7.1 Introduction
The European Union, which is officially established as an entity based on the rule of lawFootnote 1 according to its own Article 2 TEU,Footnote 2 currently faces a ‘rule of law crisis’ in several Member States, where the system of checks and balances is being gradually dismantled, judicial independence is undermined and systemic corruption is flourishing.Footnote 3 Despite the availability of numerous instruments (e.g. Article 7 TEU, direct actions under Articles 258 and 259 TFEU, the financial repercussions of non-compliance under 260 TFEU, and many others)Footnote 4 intended to deal with such existential threats – a Union not composed of rule of law-based democracies respecting human rights would be a misnomer – the political will to apply the available tools in practice is missing.Footnote 5 The supranational side of the same coin has fared no better: while ‘rule of law’ emerged as the core rhetorical pretext for pushing for the unquestioned supremacy of EU law across the board,Footnote 6 this created apparent conflicts with the Strasbourg human rights protection system and resulted in the Union’s failure to apply the same basic principles at the supranational level as it promotes at the national level, leading to the regrettable emergence of well-articulated double standards.Footnote 7 The most clear-cut of these is the non-application of the core elements of the rule of law – the irremovability of judges and security of tenureFootnote 8 – to the EU’s highest Court, as is clarified by the Vice-President of the institution.Footnote 9 An embarrassing situation followed, calling into question the lawfulness of the composition of the Court.Footnote 10 The illegally ousted Advocate General, whose term of office, which is established in Primary Law, has not yet expired, issued brilliant ‘shadow Opinions’ – also pertaining to core issues of EU migration lawFootnote 11 – in parallel to those presented by the person purported to be an ‘Advocate General’ by the Member States and sworn in by the President of the Court in apparent violation of the Treaties.
On the other side of the same coin, the EU has been facing a ‘migration crisis’ in recent years, which is directly related to an absolute fiasco of its neighbourhood policy.Footnote 12 Barroso’s projected ‘ring of friends’ has effectively become (or at best remained) a renewed defilé of dictatorships or, in part, an unstable warzone, finding the EU and its Member States utterly unprepared for this reality, including the migration pressures it could generate: so much for the ‘promotion of values’ abroad – including in EU’s own backyard.Footnote 13 The ‘migration crisis’, which came as a testimony to unpreparedness and deep failure of foreign policy over the years and focused on dictator appeasement combined with ignoring powerful interests and de facto spheres of influence, presented a seemingly novel challenge: its mitigation needed to follow the Union’s values, such as solidarity and the rule of law. This proved extremely difficult to achieve, as politically and also legally, deep intolerance to the migrant other became the new normal in the EU, often targeting not only third-country nationals, but also EU citizens, as Sarah Ganty has demonstrated.Footnote 14 This reality ranges from border walls to pushbacks on land and at sea – sometimes with the full knowledge, if not the assistance, of FRONTEXFootnote 15 – as well as broad acceptance of ‘culture’ and ‘integration’ tests.Footnote 16 Europe today is without any doubt far removed from being a welcoming place, as thousands drown at sea from year to year, children are pushed to die in wintery forests and millions of hours are wasted by countless immigrants forced to learn ‘the local customs and language’ in an again intolerant Europe.Footnote 17 At a more global level, the EU, although officially created with lasting peace in mind, has been traditionally markedly ineffective in promoting peace in the European continent and around it.Footnote 18 The emerging picture is a disheartening one. It is difficult to decide what about the newly created post of the Commission Vice President for the ‘European Way of Life’ is a better illustration of just how bad this situation is: the fact that it exists, or the fact that it was thought to be a good idea.Footnote 19
Against the above backdrop, this contribution focuses on the link between the rule of law and migration in the particularly poisonous context of democratic and rule of law backsliding in the EU.Footnote 20 Our analysis draws on the Hungarian case study,Footnote 21 where overall institutional changes introduced since 2010 have led to the establishment of a regime described as ‘illiberal’ by some and as ‘authoritarian’ by others.Footnote 22 We argue that Hungarian asylum policy is essentially designed with one key goal in mind: to deprive people of the right to seek asylum in breach of the international obligations of Hungary and of EU law. Introduced in response to the ‘migration crisis’ in 2015, it was a direct result of the broader process of rule of law backsliding. The Hungarian case study proves that the unresolved rule of law backsliding flourishing in some EU Member States affects both the practical implementation of EU basic values (e.g. solidarity) and the proper functioning of the EU policies (e.g. asylum policy).
