European Commission
presents a framework to safeguard the rule of law in the European
Union
EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
PRESS
RELEASE
- Strasbourg,
11 March 2014
Member countries of the ECHR
Today the European
Commission adopted a new framework for addressing systemic threats to
the rule of law in any of the EU's 28 Member States. The initiative
comes after the College of Commissioners held two orientation debates
on the rule of law on 28 August 2013 and on 25 February 2014, which
concluded that there is a need to develop a tool to deal, at EU
level, with systemic threats to the rule of law.
The new rule of law
framework will be complementary to infringement procedures - when EU
law has been breached – and to the so-called 'Article 7 procedure'
of the Lisbon Treaty which, at its most severe, allows for the
suspension of voting rights in case of a "serious and persistent
breach" of EU values by a Member State. The new framework
establishes an early warning tool allowing the Commission to enter
into a dialogue with the Member State concerned to prevent the
escalation of systemic threats to the rule of law. If no solution is
found within the new EU rule of law framework, Article 7 will always
remain the last resort to resolve a crisis and ensure compliance with
European Union values. The new framework does not constitute or claim
new competencies for the Commission but makes transparent how the
Commission exercises its role under the Treaties.
European
Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso said: "The
rule of law is one
of
the founding pillars of the European Union. This is what our Union is
built upon. The European Commission has a crucial role in upholding
the rule of law as the Guardian of the Treaties. I have
systematically pointed to the need for a better framework which
allows the Commission to intervene early and transparently in cases
of serious and systemic threats to the rule of law in a Member State.
Today, the Commission is delivering on this commitment making sure
that, in future, and based on our recent past experience, we can
prevent and effectively resolve rule of law crises in our Member
States."
"Respect for the
rule of law is a prerequisite for the protection of all other
fundamental values upon which our Union is founded. The European
Commission is the Guardian of the Treaties – so too, we must be one
of the Guardians of the rule of law," said
Vice-President
Viviane
Reding, the EU's Justice Commissioner. "In
the past few years, every time there
has been a
threat or a potential threat to the rule of law in one Member State,
all institutions have turned to the Commission as the impartial
arbiter asking us to take action. Today we are putting in place the
tools necessary to act and protect our citizens from threats to the
rule of law in our Union. The European Union is based on respect of
the rule of law and on respect of the equality of all Member States.
It follows then that the new tool to safeguard the rule of law will
be applicable under the same threshold of a serious and systemic
threat to the rule of law to all Member States, big or small, North,
South, East or West."
The main
characteristics of the new rule of law framework
The new framework is
fully based on the current
EU Treaties
and complements existing instruments, notably the Article 7 procedure
and the Commission's infringement proceedings. This of course does
not exclude future developments of the Treaties in this area.
It
is focused
on the rule of law.
The rule of law is the foundation of all values upon which the Union
is based. By guaranteeing the respect of the rule of law, the
protection of other fundamental values will be upheld. The Commission
has taken a broad definition of the rule of law, drawing on
principles set out in the case law of the European Court of Justice
and the European Court of Human Rights, essentially meaning a system
where laws are applied and enforced (see Annex 2).
The framework can be
activated in situations where there is a systemic
breakdown
which
adversely affects the integrity, stability and proper functioning
of the
institutions and mechanisms established at national level to secure
the rule of law. The EU framework is not designed to deal with
individual situations or isolated cases of breaches of fundamental
rights or miscarriages of justice.
Equality of Member
States:
the framework will apply in the same way in all
Member
States and will operate on the basis of the same benchmarks as to
what is considered a systemic threat to the rule of law.
The EU framework
establishes an
early warning tool
to deal with threats to the rule of law, allowing the Commission to
enter into a dialogue
with the
concerned
Member State in
order to find solutions before the existing legal
mechanisms
set out in Article 7 of the Treaty are to be used.
The European
Commission plays a central role
in this new rule of law framework as the independent Guardian of the
Union’s values. It can draw on the expertise of other EU
institutions and international organisations (notably the European
Parliament, the Council, the Fundamental Rights Agency, the Council
of Europe, the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
[OSCE], etc.).
A three-stage process
The purpose of the
framework is to enable the Commission to find a solution with the
Member State concerned in order to prevent the emerging of a systemic
threat to the rule of law that could develop into a "clear risk
of a serious breach" which would potentially trigger the use of
Article 7 TEU. Where there are clear indications of a systemic threat
to the rule of law in a Member State, the Commission can launch a
"pre-Article
7
procedure"
by initiating a dialogue with that Member State. The process has
three stages (see
graphic in Annex 1):
Commission assessment:
The
Commission will collect and examine all the
relevant
information and assess whether there are clear indications of a
systemic threat to the rule of law. If, as a result, the Commission
is of the opinion that there is indeed a situation of systemic threat
to the rule of law, it will initiate a dialogue with the Member State
concerned, by sending its "rule of law opinion", which will
be a warning to the Member State – and substantiating its concerns.
It will give the Member State concerned the possibility to respond.
Commission
Recommendation:
In a second stage, unless the matter has already
been
satisfactorily resolved, the Commission will issue a "rule of
law recommendation" addressed to the Member State. It will
recommend that the Member State solves the problems identified within
a fixed time limit and informs the Commission of the steps taken to
that effect. The Commission will make public its recommendation.
Follow-up to the
Commission Recommendation:
In a third stage, the
Commission
will monitor the follow-up given by the Member State to the
recommendation. If there is no satisfactory follow-up within the time
limit set, the Commission can resort to one of the mechanisms set out
in Article 7 TEU.
The entire process is
based on a continuous dialogue between the Commission and the Member
State concerned. The Commission will keep the European Parliament and
Council regularly and closely informed.
Background:
Compliance with the rule
of law is a prerequisite for the protection of all fundamental values
listed in Article 2 TEU. It is also a prerequisite for upholding all
rights and obligations deriving from the Treaties and from
international law. Since 2009, the European Commission has been
confronted on several occasions with crisis events in some Member
States, which revealed specific rule of law problems. In his 2012
State of the Union address, President Barroso recalled that a
Political Union also means that the rule of law, as a founding value
of the EU, must be strengthened, announcing an initiative to this end
(SPEECH/12/596).
The resolution
adopted by the European Parliament on 3 July 2013
and the Justice
and Home Affairs Council conclusions of 6 June 2013
shared this diagnosis (see also SPEECH/13/348).
The
College of Commissioners had a first orientation debate on how to
better safeguard the rule of law in the European Union during its
seminar in August 2013. Speaking at the Centre for European Policy
Studies in September, Vice-President Reding then outlined her vision
for a possible new rule of law framework for the European Union
(SPEECH/13/677).
At the Assises
de la Justice,
a high-level conference on the future of justice in the EU in
November 2013 which was attended by over 600 stakeholders and
interested parties, one session was specifically dedicated to the
topic "Towards
a new rule of law mechanism".
On the basis of all these
discussions, the College of Commissioners held another orientation
debate on 25 February 2014 before adopting the new rule of law
framework presented today.
For more information
President José Manuel
Barroso's 2012 State of the Union speech: SPEECH/12/596
Homepage of European
Commission President José Manuel Barroso:
http://ec.europa.eu/commission_2010-2014/president/index_en.htm
Homepage
of Vice-President Viviane Reding, EU Justice Commissioner:
http://ec.europa.eu/reding
Follow the President and
Vice-President on Twitter: @BarrosoEU
@VivianeRedingEU
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