I ‘Droit des relations internationales’ and ‘Foreign Relations Law’
In French doctrine, the term ‘droit des relations internationales’ (literally translated as ‘Foreign Relations Law’) is not ‘used to encompass the domestic law of each nation that governs how that nation interacts with the rest of the world’.Footnote 1 As a distinctive field, French ‘Relations Internationales’Footnote 2 studies in a nonexclusively-legal way the interactions and communications between nations and other actors and social groups across the borders, that is, all the relations (stricto sensu international or lato sensu international including transnational ones) presenting a foreign element. Thus, political, economic and sociological considerations are taken into account in order to apprehend the international legal order. Foreign relations law (droit des relations internationals) can consequently seem ambiguous in French and therefore is often used as a synonym of public international law (droit international public). As a matter of fact, a great number of French students that are enrolled in a course ‘Droit des relations internationales’ in first year of law school actually study public international law. Few French law schools teach foreign relations as a distinctive discipline and even fewer have a research center specially dedicated to it.Footnote 3 As far as French foreign relations handbooks are concerned, they propose mostly three different approaches, that can also be combined between them: a theoretical/doctrinal/political science approach; an historical approach; or an institutional/normative/juridical approach.Footnote 4
Nevertheless, notwithstanding the semantics, that is, even without naming this particular field ‘Foreign Relations Law’ and without considering it as autonomous, the French doctrine does study ‘how French law (i.e. constitutional law, statutory law, administrative regulations, and judicial decisions) interacts with the rest of the world’, as well as ‘the role of domestic courts in applying international law and in adjudicating cases that implicate governmental interests’.Footnote 5 In this sense, the French approach, as far as interaction between domestic law and international law is concerned, is one of a monist state that places its constitution on the summit of the hierarchy of norms and attributes to international law a supra-legislative but infra-constitutional authority (article 55 of the French Constitution 1958).
However, in a perspective where ‘Foreign Relations Law’ is meant to be studied as a distinctive and a fortiori autonomous field, this assertion is far too simplistic to truly apprehend the articulation of the French legal order with the international one. This interaction is rather complex and cannot be fully understood unless all aspects of French domestic law and more importantly French case law (in the sense of jurisprudence, since there is no stare decisis/binding precedent rule in French law) relative to international law have been studied. Indeed, not only the French courts jurisprudence affine, enrich or even alter the written French norms concerning domestic law/international law interaction, but also the approaches adopted by the three French Supreme Courts (Cour de Cassation, Conseil d’Etat and Conseil Constitutionnel, which is not hierarchically superior to the other two) are not always identical or even harmonized and may thus govern the relation domestic law/international law in different ways.
This chapter will focus on the Conseil Constitutionnel and its role in controlling the executive as far as the adoption of international treaties is concerned. The Conseil Constitutionnel’s jurisprudence on ‘limitations of sovereignty’Footnote 6 is a very interesting one and, notwithstanding its numerous ambiguities and grey areas, clearly reflects the strong role that the French Constitutional Council wishes to play in foreign relations law.
In its first section, this paper focuses on the role of the French Constitutional Council with regard to the review of international treaties before their ratification. Its second section offers insights on the ‘limitations of sovereignty’ doctrine and its criticism, whereas the third section proposes several illustrations of the Conseil Constitutionnel’s jurisprudence concerning the compatibility between international treaties and the French Constitution. In its final section, this article suggests a critical assessment of this jurisprudence and argues that with the ‘limitations of sovereignty’ doctrine the Constitutional Council has achieved great power and discretion and has thus indirectly acquired an important role influencing the way the executive conducts its foreign relations.
II The Role of the Constitutional Council in the Constitutionality Review of International Treaties before Their Ratification
The French Constitutional Council was created by the Fifth Republic’s Constitution adopted on October 4, 1958. Initially conceived by General de Gaulle as a rather weak mechanism, feared by him because of the American precedent of what was considered as the risk of a ‘judges’ government’, it developed an extensive and rich jurisprudence, which, combined with several constitutional modifications over the years, increased its powers and importance in the French legal order. The general growing of the Constitutional Council’s role and the expansion of the possibilities of its referral also influenced its jurisprudence concerning interactions between domestic law and international treaty law.
