Caveats from Karlsruhe and Berlin: Whither Democracy after Lisbon?
Davor Jancic
University of Utrecht - Faculty of Law
May, 30 2012
Columbia Journal of European Law, Vol. 16, No. 3, 2010
Abstract:
This Article analyzes the evolution of the reasoning about E.U.
democracy that the German Federal Constitutional Court (BVerfG) has been
shaping starting with the Solange I and II, Maastricht, and European
Arrest Warrant cases and culminating with the Lisbon Treaty case. The
BVerfG’s reasoning has often taken the form of caveats, whereby the
BVerfG ‘warned’ the European Union of its assessments of the state of
democracy in the Union. This Article argues that the BVerfG’s view of
the primary source of the Union’s democratic legitimacy has gradually
shifted away from the European towards the German Parliament. Never
before has the BVerfG highlighted the role of national parliaments in
buttressing E.U. democracy with such clarity. In what can be called
‘democracy solange’, the BVerfG ruled that as long as the European Union
is an association of sovereign states, two consequences ensue; the
democratic legitimacy provided by national parliaments and governments,
and complemented by the European Parliament, is sufficient; and E.U.
democracy cannot and need not be shaped in analogy to that of a state.
As a corollary, the German system of parliamentary involvement in E.U.
affairs has significantly been overhauled to enhance the legal position
of the German Parliament vis-à-vis the Federal Government. The initial
academic reactions to the BVerfG’s Lisbon judgment have failed to credit
the BVerfG’s role in this important development.
Full text available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2070577
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