http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,606693,00.html#ref=nlint

02/10/2009 03:09 PM


GERMANY'S HIGH COURT DECIDES


Is the European Union Constitutional?


There are those in Germany who think the Lisbon Treaty transfers too much
responsibility to Brussels. The Constitutional Court is hearing the case
this week. Should it agree, then the treaty is dead.

As trivia questions go, it's not an easy one: What four European Union
countries have yet to ratify the Lisbon Treaty? 

A couple of them are obvious. Ireland, of course, rejected the treaty in a
referendum last June, but will likely give the document a second chance in a
new poll. And the Czech Republic is no surprise either, given the country's
reputation as a Euro-skeptic. Even Poland might be clear given Warsaw's
tendency in the past to try and leverage as many last-second concessions as
possible out of any EU agreement. 

The fourth, though, is not so obvious. After all, the German parliament has
already rubber-stamped the treaty and German Chancellor Angela Merkel has
signed it. 

But not all in Germany are in favor of the Treaty of Lisbon. There are some
who worry that it violates the German constitution by exporting core
governmental competencies from Berlin to Brussels. President Horst Köhler
has withheld his approval of the treaty until the legal questions are
clarified. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the German Constitutional Court will
hear arguments in the case. And given the fundamental nature of the
complaints involved, it is not at all clear that the justices will side with
the EU. If they don't, then the Treaty of Lisbon is dead.

It's not a new battle. For years, the German court has been asked to decide
on issues relating to EU integration and the question of competency. When
the Maastricht Treaty was signed 15 years ago -- an agreement that
essentially laid the foundations for the EU as it looks and operates today
-- Germany's highest court warned that "even as integration among member
states progresses, a lively democracy must remain."

In other words, even as Berlin hands over competencies to the European
Union, it can't hand over too many. Otherwise, the German Constitutional
Court will step in. But how much is too much?

German parliamentarian Peter Gauweiler, a member of Bavaria's CSU -- the
sister party to Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU -- is among those challenging
the Treaty of Lisbon. He argues that the so-called "flexibility clause,"
which allows the EU to act in areas not explicitly outlined in the treaty,
means that Brussels can intervene as it likes, even in those areas reserved
for national legislatures. 

It is a question that has been raised before. Years ago, Udo di Fabio, one
of the eight justices who will be hearing the case this week, warned that
the flexibility clause "could be the beginning of the end" when it comes to
the constitutionality of European Union law. 

Another point of concern for many is the future of the Constitutional Court
itself. In the European Constitution, which was firmly rejected in 2005 by
referenda in both France and the Netherlands, the primacy of European law
over member-state law was first explicitly mentioned. The Treaty of Lisbon
varies from the constitution in many respects, but the superiority of EU law
in some areas has been maintained. The Court of Justice of the European
Union would then have jurisdiction over challenges to such legislation.

Another way of putting it: The case currently before the German court is
essentially asking it to hand over some of its own competencies to the
European Union. There are plenty of observers who think the justices will
decline to do so.

A verdict isn't expected until later this spring. But it has already become
clear that some in Berlin are getting nervous. Late last month German
Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble urged the court to exhibit more "self
restraint." He continued by saying, "I have no doubt that the Lisbon Treaty
corresponds completely with the constitution." 

Brussels will be hoping that the German Constitutional Court agrees.

cgh -- with wire reports

© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2009
 
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