Who is the Guardian for Constitutionalism in Europe after the Financial Crisis?

26 Pages Posted: 30 Jun 2013

See all articles by Michelle Everson

Michelle Everson

University of London - Birkbeck College

Christian Joerges

University of Bremen - Faculty of Law; University of Bremen - Faculty of Law; Hertie School of Governance

Date Written: June 29, 2013

Abstract

This discussion of the ECJ in the context of a project on political representation in the EU responds to the Court’s changing functions in the integration process and also to the critique which the exercise of this function has provoked in recent years after the Court objected to constitutional provisions and legislation of constitutional status in particular in the sphere of labour law and social protection. The ECJ has been accused of partisanship with a neoliberal-monetarist agenda. These debates are bound to extend to the new functions which were assigned to the CJEU in the supervision of the budgetary discipline of Member States in the Euro zone. The problems that might arise in such a case have been foreshadowed by the recent jurisprudence on the legality of the European practices of crisis management. The judgments of the German Bundesverfassungsgericht of 12 September 1212 on the ESM Treaty and the Fiscal Compact and the CJEU Judgment of 27 November 2012 in the Pringle case are of exemplary importance. They document the difficulties both courts have with the defense of the autonomy of law against apparent functional necessities and concurring attitudes in the readiness to accept the primacy of the political.

JEL Classification: Z00

Suggested Citation

Everson, Michelle and Joerges, Christian and Joerges, Christian, Who is the Guardian for Constitutionalism in Europe after the Financial Crisis? (June 29, 2013). LEQS Paper No. 63, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2287111 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2287111

Michelle Everson (Contact Author)

University of London - Birkbeck College ( email )

Malet Street
London, WC1E 7HX
United Kingdom
+44 (0) 20 7631-6030 (Phone)
+44 (0) 20 7631-6506 (Fax)

Christian Joerges

University of Bremen - Faculty of Law ( email )

PO Box 330440
Bremen, 28334
Germany

University of Bremen - Faculty of Law ( email )

PO Box 330440
Bremen, 28334
Germany

Hertie School of Governance ( email )

Friedrichstraße 180
Berlin, 10117
Germany

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