Steve Peers
The
new British government has indicated that it is determined to repeal the UK’s
own Human Rights Act (HRA) in the
near future. There are a number of legal and political problems with this idea,
which are aptly summarised (with many links to further discussion) in a new
Jack of Kent blog post. But the issue of the overlap between the HRA and
EU law isn’t discussed there. I blogged last year on how the Conservative
party’s strategy document on this issue fit very awkwardly with the UK’s
EU law obligations, but it’s a good time to update this analysis.
First
of all, let’s simplify the analysis by assuming that the UK will not withdraw
from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), although as discussed in the
prior blog post, the strategy document did raise the possibility that the UK
will withdraw from that Convention if the Council of Europe raises too many
objections to its plans. As I blogged previously,
withdrawal from the ECHR could impact upon the UK’s EU membership, but we are
not at that stage yet.
Secondly,
we have not yet seen the details of the government’s proposals to repeal the
HRA, but I will assume for now that they will not aim to disapply the EU’s
Charter of Rights in the domestic laws of the UK. I have separately blogged
on the reasons why this would be unfeasible, but let’s assume for now (until we
see those proposals) that this is not the government’s intention.
The
core of the government plan (if it follows the template set out in the previous
strategy document) is to weaken the domestic system of human rights protection,
decouple it from the ECHR system and introduce new rules which weaken
substantive protection of human rights for any group of people whom the
government deems to be sufficiently despicable (for more details, see my
critique of the plan here). How does that relate to EU law?
The
key questions here are: is the plan to repeal the HRA compatible with EU law?
If not, to what extent? And what are the consequences?
At
the outset, we should note that the EU Charter of Rights and the rights
protected by the ECHR don’t always overlap. So repeal of the HRA could not
create any conflict where (a) the Charter applies, but the ECHR does not (as
regards social rights, for instance), or (b) the ECHR applies, but the Charter
does not – because the Charter only applies where there is a link to EU law, as
the CJEU set out in the judgment in Fransson.
There’s only a possible conflict where both the Charter and the ECHR apply to
an issue.
What
sort of cases would these be? I suggest three examples, although this isn’t an
exhaustive list. First of all, any limitations on the right to a fair trial
granted to criminal suspects which resulted from repeal of the HRA could
conflict with the EU legislation on their rights to interpretation
and translation, and their rights to information
about proceedings, which the UK has opted in to. (There are other EU
measures and proposals in this area, but the UK hasn’t opted in to them).
Secondly,
any requirement that telecommunications service providers retain data for
handing over to law enforcement authorities falls within the scope of EU law,
since that would constitute a derogation from the rule in the EU’s telecom
privacy Directive. Derogations from EU law fall within the scope of the
Charter, as the CJEU recently ruled in Pfleger;
I have discussed this point (as regards national data retention laws) in detail
earlier
on this blog.
This is relevant not just to the ‘DRIP’ Act passed by the UK Parliament last year (as I pointed out at the time), but also to any requirement that telecommunications providers retain and hand over the content of communications, which form part of the government’s plans for a so-called ‘Snooper’s Charter’. On the other hand, interception of communications directly by the police or security services would not fall within the scope of EU law, since there are no EU measures dealing with such issues in a purely domestic context.
Thirdly,
the original plan for HRA repeal would strip ‘illegal’ immigrants and foreign
criminals of the possibility of invoking at least some (if not all) human
rights. Due to the UK’s opt-outs from EU justice and home affairs law, not all
EU measures dealing with immigration issues apply to the UK. But depending on
how these demonised groups are defined, this could result in a conflict with EU
rules on the free movement of EU citizens and their family members, or with EU
legislation on asylum (the UK is still bound by the first phase of this
legislation, and has also opted in to parts of the second phase of it).
In
most of these cases, we can’t be certain that the new plans would conflict with
EU law until we see the exact text of the proposals. However, it’s already
clear, in my view, that the DRIP Act conflicts with the EU Charter in part.
What
happens in the event of a conflict? There are two issues here. First of all,
the EU Charter refers to the ECHR as regards those Charter rights which
‘correspond’ to ECHR rights, such as the right to a private and family life and
the prohibition on torture. It says that the relevant Charter rights have the
same ‘meaning and scope’ as their ECHR equivalents. The explanations to the
Charter make clear that the case law of the European Court of Human Rights also
applies in this context.
