Legal scholar: Poland ruling signals implications for Germany

The European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruling against Poland's judiciary for breaching EU law principles carries a message for Germany's Federal Constitutional Court. Bielefeld legal expert Franz Mayer views it as a reminder that the ECJ has the final say and EU law takes precedence over national law. This touches on sensitive aspects of German jurisprudence.

The ECJ condemned Poland because its Constitutional Court refused to recognize rulings from the EU's highest court, citing the Polish constitution. The judges in Luxembourg stressed that EU law takes precedence over national law. Franz Mayer from Bielefeld University interprets this as a clear signal to national supreme courts, including Germany's Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe.

Mayer states: «This remains a ‘breaking point’ with national supreme courts.» He believes the ECJ would have ruled similarly in a case against Germany over the controversial 2020 European Central Bank (ECB) judgment. At that time, the Federal Constitutional Court disregarded a Luxembourg decision, arguing that EU law must not infringe on national constitutional identity.

The European Commission had initiated infringement proceedings against Germany but dropped them after assurances from the federal government. Mayer notes: «The ‘Karlsruhe constitutional court elephant’ was palpably present in the room.» Nevertheless, the expert says, the Federal Constitutional Court agrees with much of the ruling, such as on appointment flaws in the Polish court that undermined its independence.

This judgment highlights ongoing tensions between EU law and national sovereignty, as seen in other countries. It urges recognition of the ECJ's authority without dismissing all national concerns.

Related Articles

European Parliament MEPs in tense narrow vote requesting ECJ review of Mercosur trade deal, with EU and South American trade symbols.
Image generated by AI

EU parliament requests EuGH opinion on mercosur agreement

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The EU Parliament has narrowly voted to request a legal review of the Mercosur trade agreement by the European Court of Justice. Wednesday's vote delays ratification by months or even years. Supporters criticize the move as a mistake amid geopolitical tensions.

French democracy appears ill-prepared for a potential far-right power grab, according to a new book critiquing the Conseil d’État and Conseil constitutionnel. Authors Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchez and Antoine Vauchez denounce these institutions' growing compliance with the executive. They warn of a troubling slide over the past twenty years, at the expense of public liberties.

Reported by AI

German Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig has presented a draft law to relieve administrative courts and speed up procedures. The German Judges' Association welcomes the direction but criticizes the plans as insufficient and demands more staff. A new wave of asylum lawsuits is intensifying pressure on the courts.

Hessen's Minister President Boris Rhein wants no more new pacts with the federal government. He criticizes that such agreements burden the states in the long term and calls for a federalism reform. Rhein also distances himself from Markus Söder's idea of merging federal states.

Reported by AI Fact checked

The Wisconsin Supreme Court has appointed two three-judge circuit court panels to hear lawsuits challenging the state’s Republican-favoring congressional map. A conservative justice’s dissent defending the existing districts relied on a mischaracterization of a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision on the Elections Clause.

A tenant in Berlin sublet his apartment with a significant surcharge, prompting his landlady to sue. The case has reached court, with a ruling expected on Wednesday. It could impact many rental agreements across Germany.

Reported by AI

Hong Kong's justice minister Paul Lam has refuted 'unfounded' accusations against judges in national security cases, stressing that they fulfilled their duties and judicial independence remains strong. In a speech marking the start of the legal year, he slammed threats of sanctions against the city's judges and illegitimate pressures on overseas judges to resign. Chief Justice Andrew Cheung noted that geopolitical tensions are hindering recruitment of overseas non-permanent judges to the Court of Final Appeal.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline