25.11.2008 - ENGLISH PAGES
Speech of the President of the Republic at the Constitutional Court Proceedings on the Lisbon Treaty
Mr. Chairman
and judges of the Constitutional Court,
I am at this hearing, because the Constitutional Court asked me to present my
viewpoint on the proposal made by the Senate of the Czech Republic Parliament to
have the Lisbon Treaty, modifying the Treaty on the European Union and the
Treaty Establishing the European Community as agreed in Lisbon on 17 December
2007, examined in order to assess, whether or not it is compatible with the
Czech Republic’s Constitution.
At the beginning, I would like to emphasize that I am well aware that the
arguments that are the most relevant for the decision of the Constitutional
Court, are legal arguments. I will concentrate on these arguments in my speech.
However, it is evident, that we must not lose sight of the wider context. If
this treaty comes into force, the international position as well as internal
conditions within our state will change. Also the influence of our country on
the decisions of the European Union will be weakened. All this would change the
terms of our membership, which were approved by our citizens in the referendum
on the EU Accession Treaty. The democratically established authorities of our
state will be deprived of the right to decide on many areas of public life and
this administration will be turned over to the EU authorities, which are not
subjected to sufficient democratic control. In addition, the European Union
authorities will be allowed to expand their own competencies over life in our
country and its citizens at their will, even without our consent.
Our decision on such crucial issues such as the Lisbon Treaty therefore must not
be guided by foreign pressure or the momentary short-term interests of some of
our politicians. It must not be guided by naive illusions about international
politics, which have failed us repeatedly in the past. The decision on the
Lisbon Treaty will not be binding just for now or only for a few years. It will
bind future generations. Therefore I consider these proceedings of the
Constitutional Court a key event in its history. This decision of yours will
probably be the most important decision you will ever have to make.
I expect you to explicitly react to my statement of June this year. I am not
going to repeat it here, but I believe we should at least briefly sum up those
questions of mine that I raised and that I still consider important:
First; Would the Czech Republic – if the Lisbon Treaty came into force –
still be a sovereign, democratic and legally consistent state?
Second; Would the Czech Republic still be a member of the international
community with full rights, able to abide fully and independently by its
obligations arising from international law?
Third; Would the European Union remain an international organisation or would
it become a federal state (or an entity of any other name with the
characteristic attributes of a federal state), and does our Constitution allow
the Czech Republic to become part of such a state?
Your clear and unequivocal response to these questions is a necessary
prerequisite for the Czech Republic to be able – in the hypothetical case that
the Irish would change their decision in the future – to proceed with the
ratification of the Lisbon Treaty.
I am not here at these proceedings just to repeat these elementary, though
crucial issues. There is a new circumstance. It is the standpoint of the Czech
government of 27 June this year, when the government backed up its arguments
with the legal doctrine of the “material core” of the Constitution. With
the help of this doctrine the government came to the conclusion that the Lisbon
Treaty is compatible with our Constitution. However, in my view, it is just the
opposite.
Even the very fact that the government is referring to this doctrine is rather
surprising, because it is not one that has been tested or proven. It was only
first applied in this country in 2006. It was formulated in Germany in
connection with the provision of the German Constitution which forbids changing
the key attributes of a democratic state. It became popular for the
Constitutional Courts, because this doctrine turned them into a monopoly arbiter
on decisions about which part of the Constitution is important and which is not.
In every case, these decisions are inevitably subjective because the general
theory of law contains no definition of which elements of the Constitution are
the alleged “material core”. I have grave doubts about this approach to the
Constitution; however the government adopted this doctrine as the basis for its
attitude to the Lisbon Treaty, so I will try to assess the Lisbon Treaty from
this point of view as well.
The Lisbon Treaty does not comply with the constitutional order of the Czech
Republic. It violates not only individual provisions that could be remedied by
amending the Constitution – though it certainly cannot be solved by interpreting
the Lisbon Treaty adoption as an indirect change of the Constitution, as the
government assumes. It violates basic constitutional principles, which are –
according to the “material core” doctrine - untouchable and unchangeable.
Article 9 of the Constitution, which is the basis for using this doctrine,
states:
“(1) Constitution
may be supplemented or amended only by Constitutional Acts.
(2) The substantive requisites of the democratic, law-abiding State may not be
amended.
(3) Interpretation of legal rules may not be used as authorization to eliminate
or imperil the foundations of the democratic State.”
In the
context of these proceedings paragraphs (2) and (3) are the most important.