The French Constitutional Council rules on whether proposed international treaties are in conformity with the French Constitution. This review is possible after the international treaty has been approved by the ParliamentFootnote 7 and before it is ratified by the President of the French Republic. It takes place on a referral from the President of the Republic, the Prime Minister, the President of one or the other Houses (National Assembly or Senate), or from sixty Members of the National Assembly or sixty Senators. If the Council asserts that the international undertaking reviewed contains a clause contrary to the Constitution, the authorization to ratify the treaty or otherwise approve the undertaking involved may be given only after amending the Constitution (article 54 of the French Constitution). According to article 61 of the Constitution, referral of certain acts and bills to the Council before their coming into force for it to rule on their conformity with the Constitution is compulsory. This is the case, amongst others, for the government bills that provide for authorization to ratify an international treaty which, although not contrary to the Constitution, would affect the functioning of the institutions.
Thus, the Constitutional Council exercises an a priori review on international treaties, which is compulsory in some cases and just a possibility for the President of Republic, the Prime Minister, the President of one or the other of the Houses or for sixty Members of the National Assembly or sixty Senators in all the others. This is called ‘contrôle de constitutionnalité’. The Council does not however exercise a ‘contrôle de conventionnalité’ meaning that it does not review the conformity of French law and administrative regulations with international law (treaties, other undertakings, unilateral acts and customary law). Indeed, in its 1975 IVG decision,Footnote 8 the Constitutional Council asserted that such a review belongs to the administrative and judicial courts (notably Conseil d’Etat and Cour de Cassation), since international law was not a part of the French Constitution and ‘bloc de constitutionnalité’ (this ‘constitutionality block’ is composed of the Constitution 1958, its preamble, the French Declaration of Human and Civic Rights, the Preamble of the Constitution 1946 of the Fourth Republic and the Charter for the Environment 2004).
The Constitutional Council thus limits itself to the constitutional review of international treaties. In the 1975 Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy Act decision, the Council asserted that ‘[a]rticle 61 of the Constitution does not confer on the Constitutional Council a general or particular discretion identical with that of Parliament, but simply empowers it to rule on the constitutionality of statutes referred to it’. However, when one studies the Council’s case law as regards treaties and international agreements, one realizes that its ‘discretion’ is far more important than what the letter of the Constitution and the 1975 assertion suggest.
The ‘limitations of sovereignty’ doctrine has indeed allowed the Council to develop its own foreign relations law approach regarding international undertakings by France and to enjoy an important margin of appreciation while doing so. The result is that the Constitutional Council can prevent the organs in charge of France’s foreign relations from undertaking some international engagements considered by it as incompatible with ‘national sovereignty’. If the executive, with the agreement of the Parliament whenever necessary, insists on adopting an international treaty deemed by the Council as incompatible with national sovereignty, a modification of the Constitution will be necessary before ratification of the treaty. And indeed, as will be shown in Section IV, several examples exist where such amendments have taken place after an incompatibility decision rendered by the Constitutional Council. However, this possibility does not imply that the normativity and hierarchical position of the French Constitution is lesser than in other countries, since, in theory at least, the Constitution remains on the summit of the norms’ hierarchy and its interaction with international law derives from the Constitution itself and not from international law norms. It does however highlight the power of the Constitutional Council, that can thus have an influence on the conduct of foreign relations by the executive. Also, the mere fact that amending the Constitution is envisaged in order to ratify a treaty or otherwise approve the undertaking involved, points out how important international cooperation is for the French legal order. This is also reminded in paragraph 14 of the preamble of the Constitution 1946 (which, as stated above, is actually a part of the ‘bloc de constitutionnalité’ used by the Council to review the constitutional conformity of law and treaties), stipulating: ‘The French Republic, faithful to its traditions, shall respect the rules of public international law. It shall undertake no war aimed at conquest, nor shall it ever employ force against the freedom of any people.’
III Brief Presentation of the ‘Limitations of Sovereignty’ Doctrine and its Criticism
The very notion of sovereignty in its external, international meaning (i.e. the fact that France as a sovereign state is not submitted to any authority superior to it and that it is only bound by undertakings that it accepted explicitly, implicitly or tacitly) is absent from the Constitution 1958, which, in article 3, only refers to internal sovereignty in these terms: ‘National sovereignty shall vest in the people, who shall exercise it through their representatives and by means of referendum’.Footnote 9 However, paragraph 15 of the preamble of the Constitution 1946 refers to external sovereignty in the following terms: ‘Subject to reciprocity, France shall consent to the limitations upon its sovereignty necessary to the organization and preservation of peace’, thus reminding, even if it is in a somewhat inept way, the famous Lotus and Wimbledon PCIJ dicta on the right to enter into international engagements being an attribute of state sovereignty.Footnote 10 Thus, this paragraph proclaims France’s sovereign right to undertake international engagements.
