Steve Peers
Might the UK stay in the single
market, even if it leaves the EU? This is the issue to be raised by planned litigation
relating to the UK’s position in the European Economic Area (EEA) – a zone set
up by a treaty between the EU, its Member States, and Norway, Iceland, and
Liechtenstein, which extends EU single market rules to the latter three States.
It raises issues of both international and domestic law; but first, it would be
useful to explain the EEA further.
The EEA
The EEA treaty was originally signed
in 1991, adjusted in 1992, and come into force at the start of 1994. The aim
was to extend the EU’s internal market (known as the ‘single market’ in UK
political debates) to the countries which were part of the European Free Trade
Area (EFTA). In the event, three of those countries decided to join the EU from
1995 (Sweden, Austria and Finland), and Switzerland decided not to sign up
after all, relying on a separate network of treaties with the EU.
Some believe that the EEA is the
same as the EU, but there are many differences. The EEA does not include the EU’s common trade
policy, and indeed EFTA states have signed separate trade
deals with non-EU countries. It also does not include EU policies on tax, justice and home affairs, foreign
policy, agriculture, the single currency and fisheries, although EFTA states
have signed separate agreements with the EU on aspects of these issues. In
particular, while all EFTA states have signed up to the EU’s Schengen system
for the abolition of internal border controls, that is a separate issue from
the EEA (indeed, the treaties to become Schengen associates were signed later
than the EEA).
The EEA does include applying EU laws on the free movement of goods, services,
capital and people, along with the freedom of establishment. However, EFTA states can apply an emergency
safeguard to limit free movement, including the free movement of people. The
EEA also involves participation in most of the EU laws concerns labour and
environment, as well as competition and state aids. EFTA states make
contributions to participate in EU programmes and to assist the development of
poorer EU countries; but the money does not go into the EU budget and the EFTA
countries have more control over how it is spent.
As regards institutions, the EFTA
states have no role in EU institutions, but rather the EEA has its own bodies,
where EFTA states are consulted on draft EU laws, but do not have a vote on the
EU decision-making process. They are expected to apply new EU laws within the
scope of the EEA (which, as noted already, does not extend to many areas of EU
law-making), but they can in principle reject them, subject to the possibility
of EU retaliation. They are not directly subject to the EU court, but instead
take part in an EFTA Court, which usually follows the EU court’s case law –
although note that some EFTA Court judgments are not binding.
Some argue that the UK should
stay part of the EEA on at least an interim basis after leaving the EU, while
negotiating a longer-term agreement. The basic arguments for this position are
set out here;
see also the EUreferendum
site. One thing is clear: staying in the EEA was not on the referendum ballot paper. While comments by some on the Remain
side or Leave side suggested that a vote on EU membership was also a vote on
single market membership, that is not what voters actually voted on.
How to leave the EEA?
Leaving the EEA has two dimensions:
international law and national law. Internationally, the only explicit way to
leave the EEA is by invoking Article 127 of the EEA treaty, which says that any
party can leave with at least 12 months’ notice. There is no explicit
requirement to name the date of departure when giving the notice, so arguably
the UK could specify the date of departure as the same date it leaves the EU.
Therefore, as long as the UK gives notice to quit the EEA at least twelve
months before Brexit Day, it could align leaving the EEA with leaving the EU.
What if the UK doesn’t give that
notice? In that case, although Article 127 is the only explicit way to leave
the EEA, some argue that that the UK would leave the EEA automatically when it
leaves the EU. Why? Firstly, because the clause on territorial scope (Article
126) refers to the EU and EFTA states, but not to any other countries. Also, many
of the substantive legal rules refer to the EU and EFTA states. Article 2(c)
defines the contracting states as regards the EU and its Member States, and
allocates responsibility as between them, but does not mention EFTA states.
If this analysis is correct, the
UK could still rejoin the EEA after
(or at the same time) as leaving the EU. In that case, Article 128 says the UK
would have to join EFTA and apply to rejoin the EEA, subject to EU and EFTA
states’ agreement, because only EU and EFTA states can join up to the EEA.
(Article 128 isn’t, by itself, a good basis for arguing that the UK would have
to leave the EEA if it leaves the EU, because it only addresses which countries
may join the EEA in future, not which countries are members now and whether they might retain
membership or implicitly lose it if they leave the EU or EFTA. It might,
however, be referred to reinforce a conclusion based on Article 126 or other
provisions).
So does the UK implicitly lose
EEA membership if it leaves the EU? The answer isn’t clear, because the
drafters of the EEA treaty never considered this possibility. On the one hand,
the presence of an explicit clause on leaving presumes that states cannot
implicitly cease to be EEA members. On the other hand, the substantive
provisions and the clauses on territorial scope imply that leaving the EU is
incompatible with being part of the EEA – unless the country concerned joins EFTA.
That raises the question of how this would work: arguably there would be a ‘fundamental
change of circumstances’ under Article 62 of the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties. (Note that the latter clause can’t be
used as a quick route to leave the EU,
since it only applies where a change was ‘not foreseen’ by the parties; but the
prospect of a state deciding to leave the EU clearly was foreseen by the parties to the EU Treaties, since Article 50
TEU refers to it). Or the other parties
to the EEA could argue that the UK had committed a ‘material breach’ of the EEA
by ceasing to be an EU Member State (if the UK does not join EFTA), and
terminating application to the UK under Article 60 of the Vienna Convention.