Our hypothesis is that the rule of law is not secured sufficiently, either in the EU or by the EU, causing all concerned to lose face: EU values deserve better. Given how much the basic values of the EU, and especially the rule of law, are intertwined with the functioning of EU policies, we argue that reinforcement of the rule of law broadly conceived needs to be a part of the answer to the ‘migration crisis’ in the EU. Any substandard response in the field of the rule of law leads to deterioration of migrants’ rights and vice versa: anti-migration rhetoric and politics help entrench attacks on the rule of law in the backsliding Member States of the Union. Crucially, embracing a systemic connection between the responses to the two interrelated ‘crises’ should become a priority both at the EU and at the Member State level.
7.2 The Status of Values in the EU Legal System
The amendments introduced into the Treaties in the 1990s strengthened the visibility, status and the role of values, such as democracy, fundamental rights and rule of law, building on their antecedents, lingering among the unwritten principles and informal resources of the acquis.Footnote 23 At least on paper and as inspirational ideals, full compliance with the acquis at that time still had little to do, strictly legally speaking, with compliance with ‘values’Footnote 24 – hence the need for the ‘Copenhagen political criteria’ in the context of recent enlargement preparations.Footnote 25 The aftermath of enlargement proved that their practical implementation faces numerous legal and political obstacles.
Despite the fact that the Rule of Law is closely linked with the development of the European Communities as confirmed on numerous occasions in the case law of the Court of Justice,Footnote 26 the Member States tend to question its status, justiciability, meaning and function.Footnote 27 This questioning is not always without merit, given the complexity of the multilevel system of European constitutionalism.Footnote 28 That said, Laurent Pech managed to demonstrate quite convincingly that even the occasional differences in the articulation of its meaning notwithstanding,Footnote 29 the wholesome core of the rule of law is unquestionably sound.Footnote 30
It is thus not the ‘meaning game’ that we need to riddle, when the EU’s rule of law problems come to be illuminated. Rather, there seem to be two aspects of the rule of law crisis. The first is that some Member States deliberately undermine the existing system of checks and balances which allows the governments in power to amend and/or abuse the existing rules in order to remain in power, no matter what, through harnessing the apparatus of the state.Footnote 31 The second aspect of the crisis consists in the fact that the European Union has been rather anæmic in its attempts to counteract rule of law backsliding in the Member States.Footnote 32 Such an approach undermines the principle of the rule of law understood as a foundation of the EU and does not ensure that the Union is truly composed of rule of law-abiding democracies respecting human rights. Despite being codified in primary EU law, fundamental rights have enjoyed limited scope of application,Footnote 33 since they are addressed to the Member States only when they are implementing Union law. Furthermore, the verification of their practical implementation by Member States is limited due to the principle of mutual trust between EU Member States and the principle of autonomy of EU law.Footnote 34 The Charter of Fundamental Rights guarantees the right to asylum in a scope provided for by the Geneva Convention and in accordance with the EU Treaties.Footnote 35 In this sense attempts to limit the right to asylum are not only about violations of EU law, but also, significantly, about undermining globally recognised human rights instruments. From this perspective, the ‘migration crisis’ (also described as a ‘refugee crisis’ or ‘asylum crisis’) can be considered as a crisis of fundamental rights protection in the EU. From the institutional perspective it is ‘a crisis of the CEAS’.Footnote 36
