an introduction to eu law and institutions chris bryant september 2015
TRANSCRIPT
An introduction to EU law and institutionsChris BryantSeptember 2015
Overview
• The EU
• EU Treaties & Institutions
• Substantive Law• Refresher of some basics
• Procedure• EU legislative process• Infringement procedures / complaints• National measures - notification procedure• The Courts
• Eurobabble
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EU Membership
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The EU – Member States - 28
Austria Belgium Bulgaria
Croatia Czech Republic Cyprus
Denmark Estonia Finland
France Germany Greece
Hungary Ireland Italy
Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg
Malta Netherlands Poland
Portugal Romania Slovakia
Slovenia Spain Sweden
And last but not least, ….. United Kingdom
The EEA
• 28 Member States plus:• Norway• Iceland• Liechtenstein
• EEA Agreement
• Note position of Switzerland – part of EFTA but not EEA
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EU institutions and bodies
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The EU institutions - Overview
• European Commission
• European Parliament
• European Council
• Council of Ministers/Council of the EU
• Court of Justice
• Court of Auditors
• European Central Bank
• Other bodies:• Economic & Social Committee• Committee of the Regions• European Ombudsman
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The European Commission
• Executive arm of the EU
• Main roles:• Proposing legislation• Managing existing EU policies• Guardian of the Treaties• Delegated legislation (“comitology”)
• Structure:• 28 Commissioners, headed by President• 7 Vice-Presidents, including the Representative of
the Union for Foreign Policy and Security Policy• A First Vice-President
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New Commission structure
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New faces…
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Commission President: Jean-Claude Junker
High Representative: Federica Mogherini
UK Commissioner: Jonathan HillFinancial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Union Competition
Commissioner: Margrethe Vestager
The European Parliament
• Co-legislator on most policy areas
• Based in Brussels, Strasbourg & Luxembourg
• Committee & plenary structure
• Some “celebrated” members and alumni
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NickNige
European Council
• Political rather than legislative body
• Made up of:• Heads of State• President of the European Commission• Permanent President
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Donald Tusk
Council of Ministers
• Just call me…• Council of Ministers or…• Council of the EU or…• Council
• Representatives of Member State governments
• Different formations
• COREPER – I and II
• Rotating presidency – work in trios - UK in July 2017
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Court of Justice of the EU
• Role = to ensure observance of EU law
• Court of Justice• 28 judges• 9 advocates-general
• General Court• 28 judges• No advocates-general
• Civil Service Tribunal
• Based in Luxembourg
• Case references: ECJ = C-xxx/xx, General Court = T-xxx/xx
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Other institutions and bodies
• Other EU institutions• Court of Auditors• European Central Bank
• Other bodies:• Economic & Social Committee• Committee of the Regions• European Ombuds(wo)man
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EU law – a refresher
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EU law - Overview
• Sources of law• Treaties• Secondary legislation
• Substantive law• Supremacy• Direct effect• State liability
• General principles of EU law
• Interpretation of EU law
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Sources of law – the Treaties
• Rome 1957 • Now the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU
(TFEU)
• Maastricht 1992• Now the Treaty on European Union (TEU)
• Amsterdam 1997
• Nice 2001
• Constitution 2004 (not ratified)
• Lisbon 2009
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Sources of law – secondary legislation
• Regulations
• Directives
• Decisions
• Soft law
• Case law
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Substantive law - Supremacy
• EC law v national law
• Rule established in Costa v ENEL
• National courts must set aside conflicting national law, even if it was adopted prior to the EU rule (Simmenthal)
Substantive law - Direct effect
• Conditions for direct effect:• Clear / unambiguous• Unconditional / no implementation required• Creates rights for individuals
• Treaty provisions, Regulations & Decisions
• Directives:• Vertical direct effect • Horizontal direct effect
Substantive law - State liability
• Member States must make good the damage they cause individuals by breaches of EU law
• Francovich
• Conditions:• Rule of law intended to confer rights on
individuals• “Sufficiently serious” breach• Causal link
General principles of EU law
• Proportionality
• Subsidiarity
• Legal certainty
• Non-discrimination
• Fundamental rights• Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European
Union
Interpretation of EU law
• Contextual approach
• Purposive approach• Subjective• Objective
• Language versions
Procedural aspects
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Procedural aspects - Overview
• EU legislative procedures
• Infringement procedures / complaints
• Court actions• Preliminary references• Direct actions• Actions for damages
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EU legislative procedures
• Importance of legal basis• Ordinary legislative procedure • Consultation procedure• Consent procedure
• Consultation of national parliaments
• Legislative initiative• Commission• Parliament• Citizens’ Initiative
• Comitology
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Infringement procedures / complaints
• Action against Member State
• Complaints• Who can make them?• Subject-matter?
• Infringement procedures• Initial inquiries & correspondence (informal)• Letter of formal notice• Reasoned opinion• Court action (ECJ)• Periodic penalties
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Court actions
• Preliminary reference (Article 267 TFEU)• Questions from national courts / tribunals• Interpretation & validity of EU law
• Direct actions (Article 263 TFEU)• Usually General Court• Locus standi issues
• Actions for damages (Article 268 TFEU)• Conditions
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The future
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In, Out, Shake it all about….
• Legal mechanism
• Exit options• EEA member (like Norway)• EFTA but not EEA (like Switzerland)• Bilateral agreements• WTO-only relationship
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It’s that man again…
Key questions for businesses to consider
• What will be the effect on existing laws?
• Will it lead to less red tape / regulation?
• How will it affect existing contracts?
• Will there be no more competition law?
• Will it affect our travel rights?
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An introduction to EU law and institutionsChris Bryant
This document provides a general summary only and is not intended to be comprehensive. Specific legal advice should always be sought in relation to the particular facts of a given situation.