Steve Peers
Today’s Chatham House speech by
David Cameron set out more detail of the UK’s demands for renegotiation of its
EU membership. It was accompanied by a letter from Cameron to the President of
the European Council, Donald Tusk, which set out a summary of his requests.
The speech also set out two changes to
UK law which the government plans to make, as regards the EU Charter of Rights
and (possibly) the role of UK courts reviewing the EU courts. Since these are
changes to domestic law, they do not have to be negotiated with other Member
States, unless there is a legal argument that they would breach EU law.
This is the latest elaboration of
Cameron’s requests; I have commented earlier on his specific suggestions
regarding free movement of EU citizens, and regarding other issues.
I will refer back to what I’ve said already in those posts where relevant.
Changes to
UK law
On the first change to UK law, Cameron
referred to the government’s plans to repeal the Human Rights Act and replace it with a ‘British Bill of Rights’,
which (as he acknowledged) are separate from EU law as such. But he then went
on to state:
“And as we reform the relationship
between our courts and Strasbourg, it is right that we also consider the role
of the European Court of Justice and the Charter of Fundamental Rights. So - as
was agreed at the time of the Lisbon Treaty – we will enshrine in our domestic
law that the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights does not create any new rights. We
will make it explicit to our courts that they cannot use the EU Charter as the
basis for any new legal challenge citing spurious new human rights grounds.”
This is a new point not raised before the
Chatham House speech. What should we make of it?
At first sight, it is not really any
different from Article 1(1) of the special Protocol on the role of the Charter
in the UK and Poland, which provides:
1. The Charter does not extend the ability
of the Court of Justice of the European Union, or any court or tribunal of
Poland or of the United Kingdom, to find that the laws, regulations or
administrative provisions, practices or action of Poland or of the United
Kingdom are inconsistent with the fundamental rights, freedoms and principles
that it reaffirms.
A clause in the preamble to this
Protocol provides:
WHEREAS the Charter reaffirms the rights,
freedoms and principles recognised in the Union and makes those rights more
visible, but does not create new rights or principles;
So the Prime Minister’s commitment to
change UK law could be met simply by making express reference to these
provisions of the Protocol – or by incorporating their wording – in an Act of
Parliament. This would simply reiterate the application of these rules to the
UK, given that the Protocol already applies in UK law by virtue of the European Communities Act.
Any more far-reaching approach (such as
that advocated by a House of Commons committee last year, as discussed here)
would run the risk of complicated breaches of EU law. It’s impossible to say
now whether that would happen or not, in the absence of any proposed legislation on this point.
For the sake of context, it should be
noted that the CJEU has ruled in the NS case that the Charter did not add any rights to the ‘general principles
of EU law’, which were the basis for protection of human rights in the EU legal
system prior to the Treaty of Lisbon. And in Fransson, the Court ruled that the scope of the Charter (ie
when it applied to Member States’ action) was the scope of the general principles.
True, the Charter can be used to set aside Acts of Parliament, even by the
lower UK courts, as in recent cases involving embassy staff and Google.
But that’s true of EU law generally, including the previous general principles,
as we saw in judgments like Kucukdeveci.
The Prime Minister’s second pledge was
to consider whether to introduce a national check on EU measures like that asserted
by the German Federal Constitutional Court, concerning the loss of ‘essential
constitutional freedoms’ and the review of acts by the EU institutions to check
if they remain within the scope of the EU’s powers.
Such a measure would breach EU law in principle, since the CJEU has long ruled that
it is the sole judge of whether an EU law is invalid. But Cameron is correct to
point out that other national constitutional courts have done the same thing. A
full-bodied constitutional conflict has been avoided in practice because those
other courts have been reluctant to use those powers, and because the CJEU has
maintained a dialogue with them (which does not extend to agreeing with them
all the time: see discussion of the recent case law on the ECB’s OMT scheme).
It should be noted that the ‘essential
constitutional freedoms’ which Cameron refers to are fundamental rights as protected by the German Basic Law (the de
facto German constitution). It remains to be seen whether the ‘British Bill of Rights’
which Cameron plans will protect human rights so strongly in the UK that there
is any real prospect of the EU taking those rights away. If not, Cameron’s proposal
looks like the constitutional equivalent of shaving all his hair off, while simultaneously
insisting on the fundamental importance of his comb.
Changes to
EU law
Cameron’s speech essentially rehashed
the key features of his prior demands for changes to free movement law, as discussed in the prior blog post. It should
be noted that it is clear from more recent CJEU rulings (the Alimanovic ruling, discussed here)
that Universal Credit can be legally denied to first-time EU job-seekers (one of the points in his list), because it doesn't qualify as a benefit concerning access to the labour market. That ruling
might also make it easier to amend EU legislation to deny benefits to EU citizens
who become unemployed within their
first four years of entry in the UK. But it still seems unlikely that in-work benefits could easily be
restricted, without a Treaty amendment.
On other issues, Cameron’s suggestion
to bring together all commitments relating to competitiveness into a single text are rather unclear. It is
striking that he has not demanded the repeal or amendment of specific EU
legislation. (It’s a Euromyth – or perhaps we should call it a Cameronmyth –
that he has ever made such specific demands. At least, they don’t appear in his
keynote speeches on EU renegotiation; see the previous 'Bloomberg speech', for instance).
