Judiciary (Consejo General del Poder Judicial). Such a lack of objectivity allows appointments based in political reasons, as well as clientelism or favors’ exchange. As the Council’s members are themselves appointed by the Parliament, the composition of the Spanish Supreme Court is in fact decided by the political parties. And even if judges are granted full independence during their tenure there is little doubt about the debts acquired in the moment of their appointment and the weight of their ideological positions for such election.

In the Spanish judiciary, many call for the members of the General Council to be chosen by the judges themselves, following the best European standards. However, there is really little said about the possibility of modifying the access to the Supreme Court establishing an impartial and objective system based exclusively in merits. The intense prominence of the – often very politized – professional associations of judges, which are acting as real trade unions in the representation of members of the judiciary, makes it likely that even a possible change in the composition of the council for the judiciary would not necessary imply a de-politization of the appointment of judges to the Supreme Court. 

For many years the Spanish judiciary has suffered from wide-spread suspicion of not being  fully committed with the constitutional principles and rights. During the transition from dictatorship to democracy in the 1970s, Spain did not undergo any process of lustration of the judiciary. The same judges appointed during the dictatorship that were used to implement the laws approved by General Franco passed on to implement the new democratic Constitution. A decade later the socialist Government took some efforts to retire some of the judges appointed without transparent system, and sometimes even without any legal background. 

Currently, judges who were appointed during the dictatorship are a minority ,and many of Spanish judges weren’t even born when Franco died. However the selection system of judges has been often accused of promoting candidates with conservative leaning. Reportedly the current system of competitive examinations requires an average time of five years of studying. This is not always economically affordable to all families and in general favors a conservative attitude among candidates. At the same time, the examination system in Spain is based only in rote learning, without any other consideration related to their social function as judges. In any case the conservative inclination of Spanish judges has become evident in the recent internal election for some boards of direction in the courts: the most conservative association, often close to the far right, the Professional Association of Magistrates (Asociación Profesional de la Magistratura) obtained 52% of votes while the only association self-defined as progressist obtained just 12%.

This being said, the political ideology of judiciary should never be a question in a democratic state. In Spain, however, the independentist conflict of Catalonia is increasing the stress put on  the system. By facing the Catalonian challenge, the conservative government chose to give a legal rather than political answer. Spanish courts issued a ban to discuss any matter related to independence at the Catalonian parliament. The then leaders of the movement were indicted for disobeying the ban and promoting social protests.

In the path to avoid any possibility of a political answer by the independentists, the judiciary is playing a key role which often goes way beyond the strict implementation of the law. Provisional detention was used as an instrument to publicly silent their voices. Judges used it even to prevent one of them from becoming the President of the Autonomous Region of Catalonia by sending him to prison the very same day when he was going to be elected. They were eventually convicted – without any possibility of appeal – under a criminal provision that has not been used before and that was created specifically by case law of the Supreme Court for this specific occasion. All these decisions may be presented as formally legal, but all of them are possible only in a situation of intense judicial activism.

The Spanish judiciary does not seem to be worried about its public image of independence and impartiality. In social media many judges, presenting themselves as such, make statements about politics in matters unrelated to justice management and reform. Many of them often show support to the extreme right party VOX. Actually in Spanish social media it has become normal to see judges attack feminism as an ideology or insulting MPs from the left. Their political views clearly often determine their legal positions in contradiction with the mandates of the law or the constitution, especially regarding the exercise of civil rights.

When a judge seized the telephone of few journalists in order to identify the whistleblower who was providing them with information – something which is clearly forbidden by article 20 of the Constitution – several well-known magistrates supported him on Twitter arguing that judicial investigations are more important than the protection of the right to information. Fortunately the judge was charged with the crime of disrespecting fundamental rights and the opinions on social media disappeared. Nevertheless, the same happened later when another judge wanted to take their statements as accused of excesses during a demonstration to two MP of the leftist party Podemos without any prior authorization by Congress as required by the Constitution. The support of many of his professional mates showed that in Spain often even the decisions of low er courts’ judges are also determined by their political ideas. Also by their religion, despite Spain officially being a non-religious state: some time ago a young boy was convicted by a first instance judge for photoshopping his face into a religious image in a picture posted on his Instagram account. Recently a feminist was accused of blasphemy for imitating a religious procession during the 1st of May demonstration, and the judge who dismissed the case insisted in his ruling in the sanctity of the holy Virgin. He received the support of several other magistrates.

The cases of ideological decisions are increasing as, with the new left Governments the judiciary see itself as the only body of resistance to defend traditional values as patriotism, family and religion, even over the constitutional values.

The incapacity of self-restraint by the judiciary may, therefore, be jeopardizing its function as neutral power of the State. This situation can be reversed but it would require a bunch of measures to be taken by different stakeholders. Some of them are long-expected legal reforms: reforming the system of access to judiciary in order to allow any kind of candidates and to improve their social abilities; appointing the judges of the Supreme Court by a system based exclusively in merits; a new system for selecting the majority of the members of the general council of judiciary without political interferences. At the same time, the current situation requires stronger self-restraint of the judges from political or ideological contents in their decisions and in their public activity. Overall, it is needed to stop presenting the conflict in Catalonia just as a legal problem to be solved by the judges.

There is probably little hope for all this to be achieved, but the consequences on the credibility of Spanish judiciary are so serious that it is definitely worth to give a try.


SUGGESTED CITATION  Urías, Joaquín: Spain has a Problem with its Judiciary, VerfBlog, 2020/1/15, https://verfassungsblog.de/spain-has-a-problem-with-its-judiciary/, DOI: 10.17176/20200120-125805-0.

8 Comments

  1. Gemma Vilalta Thu 16 Jan 2020 at 08:12 - Reply

    I completely agree.

