Transcript Slide 1

European
Labour Law
Lecture 02C
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 1
Initially there was no ambition to protect fundamental
rights in the EEC.
So the Treaty of Rome did not mention fundamental
rights, although later lawyers recognised in some treaty
provisions the idea of fundamental rights
For instance
- Arts 7 and 48 EEC (no discrimination on grounds of
nationality)
- Art. 119 EEC (equal pay).
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 2
This lack of protection became problematic in the 1970s,
after the ECJ had ruled thatEEC law was the supreme
law in all MS.
What if EEC law would conflict with fundamental rights
as recognised in constitutions of the MS?
Dubious verdicts of the ECJ (Internationale
Handelsgesellschaft)
Critical rulings by the Constitutional Courts of Italy and
Germany.
1977 Joint Declaration of Council of Ministers, European
Parliament and Commission.
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 3
Additionally 2 kinds of actions were considered, but not
realised in those years:
- Writing an own EEC Bill of Rights
- Accession by the EEC to the ECHR
In 1989 was realised the text of a Community Charter of
Fundamental Social Rights for Workers
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 4
The Community Charter of Fundamental Social Rights
for workers was adopted on a Meeting of the EC Heads
of State and Government, by all members but not by UK
Prime Minister Thatcher. So its legal status has never
been clarified.
Still the Commission used it as a kind of a social action
programme to propose various Directives many of them
have been adopted during the 1990s.
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 5
1997 Amsterdam Treaty brings:
A Provision (Art. 6 TEU) recognising as general
principles of EC/EU law
- The ECHR
- The constitutional traditions common to the MS
1999 A Convention to draft the EU Charter of
Fundamental Rights (CFREU)
Immediately and unanimously adopted on the European
Council of Nice, but what was its legal status???
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 6
2002-2006 Preparation of the Constitutional Treaty
- Art. 6 TEU was to be maintained and extended with the
promise that EU shall accede to the ECHR
- The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights (CFREU) was
to be inserted in extenso as Part II of the Constitution
Finally, in the Treaty of Lisbon, the Charter was not
inserted in extenso. It was only said, that the CFREU is
recognised by the EU and “shall have the same legal
value as the Treaties” (Art. 6 TEU).
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 7
The CFREU embraces both civil/political rights and
social/economic/cultural rights.
Social rights in art. 16-36 CFREU
Protagonists of human rights pin their hopes on this
CFREU which has now a binding character.
However 3 shadow sides:
- In many respects the Charter shows more modest texts
than comparable rights in other charters
- UK, Poland and Czech Rep. made reservations
- CFREU regards EU law, has no horizontal effects and
should be narrowly construed (art. 51/52 CFREU
Ominous Heath case!
2.3. Fundamental rights in the EU 8
Negotiations with CoE on accession EU to ECHR have
started. Ultimately a treaty will be necessary which must
be endorsed by all ca. 50 CoE MS
Main questions:
- how to avoid that citizens get “two bites in the apple”?
- how to avoid diverging judgments of the CoJEU and the
ECtHR on the same fundamental rights?
Already one resounding example in the right to strike:
- CoJEU in 2007: restrictive judgments Viking/Laval
- ECtHR: in 2010: positive Enerji judgment.