EU integration has been facing numerous challenges in the recent years, some of which have been described as ‘crises’, while others – as ‘deficits’.Footnote 37 Such crises-deficits result in a situation in which the law is both contested – for good or bad reasons – and disapplied – again, for good or bad reasons. The Dublin Regulation, which is famously flawed, does not work in practice, leaving the problems it purported to alleviate unresolved, while unquestionably remaining ‘law’. Article 7 TEU, similarly, fails to protect, not only against authoritarian turns – but also against the undermining of legal rules.Footnote 38 There is also an important ‘populist element’ present in both cases.Footnote 39 This concerns both anti-elitism – and this includes rallying against courts and judges in the name of ‘democracy’ pursuing the goal of undermining judicial independence; and anti-otherness, targeting today not only ‘illegal immigrants’ – but also EU citizens with immigrant background in their family histories. How else does one protect ‘our European way of life’? The worse off here are the most vulnerable – the refugees. ‘Democratic’ fighting for ‘our way of life’ can thus build on the dismantlement of the rule of law with anti-refugee sentiments as the main driver deployed by the backsliding governments and gradually transferred to the European discourse and practice. Both the failure to tackle the problems of the dysfunctional Dublin system and the creation of the Commission Vice-Presidentship focused on the ‘European way of life’ are thus parts of the same anti-rule of law populist drive, which saw Hungary and Poland in a free fall in all the democracy and rule of law indexes. The ‘will of the people’, sometimes expressed via a referendum,Footnote 40 is frequently one of the main instruments in the re-charting of law and politics along anti-rule of law and anti-immigrant lines. The two emerged in ‘our European way of life’ as two sides of the same coin, and both levels of government – supranational and national – are to blame. Furthermore, the populist critique of human rights also refers to the ‘people’, arguing that the ‘human rights project’ has given up on this mission and has started to serve particular groups and promote particular agendas.Footnote 41 Such rhetoric directly undermines pluralism, a foundational value in the EU project.Footnote 42 Lastly, it goes without saying that the challenges described above erode the core fabric of which EU law is woven: the principle of mutual trust.Footnote 43
7.3 When Rule of Law Backsliding Meets ‘Migration Crisis’: Hungarian Asylum Law before the Court of Justice
Commissioner Viviane Reding, when discussing the ‘rule of law crisis’ in 2013, referred to three examples: ‘the Roma crisis in France in summer 2010; the Hungarian crisis that started at the end of 2011; and the Romanian rule of law crisis in the summer of 2012’.Footnote 44 After ten years the Hungarian crisis has led to the establishment of the first autocracy in the European Union – a ‘Partly Free’ EU Member State.Footnote 45 Institutional arrangements undertaken by the government in Hungary since 2010 have strengthened the executive against any independent entity. Such an institutional, procedural and political shift allowed the government to introduce numerous policies directly affecting fundamental rights and freedoms – freedom of association, academic freedom, and right to asylum.Footnote 46
There are no effective checks and balances which would control and supervise whether a policy is reasonable, effective or acceptable in the light of Constitution, international law or the moral values of a given society. Using the ‘migration crisis’ to ramp up populist sentiments, the Hungarian government introduced an asylum policy which de facto limited the right to asylum to a degree where there could be no such right in practice. The populist othering game went as far as the criminalisation of those ‘assisting migrants’ and large-scale PR campaigns against the figures criticising the government, from George Soros, the founder of the CEU, to key figures at the European Commission.Footnote 47 ‘Othering’ is popular and can become a banner under which the rule of law is destroyed.