It is undeniable, that the core of the Constitution as well as its alleged
“material core” is the principle of the sovereignty of the state. This
was also the conclusion of the Czech Constitutional Court two years ago. You
reached this decision in the Sugar Quota Case, where you rejected the doctrine
of the European Court about the absolute precedence of Community law. There you
stated, that – let me quote – “the transfer of power to the European Union
authorities can be made only as long as it is done in a way, which is
compatible with preserving the sovereignty of the Czech Republic and as long as
it does not endanger the very basics of the democratic law-abiding state.”
End of quote.
This was a very important decision, with which I identify. It confirms
that the Czech Republic – unlike most EU countries – must not become a subject
of a federal state (or a state of the federal type). According to the finding of
the Constitutional Court No. 154/2006 Coll. renouncing sovereignty would be
invalid because it would violate article 9 of the Constitution.
Such a conclusion is not surprising, because it is obvious that there can never
be two sovereigns on one territory. We would always decide again and again,
which of the two has precedence; who is to decide which powers to transfer to
the European Union authorities and which are to remain with the member state.
The question is, in whose competence are the competences (i.e. who has the so
called “competence competence”).
This is not a new topic. We have already had to change our Constitution before
accession to the European Union, but even then the amendment of the Constitution
had to respect article 9 of the Czech Republic Constitution. This is why it
allowed only some specific powers of the Czech Republic authorities to be
transferred to the European Union authorities but it did not allow the transfer
of our sovereignty. This clearly stated that any transfer of powers must
explicitly list the transferred powers and no possibility must be left for the
EU authorities to interpret the scope of the transferred powers as they liked or
even allow that they could appropriate more and more powers from our country
without needing our consent and without us being able to present our
disagreement or refer – as we are doing now – to the Czech Constitutional Court
to assess the issue. The Lisbon Treaty will reduce the powers of this court.
This is why even now the European Union authorities cannot be given the
“competence to take further competences”.
The following provisions of the Lisbon Treaty absolutely contradict the
principle of the sovereignty of the state:
-
The
concept of shared powers according to article 4 of the consolidated wording of
the Treaty on the European Union;
-
Adopting measures beyond the competence of the European Union, “if it is
necessary to achieve some of the objectives set by the Treaties” according
to article 352 section 1 of the consolidated wording of the Treaty on the
European Union, which is the “authorising clause” or “flexibility clause”;
-
The
simplified revision procedure for adopting changes of the primary law according
to article 48 of the Treaty on the European Union, the passerelle. It
allows the establishing treaties of the EU to be changed and thus – immediately
– also our legal system just by a decision of the Council of the European Union.
Also the implicit external powers doctrine as formulated by the European
Court of Justice in 2006 is very doubtful. It allows the European Union to
conclude international treaties that are beyond its competences. It is enough
for the EU to claim that such a treaty is necessary to achieve the objectives
set by the Treaties within EU policies. What is alarming is not only the very
vague definition of this competence of the EU, but also the fact that it is
already in force, though it is to be codified only in the Lisbon Treaty, in
article 216 of the consolidated version of the Treaty on the European Union,
which will thus codify and legalise this practice retroactively.
The Lisbon Treaty thus begins a process at the end of which the European Union
will be the sovereign that sets norms and rules for individual member states and
their citizens through directives or some other unilateral form. The
constitutions of the states will no longer be the source of the legal order of
the individual member states. On the contrary, in such situation these legal
systems will derive their existence from the European Union Constitution (no
matter what its name will be) and will have to adapt to it.
It is particularly alarming that this ultimate limitation of the sovereignty
of the Czech Republic and the other member states of the European Union is never
clearly and openly formulated and it is not explicitly named as the intention
and objective of the new order that this treaty will bring about. The
termination of sovereignty is carried out in secrecy, implicitly; it is
encrypted deep in unclear articles and provisions. If the Lisbon Treaty comes
into force, it will – without the European public knowing it – authorise the
European Union authorities to reduce the sovereignty of member states by its
decisions at will. This is unacceptable. Deepening of European integration must
not occur in secrecy, behind the backs of the citizens of member states, and
neither can it be forced on them against their will. This would be a violation
of article 9 as well as article 1 of our Constitution. The only conclusion that
can be made is that the European Union contradicts the principle of the
sovereignty of the Czech state.