  2. MERCE SELLARES Thu 16 Jan 2020 at 10:49 - Reply

    I totally agree. We have in prison our beloved Jordi for calling a peaceful demonstration in 2017 and a month later they were provisionally imprisoned and now sentenced to 9 years. And in contrast, the Spaniards who were sentenced for assaulting a Catalan act in 2013 have never been imprisoned, and the sentence has been annulled

  3. philipp Thu 16 Jan 2020 at 11:31 - Reply

    thank you for this article! it confirms the negative impression of the „consejo general del poder judicial“ i received from spanish newspapers. and it sure sounds like there are no easy solutions, even under the new progressive government.

    unfortunately, german and other international media often frame the whole conflict as a feud between “the catalans” and “madrid”, hardly ever (also) as part of a larger dispute about the rule of law, the protection of civil liberties and democracy in all of spain.

    which is why i find it important for the general public in germany and other european countries to learn about perspectives like yours.

  4. Adamastor Thu 16 Jan 2020 at 17:17 - Reply

    Great Article, Man. Thank you, It is very good to hear information about Spain from Spanish people.

    There is one thing, tho: Spain is a Kingdom. You can’t propose divide a kingdom. It’s treason.

    So, Spain may have a problem in Judiciary, but certainly not is the case of Mr. Junqueras.

  5. Ignasi Guardans Fri 17 Jan 2020 at 00:41 - Reply

    Mr Urías is unfortunately mixing his most legitimate opinions about what is right and what is wrong in courts, judges and rulings, with false statements about what the CJEU said. That is not correct. So, when he writes “The ECJ said that…” he is morally obliged to say the truth about what the ECJ said. But he doesn’t. That is manipulation. That is tantamount to lying to your readers. Let’s see:
    A) “the ECJ said that if he was a dangerous criminal it was also possible to keep him in jail…”: the Court never said that. The ECJ did said that Mr Junqueras could be held in custody if the Spanish Supreme Court considered it necessary. And in that case it should urgently request authorization. The potential reasons to keep him in preventive custody where for the Spanish Court to analyze: not a word is said in the ECJ ruling, including not such a ridiculously offensive comment (if considered a “dangerous criminal”). In fact, as Mr Urías knows but does not explain to foreign readers, the reasons for preventive custody in Spanish law are not related with someone being considered more or less dangerous. They are two: risk of running away, risk of destruction of evidence. And Mr Puigdemont’s self exile in a villa in Waterloo was walking proof that the risk of evading justice.
    B) Urias accuses the Spanish court of flagrant disobedience to the ECJ when he writes that “it would be mandatory to present a request to the Chamber before condemning him. The Spanish Supreme Court didn’t do either“. That is a false and manipulative transcription of the ECJ ruling. Easy to check: go and read it. The ECJ NEVER said any authorization was requested “before condemning”. It only said what I explained in A): authorization was mandatory to keep him in jail while being an MEP. Mr Urías should quote (he can do it here) in which paragraph does the ECJ prevent the Supreme Court from condemning (not only to jail, but simultaenously to the loss of the MEP condition, and thus, of any immunity). In particular if that condemnation had taken place two months before the ECJ ruling!
    This is no place to discuss with Urias what he would have preferred the ECJ court to say, or the Supreme Court to do. But I am writing this to foreign readers just to make it clear that NO, the supposed request not-to-condemn did not exist; and saying it existed is against the truth, and manipulated information.
    Facts are sacred. So are quotes of rulings. Comments are free.

    • Philipp Fri 17 Jan 2020 at 15:42 - Reply

      “They are two: risk of running away, risk of destruction of evidence. And Mr Puigdemont’s self exile in a villa in Waterloo was walking proof that the risk of evading justice.”

      Are you seriously trying to argue that preventive custody could be justified because ANOTHER accused escaped? Wow.

      By the way, if I’m not mistaken Mr. Puigdemont was already in Belgium when the charges were brought (and simply has not returned since), which is technically not “evading justice”.
      It’s hard to blame Puigdemont & Co, given that the next impartial court they would face after entering Spain would be the ECtHR in Strasbourg…

  6. Eulalia Marcos Fuste Fri 17 Jan 2020 at 09:30 - Reply

    So many thanks for that clear explanation. Our reality in Catalonia is worse because this tipe of injustice.

  7. GUILLERMO RUIZ ZAPATERO Mon 27 Jan 2020 at 12:37 - Reply

    YOU CAN FIND IN THE LINK ATTACHED A DETAILED LEGAL ANALYSIS OF THE SPANISH RESOLUTIONS THAT DID NOT FOLLOW THE ECJ RULING DATED DECEMBER 19 2019- JUST ON THE ISSUE OF ASKING TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT FOR THE SUSPENSION OF THE MEP INMUNITY

    BY THE WAY IT MUST ALSO BE CONSIDERED AND SAID THAT THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DID NOT FOLLOW THE ECJ RULING EITHER

    https://gruizlegal.blogspot.com/2020/01/dignidad-indivisible-observaciones.html

Leave A Comment Cancel reply

WRITE A COMMENT

1. We welcome your comments but you do so as our guest. Please note that we will exercise our property rights to make sure that Verfassungsblog remains a safe and attractive place for everyone. Your comment will not appear immediately but will be moderated by us. Just as with posts, we make a choice. That means not all submitted comments will be published.

2. We expect comments to be matter-of-fact, on-topic and free of sarcasm, innuendo and ad personam arguments.

3. Racist, sexist and otherwise discriminatory comments will not be published.

4. Comments under pseudonym are allowed but a valid email address is obligatory. The use of more than one pseudonym is not allowed.




Explore posts related to this:
Catalonia, Oriol Junqueras, Spanish Supreme Court, judicial independence


Other posts about this region:
Spanien