A barbed-wire fence was erected along the country’s southern border; crossing the border fence became a criminal act; two transit zones were established, where people were kept without any ‘detention order’; the courts’ competences were limited;Footnote 48 a ‘pushback’ policy was implemented; since 2018 all asylum applications were automatically declared inadmissible if the applicant had transited Serbia;Footnote 49 and finally, as mentioned above, providing assistance to asylum-seekers also became a criminal act. In 2016 alone, the Hungarian government spent approximately twenty-eight million euros on its large-scale xenophobic anti-immigrant campaign.Footnote 50 In October 2018 a referendum was held in Hungary in which the Hungarians were asked ‘Do you want the European Union to prescribe the mandatory settlement of non-Hungarian citizens in Hungary without the consent of the National Assembly?’ Despite the low turnout, Viktor Orbán announced that ‘Hungarians decided that only we Hungarians can decide with whom we want to live’.Footnote 51
The very idea of migration, especially ‘non-Western’ migration, came to be immensely politicised. The politicisation of migrationFootnote 52 diagnosed in numerous Member States, was a result of the polarisation of attitudes towards EU migration policy,Footnote 53 and without any doubt was also a reaction to the very essence of what the EU has stood for from its inception: a Union in which the internal market is the main objective and the core element of achieving it is open internal borders and the strict enforcement of the principle of non-discrimination on the basis of nationality. Unthinkable elsewhere in the world, given the nationality’s main function – it would be absurd to claim that any of the Member States enjoys any control over its borders or its population.Footnote 54 No nationalist would like this, of course, and Orbán has been very skilful in riding the wave of hate he fuelled in full knowledge of the outright nihilistic, at least legally speaking, nature of his referendum, combined with all the PR activity: by joining the EU, Hungary had surrendered the right, precisely, to determine essentially who will inhabit its territory.Footnote 55 The law was thus not on the ‘othering’ populists’ side.
Would it be surprising, then, that the officially endorsed and madly serialised narrative offered by the Hungarian government rests heavily on creating a link between ‘rule of law’ and ‘migration’ – suggesting that criticism based on ‘rule of law’ aims at forcing Hungary to ‘let illegal migrants in’,Footnote 56 and as a result the procedure initiated under Article 7 TEU, constitutes a ‘revenge campaign of the pro-migration elite’.Footnote 57 Insofar as the EU is bound to ensure that its law’s claim to supremacy succeedsFootnote 58 and that an effective right of asylum is indeed provided in the EU – however flawed its problematic legal framework may be on the subjectFootnote 59 – Orbán’s propaganda has thus got several key points about the nature of the EU right. Indeed, Hungary cannot in the majority of cases decide who will live in Hungary and yes, it is against the law to try to do so without taking EU legal instruments fully into account.
The second point that the Orbán propaganda machine got across relates to the criticism of ‘migration’ per se, which is presented as a threat to Hungary,Footnote 60 resulting in the ‘securitisation’ of migrationFootnote 61 and the humiliation of migrants. Hungary is not alone here – take the UKFootnote 62 or DenmarkFootnote 63 as other examples – but Hungary is notorious for bringing this basic point to an extreme. For Fidesz, the crux of the matter is not even ‘Britishness’ or ‘the knowledge of the Danish language and culture’: any act of migration by ‘non-Western’ ‘others’ is presented in the official narrative as a direct threat to ‘Christian values’ – never mind the religion of the migrants – thus justifying the rhetorical need of protecting these values.Footnote 64 The only value enjoying protection here is boring old racism – not an atypical stance in the contemporary ‘West’ of the passport apartheid,Footnote 65 but probably somewhat more clearly articulated in Hungary than, say, Denmark, and thus a little bit more obnoxious. Orbán even employs the term ‘Christian democracy’ to describe a regime which he used to name ‘illiberal democracy’.Footnote 66 This description of course advanced despite the fact that the functioning of Hungarian ‘transit zones’ can hardly be linked to any ‘Christian standard’,Footnote 67 not to mention the fact that Hungarian ‘democracy’, to quote András Sajó’s brilliant recent account, is ‘Ruling by Cheating’.Footnote 68
