In Europe Sticking To The Rules Matters

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29 Mar 2012 12:00 AM by Keith110 Star rating in the UK and I am lead.... 681 posts Send private message

In Europe sticking to the rules matters by David Lidington - Minister for Europe

I was struck by the European Court of Justice’s (ECJ) recent report that highlights how well Member States implement EU legislation that they have signed up to. I was pleased to see how the UK fares.

From time to time the ECJ faces criticism in the UK that it looks to interpret EU competence too widely. But it does take its role seriously in ensuring that Member States fulfil their pledges, such as on competition law, the single market, intellectual property and consumer protection. It is crucial that rules are enforced and that they apply equally to everyone. British companies expect and deserve a level playing field when they compete and do business in other EU countries. Businesses don’t expect countries that have signed up to the rules, to then ignore them. That is why it’s right and important that the ECJ takes firm action when other countries aren’t living up to their commitments and we support them in doing that.

I think there are some pretty clear conclusions from the report:

  1. Better Europe does not automatically mean more Europe;
  2. We should only legislate where really necessary. Jobs and growth must remain the absolute number one priority for us all. We need to drive forward the commitments made at the Spring Council ahead of the June Council. Unnecessary legislation – or legislation that does not promote jobs and growth – should not be top of the agenda. That goes to the heart of the better regulation agenda;
  3. The definition of being a good European is not about espousing the rhetoric of ever further integration. A good European is someone who wants to act in the interest of the peoples of Europea and who wants to uphold European values and democratic processes. It is someone who freely and constructively questions and speaks up. It is someone who wants to ensure that EU activity is robust and prioritised so that – once agreed at 27 – it is implemented. Why waste time, effort and money if implementation is either unrealistic or not taken seriously?
  4. The UK is right to make the case for a better, reformed and targeted EU; the gauge of success is not how much legislation is passed. I – and my colleagues in the Council of Ministers – have a responsibility to question Commission proposals in terms of growth, value added, competence, subsidiarity and proportionality. We should be honest and flag up how realistic implementation really is. If we don’t, no-one else will. After all, the Commission and European Parliament are not fined for failure to implement legislation. Member States are;
  5. Our colleagues from Central and Eastern Europe such as Bulgaria (I am loath to use the term “new Member States”) generally have a very good rate of implementation. They share our approach to the purpose of legislation.

Legislation needs to be realistic and targeted. It is not an end in itself. The consequences of unfulfilled legislation is that we will fail to meet our commitments and lose respect and credibility. We have to do things better – with less. There is nothing anti-European in that.



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29 Mar 2012 2:09 PM by ads Star rating. 4124 posts Send private message

 " The consequences of unfulfilled legislation is that we will fail to meet our commitments and lose respect and credibility."

Such a statement could well be used to describe the situation in Spain. So long as failure to enforce existing law in a timely manner continues unregulated, (as all too many bear witness to within this forum), and retrospective actions born from the corruption/ malpractice of others continue to significantly compromise innocent consumers and their rights, then it is sadly inevitable that many will draw the same sad conclusion........i.e. lack of respect and loss of credibility.

I live in hope however that as Governments and Justice departments become more closely monitored and citizens become more proactive in their approach to identify the stark realities, to demand greater transparency and accountability, that things just might improve.

The worry is however how long reform of this nature will take and in the interim how committed the EU are to follow through with "firm action" if member states such as Spain continue with an assault on consumer rights. The proof will be in action not words, so lets see what realistically transpires.

It doesn't help however when petitioners are dismissed by the European Commission suggesting that they exhaust all legal domestic routes when we all know that there are no timescales attached to the enforcement of law in Spain.

As someone from the AUN recently observed, 

"Almost no one can survive, let alone define what the term “exhaust  all legal remedies” means in this excessively complex country. The system seems designed to be one of attrition and to defeat any attempt to exhaust those remedies within a normal human life span. So the European Court of Human Rights is for all intents and purposes out of reach, and by virtue of the Commission taking the Reding approach, so is the European Court of Justice.

"

 



This message was last edited by ads on 29/03/2012.



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31 Mar 2012 6:08 PM by sandra Star rating in . 812 posts Send private message

sandra´s avatar

Well, two days ago,  I posted the following reply to David's blog on the FCO  website and it is still awaiting moderation!! Perhaps the EU churns out its legislation in the same manner as David posts his blog and then, like David, no-one checks to see if anyone is actually taking any notice of it. It does make you wonder!

March 29, 2012 at 8:59 am

You could not have ‘hit the nail on the head’ more clearly. The Spanish justice system is completely unworkable. Judges make decisions based on their individual interpretation of the law or worse still on which party’s pocket they find themselves in. The courts are clogged with appeals that have no real business other than to dissuade litigants to drop their costly law case and to delay the day when appellants will perhaps have to accept their sentence or fine.
Consumer law is not adhered to and is flouted at every opportunity.
The level of corruption in Spain is such that bankers, lawyers and local officials all conspire to fleece the public and line their own pockets.Ordinary Spanish people have faith in none of them.
Yes David, instead of making more cost creating and useless legislation the European Parliament should be ensuring that those laws already in place are strictly adhered to by all EU members.


 



This message was last edited by sandra on 31/03/2012.

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