Steve Peers
It was announced last week that Geert Wilders, the head of
the Dutch PVV and a newly elected Member of the European Parliament (MEP), would
bring legal challenges to assert a right to be an MEP while also continuing to
be a member of the Dutch national parliament. Is there such a right?
The starting point is Article 39 of the EU Charter ofFundamental Rights, which provides that every EU citizen ‘has the right to vote
and stand as a candidate’ for elections to the European Parliament. If that
right were unlimited, then Wilders would of course win his case (assuming,
logically enough, that the right to ‘stand’ as a candidate entails a right to
sit as an MEP, if elected, as its obvious corollary).
However, most rights in the Charter are not unlimited.
Article 52 of the Charter sets out (among other things) the rules on
limitations of rights. Article 52(2) specifies that the rights ‘based on’ the
EU Treaties ‘shall be exercised under the conditions and within the limits’ of
the Treaties. More generally, Article 52(1) specifies that any limits on Charter
rights must be provided for by law, not deprive the right of its essence, have
a public interest objective and be necessary and proportionate to meet that
objective.
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has not
yet clarified the relationship between Article 52(1) and (2). In the Commentary on the Charter, I suggest that Article 52(2) is lex specialis, with the consequence that the limitations on rights based
on the EU Treaties which are set out in EU legislation are prima facie valid,
without having to consider the issue any further. As we will see in a moment,
that interpretation would instantly decide the Wilders case.
However, it’s arguable, in the absence of clarification from
the CJEU, that those limitations also have to comply with the general rule on
limitations on Charter rights set out in Article 52(1). So I will consider that
possibility also.
The source of the ban on the ‘dual mandate’ (ie being an MEP
and national MP simultaneously) is the 2002 Council Decision which amended the
1976 Decision on elections to the European Parliament (see the consolidated text of the Decision). Article 7(2) of that Decision sets out a rule of
incompatibility between being an MEP and a member of a national parliament, as
from the 2004 election to the EP. There is a transitional rule for the UK
(since expired) and an indefinite special rule for Irish MEPs: they can retain
a dual mandate until the next Irish election following their election to the
EP.
According to the explanations to the Charter, which the CJEU
constantly relies on to interpret it, Article 52(2) means that rights derived from
EU citizenship in particular (such as the Article 39 right) remain subject to
the limits and conditions in the Union law in which they are based. So that is
the end of Wilders’ argument.
But what if such conditions also have to meet the conditions
set out in Article 52(1)? First of all, the limitation on the dual mandate is
obviously ‘prescribed by law’. It doesn’t destroy the essence of the right to
stand as an MEP, since there is no requirement to give up a national seat
before standing. Nor does it destroy the essence of the corollary right to
serve as an MEP once elected, since the person concerned can always do so if he
or she is willing to stand down as a national MP.
Does it serve a legitimate public interest? Surely, yes:
despite all the derision heaped upon national parliamentarians and MEPs, both
jobs are full-time and demanding, and cannot be done simultaneously. In light
of that consideration, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that the limitation is
necessary and proportionate.
There is a possible issue of equality though (see Article 20
of the Charter). It is odd that Irish MEPs are subject to a special rule that
allows them to hold a dual mandate, potentially for several years. Of course,
the principle of equality could equally be satisfied by ruling that the Irish
exception is invalid. At most, it would mean that Wilders could hold the dual
mandate until the next Dutch elections, not indefinitely.
Admittedly, the Council Decision does not rule out holding
other full-time jobs, besides national parliamentarian, EU official or member
of a national government (Article 7(1)). Again, though, the principle of equality
could equally apply so as to extend to a ban on holding such jobs as well.
What about other sources of law? Any right to hold a dual
mandate that might arguably be conferred by the Dutch constitution is
irrelevant, due to the supremacy of EU law. The CJEU established last year, in
the Melloni judgment, that
Article 53 of the Charter, although it refers to national constitutional rights,
does not give them priority over EU law when EU law has fully harmonised an
issue. As for the ECHR (referred to in
Article 52(3) of the Charter), it has not ruled on the dual mandate issue as
regards national parliaments and the European Parliament.
Finally, it should be noted that the above conclusions would
apply to any politician, whether I dislike their politics (as in Wilders’ case)
or whether I fervently support them.
Thanks. As to locus standi, do you think there is any way in which the 2002 decision can be considered a regulatory act? Because I have to say that despite some case law on the distinction between regulatory and legislative acts, I don't find this issue very clear.
ReplyDeleteThe treaty defines Council acts on the EP electoral system as a special legislative procedure, so the 2002 decision can't be a regulatory act. Plus he's a bit over the two-month time limit to challenge it directly! Presumably he might try to challenge an EP decision to refuse to register him as an MEP, and invoke Art 277 TFEU to argue that the parent act on which the EP's decision is based (ie the Council elections decision) is invalid.
ReplyDeleteSteve, another matter of discussion is, that Wilders is also leader of the PVV party, so in fact a triple job.I don't think it is in the interest of the party, the members of the PVV in Dutch 2nd Chamber and the EP,that he wants to be MEP.But, as usual, Geert doesn't accept any criticism, his opinion is Law...And I presume, he is working to an EC-wide political position,using the EC ultra -rightwing parties to climb the ladder...
ReplyDeleteSteve, in addition the immunity of Wilders for criminal charges may come up at a certain moment. See http://www.utwente.nl/mb/pa/research/wessel/blog1.pdf
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