The anti-migration policy adopted by the Hungarian government since 2015 became the subject of numerous infringement actions initiated by the European Commission. The first concerned the opposition to fulfil the relocation plan adopted in 2015 as a part of the ‘European Agenda on Migration’.Footnote 69 The aim of the relocation programme was to support Greece and Italy and relocate almost 1,600,000 refugees to other Member States. The programme operated on the basis of two Council decisionsFootnote 70 which were challenged by the Czech Republic and HungaryFootnote 71 before the Court of Justice.Footnote 72 One reason for the reluctant response to EU initiatives, such as the relocation scheme in many EU countries, has been the rise of nationalistic populist parties in national elections in several EU Member States.Footnote 73 In the proceedings before the Court, the Polish government argued, for example, that the relocation scheme was disproportionate with respect to states that are ‘virtually ethnically homogeneous, like Poland’ and ‘whose populations are different, from a cultural and linguistic point of view, from the migrants to be relocated on their territory’.Footnote 74 The Court’s ruling, which dismissed this reasoning, was seen as a milestone since solidarity and burden-sharing were framed for the first time as obligations, rather than as discretionary.Footnote 75
Following the unsuccessful challenge of legality of the relocation scheme, Hungary (alongside Poland and the Czech Republic) faced proceedings regarding their failure to fulfil obligations under the relocation decisions.Footnote 76 Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic argued that their actions – refusal to accept refugees under the relocation scheme – were justified due to the ineffectiveness of the scheme and the need to safeguard internal security. The governments argued that such ‘withdrawal’ from the realm of legal obligations directly binding on them was acceptable in the light of Article 72 TFEU, which specifies that ‘This Title shall not affect the exercise of the responsibilities incumbent upon Member States with regard to the maintenance of law and order and the safeguarding of internal security’. The Court disagreed with this argument and underlined that Article 72 TFEU must be interpreted strictlyFootnote 77 and ‘cannot be read in such a way as to confer on Member States the power to depart from the provisions of the Treaty based on no more than reliance on those responsibilities’.Footnote 78 It further underlined that Member States cannot rely on their ‘unilateral assessment’ to avoid their obligations.Footnote 79 This was in particular due to the binding nature of the Decisions and from the perspective of their aim – solidarity, finding that ‘in a European Union based on the rule of law, acts of the institutions enjoy a presumption of lawfulness’.Footnote 80 Advocate General Sharpston was as simple on this matter as she was clear: ‘respect for the rule of law implies compliance with one’s legal obligations’.Footnote 81 She added that ‘solidarity is the lifeblood of the European project’, which ‘requires one to shoulder collective responsibilities and (yes) burdens to further the common good’.Footnote 82
There is also an important ‘political aspect’ to the relocation story – that ‘consensus in the EU has to be formed on the political level’,Footnote 83 to forestall legal challenges of its crucial elements. The media reported that outside the legal proceedings, it was being suggested that the relocation decisions themselves, rather than the lawless behaviour of the recalcitrant Member States, were the ‘original sin’ that broke trust between the Commission and Eastern and Central European governments.Footnote 84 The lack of an actual will to cooperate and genuinely act in solidarity with other EU Member States is seen as one of the reasons why the relocation system failed.Footnote 85 This legal fight reinforced the position of the ‘anti-immigrant’ leaders at home: connecting the destruction of the rule of law with anti-immigration policies has seemingly paid off.Footnote 86
The main elements of the new asylum policy were subject of the second infringement procedure against Hungary, initiated already in 2015, but did not reach the Court until 2018.Footnote 87 The case covered the most disturbing elements of the ‘asylum procedures’ applied in two ‘transit zones’. Access to the asylum procedure was ‘systematically and drastically’ limited,Footnote 88 which was found to be incompatible with Article 6(1) of Directive 2013/32. The obligation to remain in the transit zones (surrounded by a high fence and barbed wire) was recognised as ‘detention’,Footnote 89 which had not been ordered on a case-by-case basisFootnote 90 and was thus contrary to numerous provisions of Directive 2013/32.Footnote 91 The Court also found that the so called pushback policies violated EU law. However, according to the Hungarian Helsinki Committee, the policy is still in use.Footnote 92 As a result FRONTEX – an EU agency currently under EP investigation for, precisely, pushbacks elsewhere – decided to suspend operations in Hungary.Footnote 93 This is a puzzling decision, given the growing evidence of FRONTEX’s own involvement in pushbacks and harassment, in attempts to prevent the effective protection of rights.