Another important element of the “material core” of the Constitution is the
principle of the sovereignty of the people. “The
people are the source of all power in the State”,
the Constitution states. This is what makes the Czech Republic a democratic
country. It is the clearly defined, historically authentic people, politically
identifiable demos, who are the Czech sovereign, the holder of the
sovereignty of the Czech state. The whole Czech constitutional, legal and
political system springs from the power of the people.
Therefore we should ask who is the source of the legal and political power in
the European Union? It certainly is not the people, because no “European
people”, demos, exist. The power in the EU is derived from the
institutions established by inter-governmental treaties or agreements. However,
this conception of power is in contraction with the conception of the state as
defined in the Czech Constitution. This leads to other questions: Would the
European Union after adopting the Lisbon Treaty be as democratic as the present
Czech Republic? Does the European Union have sufficiently structured
distribution of powers and sufficient control, supervision and appeal
mechanisms? Is its political system based on free and voluntary establishment
and free competition of political parties? Is it possible to change the existing
EU authorities by electing the opposition? There are a lot of questions like
these.
If the Lisbon Treaty came into force, the European executive could force upon us
from above even such things that a national parliament would never approve. It
would broaden the ways to bypass the national legislative assemblies, which
would weaken democracy in the member states, including the Czech Republic.
The Lisbon Treaty thus violates the constitutional principle of the
sovereignty of the Czech people.
Not only that. If the powers of the Czech people become so limited in order
to expand the power of the EU authorities, it will be a chain reaction, which
will also limit other basic principles of our Constitution – the principle of
the protection of personal freedom, the principle of the division of public
power, the principle of the rule of law and the equality of citizens in court
and the principle of legal certainty. The Czech Republic could then ensure these
principles only within the limited residual scope allowed by the European Union
authorities.
Another important element of the “material core” doctrine is that the Czech
Republic – according to article 1 of its Constitution – is not only a democratic
but also a legally consistent state. A legally consistent state is a state where
the rules are declared and known in advance. The Lisbon Treaty violates this
principle not only because its text is so unclear but especially because of the
ambiguity of its provisions that deal with competences. These provisions will be
interpreted and executed by the European Union authorities, which are known to
interpret EU competences as widely as possible.
In view of all these arguments I consider it as proven that the Lisbon Treaty
contradicts all these key constitutional principles, which are considered its
“material core”. It is also evident, that it contradicts many specific
individual provisions of the Constitution. The government, however, believes
that these individual contradictions are unimportant, because the Lisbon Treaty,
if accepted, de-facto indirectly amends our Constitution, because it
automatically becomes a part of it.
This attitude of the government is erroneous, because as part of the existing
constitutional order article 112 of the Constitution lists solely the Czech
Republic’s Constitution, the Charter of Basic Rights and Liberties and the
constitutional acts. It does not mention any international treaties; it even
does not mention the treaties listed in article 10a of the Constitution. Not
even the quoted article 9 of the Constitution mentions international treaties.
This all leads to the conclusion that though the international treaties approved
by Parliament have precedence over other acts, they do not have the force of
constitutional acts, i.e. they do not create the Constitution and thus cannot be
part of it.
Finally, I would like to express my belief that the purpose of these proceedings
on assessing the compliance of international treaties according to article 10a
and article 49 of the Constitution with our constitutional order is to prevent
situations where the Czech Republic would adopt an international obligation that
violates our constitutional order. Therefore I am convinced that the
Constitutional Court – if it has any doubts about the compliance or
non-compliance of the international treaty with our constitutional order –
should rather conclude that the treaty is contradiction with the Constitution. I
am referring to the commentary of Eliška Wagnerová et al. about the
Constitutional Court Act published by the ASPI publishing house last year, which
says: “In this type of proceeding the Constitutional Court should not try to
remedy the contradiction by a conformal interpretation in either direction...
Any doubts about the contradiction should rather lead it to a conclusion, that
there exists some contradiction of content.” If there are any doubts the
decision should always be in favour of the constitutional order, not against
it.
Mr. Chairman and judges, I believe that these new arguments of mine reinforce
the conclusion that the content of the Lisbon Treaty is in contradiction with
our constitutional order and I hope you will identify with these arguments.
I am pleased, that these proceedings are public. This gives an opportunity for
the public to hear the arguments directly, not in a mediated and often
caricatured form.
Thank you for your attention.
Václav Klaus, Constitutional Court, Brno, 25 November 2008
http://www.klaus.cz/klaus2/asp/clanek.asp?id=KY4TNSxgCTkC