Steve Peers
In today’s judgment in European
Parliament v Council, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has
ensured that a minimum degree of democratic and judicial scrutiny applies to
the EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP).
The European Parliament (EP) was challenging the Council’s
decision to sign and conclude (ie, ratify) a treaty between the EU and Mauritius,
relating to the EU’s military operation as regards pirates in the Indian Ocean.
As discussed further in the previous blog post concerning the Advocate-General’s opinion, one important aspect
of this treaty (and similar treaties with other nearby States) was the
inclusion of rules governing the transfer, trial and treatment of alleged
pirates to Mauritius, once the EU caught them.
The dispute had two elements – substantive and procedural –
which will be considered in turn.
Substantive issues
In the Council’s view, this treaty ‘exclusively’ concerned
the CFSP. In that case, Article 218 TFEU (the clause which sets out the procedures
for negotiating and concluding international treaties by the EU) states that the
EP does not even have to be consulted. But in the EP’s view, it had the right
of consent over this treaty, since it also touched upon issues of development
policy and criminal and police cooperation. Article 218 provides that where a treaty
concerns issues where the EU’s ordinary legislative procedure applies (such as
those policy areas), the EP has a right of consent before a treaty can be
concluded.
The Court assumed that the EP was not actually arguing that
the EU/Mauritius treaty should also have been adopted by means of the
development policy, police and judicial cooperation legal bases. So therefore
it confined itself to ruling on a narrow legal point. Article 218 states that
when a proposal to negotiate a foreign policy treaty is first made to the
Council, the Commission and the High Representative for the CFSP shall make
recommendations where that treaty relates ‘exclusively or principally’ to the
CFSP.
But the CJEU ruled that the different wording (‘exclusively
or principally’ when recommending a negotiation, and ‘exclusively’ when
concluding a treaty) was immaterial. In its view, the basic rule in Article 218
is an underlying parallelism between the internal powers of the EP and its
external powers. So where it has an internal power of consent and control (for
instance, pursuant to the ordinary legislative procedure), the EP should have a
corresponding external control over the conclusion of treaties.
This approach inevitably meant that the EP lost its substantive
argument, since Article 36 TEU only gives the EP the power to be informed and
consulted of the main elements of the CFSP.
The Court’s analysis contrasts with that of the
Advocate-General, who assumed that the EP was arguing that the treaty should have had also the legal bases regarding
development policy and police and judicial cooperation. (His interesting
arguments were fully discussed in the previous blog post).
Procedural issues
The EP’s procedural argument was based on a new clause added
by the Treaty of Lisbon (Article 218(10)), which states that the EP ‘shall be
immediately and fully informed at all stages of the procedure’. In this case,
the Council had informed the EP of its decision to sign and conclude the
agreement over three months after it had taken it.
But before the Court could rule on the merits of this
argument, it had to rule on whether it had jurisdiction to consider it. Article
275 TFEU rules out the Court’s jurisdiction as regards the CFSP, except as regards
sanctions on individuals or ‘legal base’ arguments.
Nevertheless, the Court asserted its jurisdiction, arguing
that the rule in the Treaty was its ‘general jurisdiction’, and so Article 275
was a ‘derogation’ which had to be ‘interpreted narrowly’. So the Court did
have jurisdiction to consider issues of procedure as distinct from substance,
since the procedural legal basis for CFSP treaties is Article 218, ie a
provision outside the scope of the CFSP rules as such.
The Court then ruled in favour of the EP’s main argument. Unlike the Advocate-General, it reached the
common-sense conclusion that a three-month delay in informing the EP did not constitute
‘immediately’ informing it. Publishing the treaty in the Official Journal was
not enough, since the purpose of the information requirement was to ensure ‘democratic
scrutiny’ by the EP, including as regards legal base issues. The failure to
inform the EP was an ‘essential procedural requirement’, ie a ground to annul
the act concerned under Article 263 TFEU, since it was ‘an expression of the democratic
principles on which the [EU] is founded’.
This information requirement applied even though the treaty
in question concerned the CFSP, where the EP had no power of consent or even
consultation. The Court emphasised that the information requirement applied to
any sort of treaty, and to any stage of the procedure.
Comments
If the EP had won its argument on the substantive issues, it
would have gained the power of consent over most foreign policy treaties, given
their links (which the Treaties in fact require) with other aspects of EU
external policies. It does appear that the EP was trying to argue a more
general legal base point, and so the Court’s decision to confine itself to a more
technical analysis is disappointing. If the Court had ruled on the substantive legal
base arguments, it would have been its first clarification of the external
scope of the EU’s policing and criminal law powers, and its first clarification of the scope of CFSP powers since the Treaty of Lisbon came into force. So the missed opportunity
is unfortunate. Perhaps next time, the EP will challenge a foreign policy
treaty more unambiguously, so that its legal base arguments are decided on the
merits.
It could have been argued that the exception (as regards
CFSP) to the normal rule that the EP has consent or consultation powers over
international treaties is also a ‘derogation’ from the normal rule which had to
be ‘interpreted narrowly’, just like the rule limiting the Court’s CFSP jurisdiction.
However, the Court adopted different rules of interpretation as regards these
two issues. One could deduce that the Court is more concerned about asserting
its jurisdiction than enhancing the EP’s rights.
But having said that, the Court’s ruling on the procedural point
is quite significant. First of all, as regards its own jurisdiction, the Court’s
ruling means that any CFSP measure can be litigated before it, as long as the
legal arguments relate to a procedural rule falling outside the scope of the
CFSP provisions of the Treaty (Title V of the TEU). For instance, it arguably means
that the Court would have the power to rule on the compatibility of proposed CFSP
treaties with EU law, since that jurisdiction is conferred by Article 218 TFEU
and not expressly ruled out by Article 275. But such disputes might often
include arguments about the substance
of the measure concerned (for instance, whether it would breach the EU’s human
rights obligations), and it could be awkward to distinguish between procedural and
substantive issues in practice.
Secondly, as for the EP’s information rights, the Court’s
reference to ‘all types of procedures envisaged in Article 218’ surely means
that the EP must be given information at least about the recommendations to
start negotiations, the decisions to open negotiations, the negotiating
directives, the suspension of agreements and the adoption of EU positions in
bodies set up by agreements, since all of those measures are referred to in Article
218. This allows the EP to indicate its point of view on draft or planned
treaties or measures implementing them at an early stage of the process, allowing
for further democratic input into the treaty-making process.
More broadly, the CJEU quite rightly rejected the absurd
view that a three month wait could constitute an ‘immediate’ notification. It applied the literal interpretation of the
Treaty rule (applying to all treaties, and to every stage of the procedure) as
well as the purposive rule (advocated in the previous blog post), agreeing that
the purpose of the rule was to ensure democratic scrutiny and to allow the EP
to ‘make known its views’. As I previously pointed out in that blog post, such public
scrutiny would be an opportunity to discuss, for instance, whether the country
in question had a problematic human rights record, and therefore to influence
public debate over whether the treaty in question ought to be concluded.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 5, chapter 24, chapter 25
This is a clear (nearly as clear as can be given the technical subject matter) and informative blog post, with useful analysis. Helpful on differentiating the substantive and procedural points.The final point is particularly significant, the relevance of a county's "problematic human rights record". Looking at the case of Egypt, & the pathetic report published by EEAS after the election for President al-Sisi, it seems that fundamental rights that are a principled basis of the European Union don't very much feature in EU Common Foreign and Security Policy. The Court of Justice should consider how that hypocrisy undermines the legitimacy of the EU as an actor with a degree of CFSP.
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