The third infringement action deals with the legislation that criminalises organising activities with a view to ‘enabling asylum proceedings to be brought in Hungary by a person who is not persecuted in his or her country of nationality, country of habitual residence or any other country via which he or she arrived […] or who does not have a well-founded fear of direct persecution’. The Commission argued that such legislation violates EU law and in 2019 brought the infringement case to the Court.Footnote 94 The Opinion in this case was delivered by ‘AG’ Rantos.Footnote 95 He found that the Hungarian government had breached EU lawFootnote 96 by criminalising activities designed to enable asylum proceedings to be brought by persons who do not meet the criteria for the granting international protection established by national law.Footnote 97 The Hungarian authorities argued that the challenged provision of domestic law must be interpreted in light of the clarification provided by the Hungarian Constitutional Court, which had ruled that the provision ‘does not penalise negligent conduct, but exclusively acts which are committed deliberately’.Footnote 98 It is, however, up to the authorities to decide whether the action meets the criteria of being ‘deliberate’. The Greek gentleman wrote that ‘in any event, criminalising assistance provided to applicants for international protection could have a particularly significant deterrent effect on all persons or organisations who, knowingly, try to promote a change in legislation or a more flexible interpretation of national law, or even claim that the relevant national law is incompatible with EU law’.Footnote 99 As a result, the challenged provision ‘de facto prevents or, at the very least, significantly restricts any activity providing assistance to applicants for international protection carried out by persons or organisations.’Footnote 100 The above finding seems to be even more evident if the analysis is concentrated on the asylum seeker directly. As Advocate General Sharpston underlined in her Shadow Opinion in the case of H.A.,Footnote 101 dealing with the Dublin system, ‘[a]n applicant for international protection is not a statistic. He or she is a human being, who has the right to be treated fairly and with dignity’.Footnote 102 Limiting access to legal assistance renders meaningless the right to be treated fairly.
All the hard work of the Court of Justice, including the infringement actions and preliminary rulings in response to the requests from the Hungarian courts quite expectedly failed to produce any major policy shifts on the ground: Hungary remains closed to refugees. As a result of preliminary references, however, the Court acquired a chance to rule on the main elements of the Hungarian asylum law before the infringement actions confirmed those findings.Footnote 103 Consider transit zones – the Court in FMS had already found in May 2020 that placement in transit zones amounted to unlawful detention.Footnote 104 The Government criticised the ruling as ‘dangerous’, arguing that it ‘poses a security risk to all of Europe’,Footnote 105 but also decided to close the transit zones in May 2020.Footnote 106 It shows, first and foremost, how important the time factor is in the decision-making process of the European Commission – the guardian of the Treaties – regarding initiating infringement actions against Member States. Second, the role of the independent domestic courts, indispensable actors in guaranteeing rule of law standards, cannot be overstated, especially in the context of asylum cases.