As part of its a priori review of international treaties based on article 54 of the Constitution, the Constitutional Council developed a doctrine on the respect of the ‘essential conditions for exercise of national sovereignty’ which indirectly refers to external sovereigntyFootnote 11 although explicitly invoking ‘national’ sovereignty in order to limit the executive’s power to conclude international treaties when intolerable ‘limitations of sovereignty’ were found. The phrase – even though directly inspired by the Lotus dictum – is without any doubt improper. In international law, a state that transfers or limits some of its powers undertaking an international engagement does not ‘limit’ its sovereignty (which is not apt to be limited) but rather exercises it by concluding a treaty.Footnote 12 Thus, the actual question to which the Constitutional Council answers with the ‘limitations of sovereignty doctrine’ is the following one: are the limitations of powers and of liberty of action (and not of sovereignty) or even the transfers of competencies undertaken by the state in its international engagement compatible with its Constitution?
The inopportune confusion caused by this ‘limitation of sovereignty’ expression is due to the fact that the Council refers to ‘national sovereignty’ in a twofold and indistinctive manner creating an erroneous amalgam between external and internal sovereignty, although the two concepts ought to be completely and carefully separated.Footnote 13 Thus, instead of clarifying the signification of paragraph 15 of the Preamble 1946, the Council, in its effort to distinguish between the ‘limitations of sovereignty’ that are compatible with the Constitution and those that are not, creates a rather confusing and obscure doctrine.Footnote 14 The confusion was even more important in the early beginnings of this case law. Indeed, in Decision no. 76–71 DC – Election of the Assembly of the Communities by direct universal suffrage,Footnote 15 the Council distinguished between authorized ‘limitations of sovereignty’ and unauthorized ‘transfers of sovereignty’. This unclear distinction has, fortunately, been abandoned in the case law thereafter.
IV Panorama of the Conseil Constitutionnel’s Jurisprudence As to Which International Engagements Are Not Compatible with the French ConstitutionFootnote 16
In a 1985 decisionFootnote 17 about the ratification of the Sixth Protocol of the European Convention on Human Rights, the Council seemed to identify three elements as ‘essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty’, the contrariety to which would render an international treaty incompatible with the French Constitution. Firstly, to ensure the respect of the institutions; secondly, to ensure the continuity of the life of the nation; and, thirdly, to guarantee the rights and freedoms of citizens. At the time, French doctrine considered these elements to be the actual content of ‘national sovereignty’,Footnote 18 the limitations to which would not be tolerated. Thus, it may have seemed clear that if an international treaty limited one or more of these three ‘essential conditions’, it could not be undertaken without prior constitutional amendment. However, the Council showed no constancy in repeating these elements – and a fortiori clarifying their content – in the numerous decisions that followed.
Subsequently, the most important Constitutional Council’s decisions resorting to the doctrine of ‘limitations of sovereignty’ in order to prevent the ratification of an international treaty without previous amendment of the Constitution were, and this does not come as a surprise, relative to the European Union treaties.Footnote 19 The most topical decisions in this regard will be briefly presented hereafter.
In Decision 92–308 DC – Treaty on European Union (Maastricht I), the Council asserted:
It follows from these various institutional provisions [i.e. article 3 of the French Declaration, paragraphs 14 and 15 of the 1946 Preamble and article 53 of the 1958 Constitution] that respect for national sovereignty does not preclude France, acting in accordance with the Preamble to the 1946 Constitution, from concluding international agreements relating to participation in the establishment or development of a permanent international organization enjoying legal personality and decision-making powers on the basis of transfers of powers decided on by the Member States, subject to reciprocity. However, should an international agreement entered into to this end involve a clause conflicting with the Constitution or jeopardizing the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty, authorization to ratify would require prior amendment of the Constitution.Footnote 20
Thus, the ‘pure’ unconstitutionality of a clause is presented as a distinct hypothesis from the jeopardy of the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty. The Council concludes that the authorization to ratify the Treaty on European Union requires a constitutional amendment because it creates situations (concerning the establishment of Union citizenship with right to vote in municipal elections; the single monetary and exchange-rate policy and measures relating to the entry and movement of persons) in which the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty were jeopardized. As a result, the Constitution 1958 was amended and articles 88–1 and 88–2 were added.Footnote 21
The exact same reasoning is followed in Decision no. 97–394 DC – Treaty of Amsterdam amending the Treaty on European Union, the Treaties establishing the European Communities and certain related instruments.Footnote 22 This time, the ‘limitations of national sovereignty’ that resulted in the impossibility to ratify the treaty without prior constitutional amendment concerned the transfers of powers to the community in matters of asylum, immigration and the crossing of internal and external frontiers.
