Abstract
The application of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights to the Member States has given rise both to a controversial phraseology and a controversial case-law. This paper offers a reconstruction of the constitutional intent and proposes a conceptualization in conformity with the structural function and the constitutional contemplation of the pouvoir constituent. As to the phraseological debate, it demonstrates that the Charter's application to the Member States may occur by reason of either implementation or interpretation of EU law and the two strands are embraced but not synthetized by scope as a collective term. As to the substantive debate, it demonstrates that the CJEU's case-law on implementation is not only amorphous but also inconsistent with the Charter's constitutional mandate. The paper proposes a novel approach based on the notion that the application to the Member States is accessory to the supremacy of EU law. The paper's argument is presented in the following steps. First, the paper presents the pristine rationale and constitutional function of the application to the Member State through its emergence and historical context. Second, it provides a taxonomy and critical overview of the CJEU's amorphous case-law and presents the Court's futile attempt to create a coherent doctrine that faithfully reproduces the constitutional contemplation behind the diagonal application and that reflects the division of competences between the EU and its Member States. Third, it sets out the proposed doctrine of displacement.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 155-184 |
| Number of pages | 30 |
| Journal | German Law Journal |
| Volume | 25 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 22 Mar 2024 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- CJEU
- EU charter of fundamental rights
- competence creep
- conferral of powers
- constitutional identity
- implementation of EU law
- member states
- primacy of EU law
- scope of EU law
- solange
- supremacy of EU law
- ultra vires