Secondly,
the Treaties provide for the EU itself to become a party to the ECHR. This
process has been stalled because in December 2014, the CJEU ruled that the
draft treaty to this effect was not compatible with EU law (as discussed here).
However, since that judgment the EU has reopened discussions on how to accede
to the ECHR.
The
earlier policy document recognised that there might be a conflict between EU
law and the Conservative party’s plans. It stated that the document’s position
will be ‘reflected in the rules that will govern the EU’s interaction with the
[Human Rights] Court’ (these rules have not yet been agreed, pending a deal on
accession of the EU to the ECHR). The policy document also threatened a veto over
the ratification of the EU’s accession treaty to the ECHR if ‘the UK’s new
human rights framework is [not] respected’.
More
generally, the strategy document concluded that human rights issues might be an
issue forming part of the overall renegotiation of the UK’s role in the EU
which the government is about to embark upon. It stated that if there is
anything in EU law which ‘encroaches upon our new human rights framework’, then
the renegotiation will have to address it. However, an immediate repeal of the
HRA would likely take effect before the renegotiation of EU membership (if successful)
takes effect.
What
are the systemic implications of the government’s repeal of the HRA for EU law?
First
of all, to the extent that EU law applies to a particular issue, the government’s
plans are in principle incompatible
with EU law, in the form of the Charter as interpreted in light of the
ECHR, and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, by the
CJEU. The CJEU’s case law for many years
has insisted that EU law must be interpreted not only in light of the
Convention but in light of the other Court’s case law. But these are precisely
the two elements of the UK’s Human Rights
Act which the Conservative strategy paper most strongly opposes. So the new
proposals would only be compatible
with EU law if they explicitly or implicitly make the new ‘British Bill
of Rights’ entirely subject to the special role for EU law in the UK as set out
in the European Communities Act.
In
practice, this will mean that despite the repeal of the HRA and the existence
of a replacement ‘British Bill of Rights’ in its place, a strong form of human rights protection will still exist in the UK’s domestic
law. Wherever there is a sufficient link to EU law, it will remain
possible to invoke the rights set out in the Charter. In fact, the Charter has
stronger legal force than the HRA, since it can be used by any court to disapply
Acts of Parliament, whereas the HRA can only be used by higher courts to declare
that other Acts of Parliament are ‘incompatible’ with the HRA. We have seen
recent examples of the strong legal effect of the Charter in the UK in the Benkarbouche and Vidal-Hall judgments (see my discussion of these cases here
and here). And since the Charter has stronger legal effect than the HRA,
it is very likely also to have a stronger legal effect (as well as a
substantively higher level of human rights protection) than the future ‘British
Bill of Rights’.
Indeed,
the strategy document implicitly foresaw these problems, when it suggested that
human rights protection will likely be on the negotiation table when the UK
renegotiates its EU membership. The problem with this is that human rights
protection is a general legal rule that forms part of the constitutional
foundations of EU law. As such, the impact of the Charter in the UK could not
be addressed without a Treaty amendment – and it currently seems likely
that the renegotiation will not result in an immediate Treaty amendment.
Secondly,
it seems possible that the government’s plans will complicate the process of
the EU’s accession to the ECHR. This will be clearer once the draft UK Bill is
unveiled, and further steps are taken as regards the EU’s accession to the
ECHR. There would be no conflict if the EU internal rules on ECHR accession provide
that the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights will have, after the
EU’s accession to the Convention, as weak an impact on EU law (and Member
States’ actions within its scope) as the Conservative party suggests should be
the case for the UK. Time will tell whether this is the case.
Overall,
then, it is not easy to provide for a general exemption from human rights
protection in EU law (as the failed attempt to do so for the UK already, the
infamous Protocol 30 attached to the Treaty of Lisbon, confirms). Nor is it
very likely that other Member States would be keen to allow it if it were. So
quite apart from the other complications relating to the repeal of the HRA, the
government would have to accept the continued existence of a strong form of
human rights protection in the UK as long as such cases are linked to EU law,
at least until the UK is able to renegotiate its EU membership – and probably
after that point too.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 9
Image credit: bbc.co.uk
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