In Decision no. 2004–505 DC – Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, the henceforth classic phrase is enriched: ‘When however commitments entered into for such purposes contain a clause running counter to the Constitution, call into question constitutionally guaranteed rights and freedoms or adversely affect the fundamental conditions of the exercising of national sovereignty, authorization to ratify such measures shall require a prior revision of the Constitution.’Footnote 23 The Council concludes that neither the assertion of ‘primacy’ of the European Union law, nor the title of the new Treaty or the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union require a revision of the French Constitution, but that other clauses of the Constitution for Europe ‘which transfer to the European Union powers affecting the essential conditions of the exercise of national sovereignty in areas or on terms other than those provided for in the Treaties referred to in article 88–2’ do. This is notably so with the subsidiarity principle, with the ordinary legislative procedure, with the simplified revision procedures of the Treaty of European Union, with the new powers vested in national parliaments in the framework of the Union, and more generally with
any provisions of the Treaty which, in a matter inherent to the exercise of national sovereignty and already coming under the competences of the Union or the Community, modify the applicable rules of decision-making, either by replacing the unanimous vote by a qualified majority vote in the Council, thus depriving France of any power to oppose such a decision, or by conferring decision-making powers on the European Parliament, which is not an emanation of national sovereignty, or by depriving France of any power of acting on its own initiative.Footnote 24
In Decision no. 2007–560 DC – Treaty of Lisbon amending the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty establishing the European Community, the Council recalls the same compatibility clause as in 2004Footnote 25 and repeats thereafter the exact same reasoning given the similarities between the Lisbon Treaty and the aborted Constitution for Europe. However, in this 2007 decision the Council takes a step further in distinguishing European Union law and international law. Not only does it refer to article 88–1 of the Constitution as revised since the Treaty of Maastricht (indeed, since 1992, referral to article 88–1 was added to paragraphs 14 and 15 of the Preamble 1946), but also points out that ‘while confirming the place of the Constitution at the summit of the domestic legal order, these constitutional provisions enable France to participate in the creation and development of a permanent European organization vested with a separate legal personality and decision-taking powers by reason of the transfer of powers agreed to by the Member States’.Footnote 26 As a matter of fact, between 1992 and 2007, the shift towards the recognition of the autonomy of the European Union legal order is subtle but clear. Whereas, for instance, in the 1997 decision, the Council still referred to an international organization (‘in accordance with the Preamble to the 1946 Constitution, concluding international agreements for participation in the establishment or development of a permanent international organization’), in 2004, there is a referral to ‘[enable France to participate in the creation and development of] a permanent European organization’, (emphasis added) and, in 2007, the balance between the place of the Constitution at the summit of the domestic legal order and the participation of France to the European Union is clearly stated. Thus, the Council takes an unambiguous position as far as the interaction between French constitutional law and European Union law is concerned. After having clarified this relation, the Council recalls once again that if ‘undertakings entered into for this purpose contain a clause running counter to the Constitution’ its revision is necessary.
The same remarks apply to Decision no. 2012–653 DC – Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance in the Economic and Monetary Union,Footnote 27 which follows an identical reasoning. However, in this decision, the Council considers that the provisions on the ‘fiscal compact’ and the other provisions of the Treaty are not unconstitutional. Nevertheless, this conclusion is subject to certain conditions enumerated by the Council in paragraphs 21, 28 and 30 of the decision,Footnote 28 the non-satisfaction of which would render the Treaty unconstitutional, since it is only under these conditions that the Treaty provisions ‘will not infringe the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty’.
