Steve
Peers, Emilio de Capitani and Henri Labayle
The
would-be Commissioners for immigration and home affairs and Justice will
shortly be questioned by Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) in hearings,
to determine whether the EP should vote to confirm them in office. MEPs have
already asked some written questions and the would-be Commissioners have replied. Since most of the written questions were not very searching (except
for a couple of questions on data protection issues), the Commissioners did not
reply in much detail.
However,
the hearings are an opportunity for MEPs to ascertain the Commissioners’ plans,
and to secure important political commitments, in these fields. To that end, we
have therefore suggested a number of oral questions which MEPs should ask in
the hearings.
Immigration and asylum
The
Commission consider that migration policy should be framed by the (non binding)
objectives of the global approach to migration (GAMM) and relations with third
countries should be dealt with by “Mobility Partnership” which are more
diplomatic declarations than binding acts. Would you propose a binding legal basis
for treaties with the countries concerned, grounded on Articles 77, 78 and 79
of the TFEU?
What actions will the Commission take to ensure that EU legislation in this field is fully and correctly implemented by the Member States?
What actions will the Commission take to ensure that EU legislation in this field is fully and correctly implemented by the Member States?
Will the
Commission propose an immediate amendment to the EU visa code, to confirm that
Member States are obliged to give humanitarian visas to those who need them and
who apply at Member States' consulates in third countries?
When will
the Commission propose EU legislation to guarantee mutual recognition of Member
States' decisions regarding international protection, including the transfer of
protection?
When will
the Commission make proposals for a framework for sharing responsibility for
asylum-seekers and persons who have been granted international protection,
starting with those who have applied outside the territory of the Member
States?
Will the
Commission propose an immigration code, and what will its main contents be?
The Court
of Justice has recognised that search and rescue obligations are interlinked
with external borders surveillance (Case C-355/10). The EU adopted rules in
this field which governing only border control coordinated by Frontex. Do you
intend to propose that such rules should apply to all Member States’ border
controls as a general rule, by formally amending the Schengen Borders Code ?
What immediate and longer-term steps will the Commission take to address the death toll of migrants crossing the Mediterranean?
What immediate and longer-term steps will the Commission take to address the death toll of migrants crossing the Mediterranean?
Will the
Commission propose to amend the EU legislation on facilitation of unauthorised
entry to confirm that anyone who saves migrants from death or injury during a
border crossing, or who otherwise acts from humanitarian motives, is exempt
from prosecution?
Internal Security and Police cooperation
Measures
against terrorism and transnational crime were until now mainly taken under the
vague framework of “operational cooperation”. Will the Commission propose a
clear legal basis for the Internal Security Strategy and transforming the so
called “Policy Cycle” in a transparent and legally binding framework where
European and national interventions are clearly framed? Will you propose relevant
amendments to the Europol legislative proposal which make reference to the
policy cycle without framing it? Which initiatives will you take to
implement the principle of subsidiarity and proportionality as foreseen by the
Treaty, and to ensure that the Charter must be taken in account also for police
cooperation so that the European and national parliaments as well as the Court
of Justice could verify that these principles have been complied with ?
According
to Protocol 36 (the transitional protocol attached to the Treaty of Lisbon),
all measures dealing with police cooperation adopted before the entry into
force of that Treaty will fall under the jurisdiction of the Commission and of
the Court from 1 December 2014. Some of them are outdated and should be
repealed or substantially modified to take in account the post-Lisbon legal and
institutional framework (role of the Charter, co-responsibility of the EP, role
of the national Parliaments). In several cases where EU measures limit
dramatically fundamental rights sunset clauses should be inserted in the basic
acts. However nothing about this is written in your statement nor in the
previous Commission’s REFIT exercise. Could it be a priority or do you believe
that Lisbon Treaty did not change the situation in your domain of competence?
Will your
legislative programme also be grounded on the Treaty legal basis of judicial
cooperation in criminal matters ? If so, how will you frame the relations with
the Commissioner in charge of these aspects ?
Schengen
cooperation has been until now the most successful case of cooperation between
the Member States and has been recently upgraded by launching SIS II and EUROSUR. The
notion of integrated border management in Article 77 TFEU is progressively
taking shape but no substantial improvement happens in the role of the European
and National parliament. Other similar initiatives like PRUM and Swedish
initiatives have been developed following the principle of availability. Do you
plan further initiatives here?