7.4 Why Solving the ‘Migration Crisis’ Requires EU Rule of Law Resilience
It is well known that the existing EU asylum legal framework does not constitute an effective tool to ensure that the fundamental rights of all those concerned are safeguarded. Indeed, it has been abundantly confirmed that the Dublin Regulation does not produce such results,Footnote 107 which constitutes a huge challenge for the rule of law. It is a result of two constitutional problems with the rule of law in the European Union. The first is a ‘design problem’ which amounts to the fact that the rule of law is not really an EU institutional ideal.Footnote 108 Later claims notwithstanding, it was not a foundational value and its understanding is often limited to the requirement of legality. The jurisdictio–gubernaculum divide is missing in the EU legal system.Footnote 109 This all led to a situation where Article 2 TEU tends not to be regarded – mistakenly in our view – as part of the ordinary EU acquis.Footnote 110 The second issue is a ‘functionality problem’ – the inability to enforce EU values effectively, neither politically nor legally.Footnote 111 This is notwithstanding the overwhelming progress made over recent years in the area of the rule of law, especially by the Court of Justice.Footnote 112 The existing tools have been ineffective in the face of all the deliberate attempts to undermine checks and balances in some EU Member States. Interestingly enough, similar design and enforcement shortcomings have also been highlighted with regard to the ‘migration crisis.’Footnote 113 In short, on top of the Hungarian mockery of the law described above, it is fundamental to realise that the rule of law and migration contexts are also intertwined because the EU law in question is absolutely inadequate and – which could be even worse for our purposes – its rigorous enforcement could be presented as much of a threat to the rule of law and the protection of fundamental rights as breaking it.
The EU actions, including infringement actions and Article 7 TEU procedure, did not solve the rule of law backsliding in Hungary. Dismantlement of the checks and balances gave the public authorities a broad discretion regarding public policies, including protection of fundamental rights and the right to asylum. As a result, the Commission had to initiate numerous infringements regarding violations of EU asylum law, dealing with such basic issues as access to asylum procedure or access to legal assistance. In our opinion such basic violations of the right to asylum would not have been introduced if the rule of law backsliding was tackled effectively in Hungary. Despite the Commission’s small juridical victories, the infringement actions did not change the essence of the Hungarian asylum policy, which makes seeking asylum in Hungary highly challenging, especially for the Mediterranean route migrants. In other words, we are dealing with yet another instance of what we have characterised elsewhere as ‘losing by winning’, writing with Kim Scheppele.Footnote 114 The Commission’s Court victories change absolutely nothing at the systemic level. Worse still, given the shortcomings of the Dublin system, ideal compliance with EU law would be prone to producing chronic violations of the right to seek asylum – we will turn to this point below. Such a ‘vicious circle’ shows that solving ‘migration crisis’ is directly linked with the need to handle the rule of law backsliding in EU Member States, as well as addressing the justice deficit and other flaws plaguing EU law at the supranational level.
It goes without saying that the inability of the EU to address rule of law backsliding is only one side of the coin. The second, once again, is that EU law per se does not offer the basic rule of law standards required to guarantee asylum rights. The so-called EU-Turkey deal, one of the main tools aimed at dealing with the ‘migration crisis’, provides an interesting example of such EU rule of law shortcomings. The deal was reached in 2016 and aimed at limiting the number of people seeking asylum who reached the EU Member States from the Mediterranean area.Footnote 115 It was a part of the EU Migration Agenda.Footnote 116 According to the agreement all new irregular migrants crossing from Turkey into the Greek islands from 20 March 2016 would be returned to Turkey.Footnote 117 In return the EU distributed 3 billion euros to the Facility for Refugees in Turkey. The focus of criticism of the deal was the danger of human rights abuses in Turkey.Footnote 118 In 2017 an annulment action was brought to the General Court by three persons who had travelled from Turkey to Greece, where they submitted applications for asylum. Under the EU-Turkey deal they could be returned to Turkey if their applications for asylum were rejected. They argued that the EU-Turkey deal is an international agreement that the European Council, as an institution acting in the name of the EU, concluded with the Republic of Turkey. The obvious unstated objective of such agreement is to annihilate the right to seek asylum in the EU. The General Court, however, ruled that it lacks jurisdiction to hear and determine these actions under Article 263 TFEU, reaching the conclusion that it was not the EU but its Member States which conducted negotiations with Turkey and the Court did not have jurisdiction to rule on the lawfulness of an international agreement concluded by the Member States.Footnote 119 The Court of Justice dismissedFootnote 120 the appeals after finding them ‘incoherent’,Footnote 121 ‘worded in a vague and ambiguous manner’,Footnote 122 ‘lacking any coherent structure’.Footnote 123 Switching off the fundamental rights guaranteed in EU and international law in direct breach of what both these legal orders purport to guarantee is thus absolutely fine in the EU system of the rule of law, freeing the Member States to demonise asylum seekers, view them as a threat and are unwilling to adhere to the really quite low standard of protection guaranteed by EU and international law. The desire of the Member States not to honour clear obligations is the law, as the world has learned from the Court’s engagement with the EU-Turkey deal.