The issue is arguably relevant by
analogy to many other treaties which the UK signed up to as part of the EU, in
particular trade agreements. Does the UK retain its status under the EU’s free
trade deals with Korea, Canada and many other countries automatically on Brexit
Day, or does it lose that status and have to negotiate a separate treaty?
(Arguably, the international law principle of continuity of treaties could play
a role here; and the legal issue also arises of whether the UK can start
negotiating replacement treaties, if it has to, before Brexit Day).
National law aspects
The termination of the UK’s EEA
membership raises different issues as a matter of national law – which perhaps
is the purpose of the planned litigation. If the UK government gives notice
under Article 127, or asserts that it will implicitly cease being a party to
the EEA on Brexit Day, does Parliament have to give its approval?
If the government is legally
obliged (as a matter of international law) to give notice of leaving the EEA
separately from the Brexit process, then the case is arguably analogous with
the Miller case recently decided by the High
Court, and now on appeal to the UK Supreme Court. That case raises the question of whether the
UK government’s royal prerogative extends to the termination of the UK’s EU
membership, or whether Parliament must approve such use of the prerogative
because leaving the EU would terminate rights conferred by an Act of
Parliament. Since EEA membership is referred to in the European
Communities Act, and extends many (though not all) of the same rights conferred
by the EU Treaties, the answer to this question which the Supreme Court
ultimately gives in the Miller
judgment should logically apply by analogy to the EEA.
Therefore, in this scenario, if
Parliament is obliged to approve withdrawal from the EU, it is also obliged to
approve withdrawal from the EEA. And since EEA membership was not on the referendum ballot paper, the
force of the political argument that Parliament ought to follow the view of the
majority of those voting that the UK should leave the EU is not as strong.
There will undoubtedly be a political argument that the referendum vote should
apply by analogy – since to some extent the issues raised often by the Leave
side as regards EU membership (migration of EU citizens, contribution to the
EU, control over law-making) apply also to the EEA. But, as noted already,
there are possible counter-arguments: the free movement safeguard clause in the
EEA, the different nature of budget contributions, and the more limited scope
of the EEA compared to EU law. Participation in the EEA could also, as some Leavers have suggested, be limited in time: an interim status pending negotiation of a longer-term framework for UK/EU relations.
On the other hand, if there is no
distinct legal obligation to notify departure from the EEA, because its
application to the UK will necessarily cease when the UK leaves the EU, then
any Parliamentary vote to approve invoking Article 50 should logically
encompass also the end of EEA membership, and the legal challenge relating to
the EEA may find it harder to succeed. Or if the UK government succeeds in its
appeal in Miller, it would be hard to
convince a court that leaving the EEA raises distinct questions from leaving
the EU.
In any event, any fresh
litigation on the EEA could provide an opportunity to argue about whether an
Article 50 notice is revocable – and it might be argued that that issue, and/or
the issues about termination of EEA status as a matter of international law, should
be referred to the ECJ to decide.
See also blog posts by:
Meme: Steve Peers
Barnard & Peers: chapter 25,
chapter 27
You say, “staying in the EEA was not on the referendum ballot paper”, this implying that perhaps the vote on EU membership did not automatically constitute also a vote on single market (sic) membership. Obviously, leaving the EU means in principle withdrawing from the policies that underpin the Union. This explains why the actual referendum question did not consider it necessary to list every single policy that the UK would have to abandon upon leaving the EU. A fortiori, this applies to the Single Market to which only EU members can, by definition, belong (in contrast to, say, the Schengen Agreement, which may be considered a special case as it is a prolongation of the freedom of movement to which the 3 EFTA countries adhere under the terms of the EEA). If this were not the case, we would be debating whether the UK can be a ‘full member’ of the Common Agricultural Policy or – why not? – the Common Foreign and Security Policy – which we are not because it would be absurd, bearing in mind that these, and other, policies spill over into other, fundamental, aspects of the EU’s functioning and the rights and obligations of full EU membership, such as budgetary implications and the role of the institutions.
ReplyDeleteSo I agree with the thrust of your argument, viz., that the UK could stay in the Single Market on the same terms as, say, Iceland and Norway (after the UK joined EFTA). But that would be in contradiction with the spirit of the UK referendum result, which was to demand restoration of UK border controls, in turn, incompatible with Single Market membership.
You contradict yourself when you say that the single market only applies to the EU, but that Norway and Iceland can also participate. The latter is correct: so that means participation in the single market by means of the EEA would not contradict the referendum result.
DeleteAlso, as I pointed out in the blog post, it is quite wrong to say that the Schengen rules are part of the EEA. Schengen association are quite separate agreements which applied at a later date.
There are no EU agreements with other countries that include the CAP or the CFSP, so that argument isn't convincing.
Finally, the EEA, as I pointed out, includes a possible safeguard on the free movement of persons, so could address concerns about the movement of EU citizens (which is presumably what you mean when you refer inaccurately to 'restoration of UK border controls'). And in any event the suggestion is to apply it on an interim basis only.