For
instance, in light of the recent UK case where a convicted murderer moved from
one Member State to another, do you intend to propose the exchange of criminal
records concerning the most serious crimes by a Member State’s nationals
(murder, rape, grievous bodily harm) if those nationals are no longer imprisoned?
Will the
Commission propose a police code that recasts EU legislation in this field?
When does
the Commission intend to submit a legislative proposal implementing Article 75
of the TFEU dealing with freezing assets of terrorists ?
Justice Commissioner
According
to CJEU (Melloni, Radu judgments) the principle of primacy of EU law covers
also sensitive domains such as judicial cooperation in criminal matters. It is
then important that the EU legislation is set at the highest possible standards
of protection of fundamental rights so that by implementing the EU legislation
the current level of protection at national level will not be lowered. Do you
agree that all future EU legislative proposals on criminal law should make also
reference to the possible impact on national law and always permit the
possibility of higher national standards as referred to by art. 53 of the
Charter ?
Will the
Commission commit to propose to amend the Framework Decision on the European
Arrest Warrant and other pre-Lisbon measures on mutual recognition in criminal
matters, to ensure that there is the same level of protection of fundamental
rights as guaranteed in the recent Directive on the European Investigation
Order?
When will the Commission propose a measure to ensure adequate protection for suspects as regards pre-trial detention in criminal proceedings in the Member States?
Will the
Commission submit further legislative measures to improve the suspect's
procedural guarantees?
Fundamental
rights protection is meaningless without effective ways to obtain a judicial
redress at national or EU level. Will you submit a legislative proposal
upgrading the 2013 Commission Recommendation on collective redress
mechanisms so that citizens and companies can enforce the rights granted to
them under EU law where these have been infringed?
How will
the Commission act to ensure that Member States fully and correctly apply EU
legislation on the protection of victims' and suspects' rights in criminal
proceedings?
OLAF,
EUROJUST and EPPO will deal under different perspectives with the problem of
protection of EU financial interests. Has the time come to simplify the
institutional machinery, for instance by merging OLAF with EPPO ?
Several EU measures such as the Framework decision on terrorism restrict individual freedoms. In these cases should the EU legislation (as well as delegated and implementing acts) should not embody sunset clauses, as it the case for the US legislation (see the Patriot Act)?
Will the
Commission commit to propose to the Council that any EU treaty on sharing
personal data with third countries will be suspended if, in the view of the
European Parliament following an independent review, in practice there is no
adequate level of protection of the relevant personal data in that third
country?
According
to the current and envisaged legislation it will be a Commission’s role to
assess the adequacy of data protection in third countries. Do you agree that
such evaluation should be done as delegated act as it requires a high level of
discretion on the Commission side ?
DIGITAL
AGENDA (together with Commissioner Oettinger and VP Ansip)
You will work with Candidate Commissioner Oettinger on the digital agenda who made reference to an ambitious legislative programme soon to be adopted to implement the European Digital Agenda. The EU Treaties offer several legal bases to accomplish such an objective even if the EU is still lacking a comprehensive and consistent legislative strategy which could give specific expression to fundamental rights as defined by the Charter of fundamental rights.
You will work with Candidate Commissioner Oettinger on the digital agenda who made reference to an ambitious legislative programme soon to be adopted to implement the European Digital Agenda. The EU Treaties offer several legal bases to accomplish such an objective even if the EU is still lacking a comprehensive and consistent legislative strategy which could give specific expression to fundamental rights as defined by the Charter of fundamental rights.
For this
reason the Court of Justice has recently annulled the Directive on data
retention. However the same fate could occur to other EU legislative measures
planned or in negotiation which do not meet the high standards required by the
Charter and to avoid challenges from national Courts.
To avoid
these risks will you be available to design and implement with your other
colleagues in the future Commission (Oettinger Timmermans, and Ansip) a
legislative strategy which could become an European "Marco Civil" as
the one recently adopted by Brazil ?
The Court of
Justice has defined in its data retention ruling very strict criteria to be
followed when collecting personal data for security purposes. Even the Council
legal service seems to consider that the current EU-US agreements on TFTP and
PNR do not fit with these criteria. What do you intend to do at the next
Transatlantic summit? Will you notify the US authorities that the agreements
should be profoundly revised?
When will the
Commission respond to the CJEU ruling on the invalidity of the data retention
Directive? Will it propose a new EU Directive which is compliant with the
judgment? Does the Commission believe that the Directive still allows for mass
surveillance? Will the Commission pursue infringement action against Member
States whose legislation is not in compliance with the criteria set out in the
judgment?
Barnard & Peers: chapter 25, chapter 26
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