The apparent supranational rule of law problems were further exacerbated by the positions adopted by the institutions in the context of this litigation. The EU institutions denied before the General Court that they participated in signing the agreement with Turkey despite the wording of the press release, which referred to the ‘EU-Turkey Statement’. The EU has done all it could to hide a mass assault on the rights of asylum seekers that it had orchestrated behind truly ingenious and flimsy excuses, amplifying serious concerns about the accountability of the European Union institutions and the Union as a whole.Footnote 124 Approached from this vantage point, Orbán’s government in Hungary is a model pupil in the EU’s school of values with the only difference being that it does not claim that ‘it was not Hungary’ that built a barbed-wire fence and engaged in the systematic abuse of asylum seekers to void their rights of any content. The EU is seeking the same results, but under the juvenile banner that ‘it was not me’. An international agreement reached outside the legal framework required by the Treaties, affecting fundamental rights and freedoms to the point of de facto threatening to eliminate them, and remaining outside the jurisdiction of the Court, constitutes a huge challenge to the idea that the rule of law is a foundational value of the EU: just another example of how mythical the fable of the completeness of the system of legal remedies in the EU is. Numerous examples beyond Turkey prove the same point: paying Libyan thugs to enslave people for ransom with the use of EU intelligence as the New Yorker reported is also “our way of life”. It is thus beyond any doubt that the problematic tandem of waning rule of law and migrants’ rights deterioration is not merely acute in the context of the analysis of the situation in the backsliding EU Member States, but it should also be taken seriously when considering the supranational level.
The image of the EU emerging in this context is directly opposite to the ‘Union based on the rule of law’, let alone a Union giving full respect to the rights of asylum seekers and compliance with EU law. The supranational level flaws affecting the rule of law picture and adding to its complexity, thus further came to light. The rationale behind the double standards in how the Court of Justice treats Union institutions as opposed to the individual Member States embarking on exactly the same exercise of robbing the most needy of all their rights and sometimes of their lives, will need to be explained by the Court in its future case law.
7.5 Conclusion
The rule of law is purported to be one of the core values on which the EU is founded. The same applies to respect for human rights, especially those set out in the Charter of Fundamental Rights and entering the EU legal system from the ECHR. Those most basic aspects of European law are currently facing the biggest political and legal challenges, frequently described as ‘crises’: a rule of law ‘crisis’ and a migration ‘crisis’. Crises can be perceived as an important stage of development or progress, emerging as true turning points. Political will both at the supranational and at the national level emerges, however, as an indispensable factor to turn the ‘rule of law’ into a truly foundational and constitutional value of the EU and make it work for rather than against safeguarding the rights of all those entangled in the ‘migration crisis’. As our analysis has shown, both the national – as illustrated by Hungary – and the EU regulatory levels have demonstrated eagerness to annihilate fundamental rights, undermining the basics of the rule of law and obfuscating the levels of legal and political responsibility for ‘crisis’-inspired actions aimed at harming rights. The recurrent connection between migration and the rule of law has thus been feeding a dangerous vicious circle, lowering the level of rights protection and eroding rule of law guarantees, as well as undoubtedly the legitimacy of the Union as a whole. Should this trend not be reversed, all Europeans – just like the foreigners at our shores – are going to be markedly worse off as a result, while our ideals are being progressively turned into empty proclamations by the European Union and its Hungaries alike.