Next, on the issue of ‘sovereignty’, Cameron
wants: (a) a ‘clear, legally binding and irreversible
agreement to end Britain’s obligation to work towards an ever closer union’;
(b) ‘a new arrangement where groups of national parliaments can come together
and reject European laws which are not in their national interest’; (c) ‘clear
proposals to achieve’ subsidiarity; and (d) ‘confirmation that the EU
institutions will fully respect the purpose behind’ the UK’s opt-out
from JHA matters. He also states that ‘national security’ is a sole competence
of Member States.
The national
security and JHA points are new as compared to previous demands. It isn’t clear
what Cameron is seeking as regards national security; the Treaties already
state in Article 4(2) TEU that ‘national security remains the sole
responsibility of each Member State’. As for the JHA points, the UK has lost a
few cases on social security rules for third countries bound to the EU by an
association agreement (see here, on one such case); it has also quibbled
about whether the opt-out applies to parts of treaties with third States (on
this point, see discussion here of a relevant CJEU judgment). Since the ‘legal
bases’ which divide the JHA competences from other Treaty rules are set out in
the Treaties, it is not clear what could be done here. Indeed it’s not clear exactly
what Cameron is asking for.
It’s equally
unclear what he is asking for as regards subsidiarity. There is a Protocol on
subsidiarity but it would need to be amended by the full Treaty amendment
process. Equally the slightly more specific demands regarding national
parliaments would also entail, in principle, an amendment to the Protocols on
subsidiarity and national parliaments.
However, it
would be possible – without a Treaty amendment – to give some stronger legal
effect to the principle of subsidiarity, and to strengthen the role of national
parliaments, by amending the rules on Council
voting, as suggested in detail in my previous blog post. This would
entail a requirement to delay a vote in Council on grounds of subsidiarity and
national parliament objections. This could be coupled with a legal commitment
by Member States, in the form of a legally binding Decision of Member States’
Head of State and Government, not to press ahead with a vote in Council if there
were no agreement on the proposal after the period of discussion. As explained
there, the Council voting rules and Member States’ Decisions can only be
amended by unanimity, so there would be legal security for the UK.
This leaves
us with the demand regarding ‘ever closer union’. Only a full Treaty amendment
could abolish the rule or exempt the UK from it as such, since it appears not
only in the preamble to the TEU but (as many seem to forget) in the main text –
Article 1 TEU. However, it could be arguable that a legally binding Decision of
Member States’ Head of State and Government can clarify that this does not mean
(for instance) that the UK is bound to sign up to Schengen or the single
currency, or must give up its JHA opt-outs or join an EU army (and so on). Such
legally binding Decisions are only valid under EU law if they do not contradict
the Treaties; but there would be no such conflict if the Decision simply confirmed
existing legal rules.
The final
batch of proposals (although they came first in the speech) concern the relationship
between the UK (and other non-eurozone States) and the Eurozone. They comprise:
(a) ‘recognition that the EU is a Union with more than one currency’;
(b) ‘no discrimination and no disadvantage for any business on the basis of the
currency of their country’; (c) ‘integrity of the single market must be
protected’; (d) any Eurozone developments ‘must be voluntary for non-Euro
countries, never compulsory’’; (e) ‘taxpayers in non-euro countries should
never bear the cost for operations to support the Euro as a currency’; (f) financial
stability and supervision is a key area of competence for national institutions
like the Bank of England; and (g) any issues that affect all Member States must
be discussed and decided by all Member States.
These concerns could be addressed, as
discussed in the prior blog post, by a mixture of reforms to the Council voting
rules and a Decision of Heads of State and Government. So, for instance, there
could be a delay in discussion of proposals at the behest of non-Eurozone
Member States set out in the Council voting rules, with a separate legal commitment
in the Decision not to forward with the proposals if the dispute cannot be
settled. Only a full Treaty amendment could remove the reference to the euro as
a single currency, but the Decision could refer to the existence of the euro opt-out
Protocols for the UK and Denmark, plus the continued existence of other
national currencies before other countries join the euro when they are
eligible. The integrity of the single market and non-discrimination on grounds
of currency are implicitly already in the Treaty, so could be reiterated by a Member
States’ Decision; and that Decision could also set out commitments regarding
voting on bail-out proposals and competence for financial regulation. A change
to the Council rules of procedure and Eurogroup practice could ensure full participation
of all Member States in discussions that affect the whole EU.
Photo credit: www.eurogamer.net
Barnard and Peers: chapter 2, chapter 9
I see something here with regard to
ReplyDelete(a) ‘recognition that the EU is a Union with more than one currency’;
Cameron is preparing the ground for the idea of associated membership, his concern will be to offer a middle way in the referendum with the UK as leader of the non Euro group.
If he cannot get this promise of a change in the treaty he will be in weak position as the non Euro group, that he will spin, will be constantly shrinking as members fulfill their commitment to join the Euro.
He hasn't mentioned associate membership, although maybe he will do eventually. It is possible to improve the position of non-eurozone countries without a Treaty amendment, in the way that I describe. And very few of the remaining non-eurozone countries look at all interested in joining EMU for awhile to come.
DeleteCheers for all that. All other writing on this is comically simplistic by comparison.
ReplyDeleteI'm left genuinely impressed by the architects of the EU: it might not be brilliant but it's big.
Thanks for a peak into this arcane world.