Finally, Decision no. 2017–749 DC – Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement between Canada, on the one hand, and the European Union and its Member States, on the other, concerns a particular case, namely an EU mixed agreement: an agreement that must be signed and entered into force both by the European Union and by each of its Member States. The Council, while following its case law on limitations of sovereignty, has thus to innovate. It asserts that
it is its responsibility to distinguish between, on the one hand, the stipulations of this agreement that relate to the exclusive competence of the European union pursuant to the commitments previously agreed to by France that led to the transfer of competence agreed to by Member States, and on the other, the stipulations of this agreement that relate to the competence shared between the European Union and the Member States or competence belonging only to Member States. In regard to stipulations of the agreement relating to shared competence between the European Union and the Member States or a competence belonging only to Member States, it is up to the Constitutional Council, as is established in paragraph 11, to determine if these stipulations contain a clause that is unconstitutional, calls into question the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution or runs contrary to the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty.Footnote 29
But, as far as the previously transferred exclusive EU competence is concerned, the Council adds a condition relative this time to ‘the constitutional identity of France’, known from its doctrine concerning the transposition of EU Directives:
However, if the stipulations of the agreement establish exclusive competence of the European Union, the Constitutional Council is only asked to determine if authorization to ratify this agreement requires a constitutional review, to establish that they do not call into question a rule or a principle inherent to the constitutional identity of France. If this is not called into question, it is up to the judge of the European Union to oversee the compatibility of the agreement with European Union law.Footnote 30
The Council carefully examines the provisions of the Treaty, especially those relative to shared competences (the threshold to consider that a principle inherent to the constitutional identity of France is infringed being much higher), and concludes that the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement between Canada, on the one hand, and the European Union and its Member States, on the other, does not contain unconstitutional clauses.
Besides the European Union treaties, and notwithstanding the gradual distinction operated by the Constitutional Council between public international law and European Union law, the doctrine of ‘limitations of sovereignty’ has been applied mutatis mutandis in other international treaties signed by France.Footnote 31 Decision no. 98–408 DC – Treaty laying down the Statute of the International Criminal Court constitutes the most important example of an incompatibility ruling having resulted in the amendment of the French Constitution in order for an international treaty to be ratified. In this case, the incompatibility clause is formulated a little bit differently: ‘Where an international agreement contains a clause that is contrary to the Constitution or jeopardizes the rights and freedoms secured by the Constitution, the authorization to ratify it requires revision of the Constitution.’Footnote 32 Instead of adding ‘jeopardizes the rights and freedoms secured by the Constitution’ to ‘jeopardizing the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty’ like in the 2004, 2007 and 2012 decisions, the Council replaces the latter by the former. However, the reasoning and result are the same. After having found the incompatibility of several clauses of the Statute of the International Criminal Court in regards with specific articles of the French Constitution (provisions on the criminal responsibility of the holders of certain official status are contrary to the special constitutional rules governing liability of the President of the Republic, Members of the Parliament and of the Government),Footnote 33 the Council goes on to examine more generally the ‘respect of the essential conditions for exercise of national sovereignty’ (under a section of the decision that bears this title). The review concerns the principle of complementarity between the International Criminal Court and the national courts, the international cooperation, judicial assistance and the Prosecutor’s powers, as well as the enforcement of sentences passed by the International Criminal Court. The Council finds that
under the Statute, the International Criminal Court could be validly seized on the grounds of an amnesty statute or internal rules on limitation; in such a case, France, even if a State were neither unwilling nor unable to act, might be required to arrest and surrender to the Court a person accused of conduct covered by an amnesty or limitation period in French law; this would violate the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty.Footnote 34
It also finds that ‘the power conferred on the Prosecutor to carry out these measures without the presence of the competent French legal authorities is liable to violate the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty’.Footnote 35 Thus, authorization to ratify the treaty laying down the Statute of the International Criminal Court required amendment of the French Constitution.
What is interesting in this decision is the clear dichotomy between contrariety to the Constitution per se (its articles or the constitutional principles) and incompatibility with the ‘respect of the essential conditions for exercise of national sovereignty’. Contrary to previous decisions on European Treaties, the Constitutional Council does not explicitly conclude here that limitation of the essential conditions for exercise of national sovereignty is as such unconstitutional, but rather dresses two different hypotheses that both result in the necessity of Constitution amendment.Footnote 36 Thus, the respect of the essential conditions for exercise of national sovereignty becomes an autonomous basis of review, alongside the ‘bloc de constitutionnalité’. When such a ‘general’ infringement is asserted by the Constitutional Council, the necessary amendment of the Constitution cannot aim at this or that article (since no precise article is identified by the Council). In such a case, the only amendment leading to the possibility to ratify the international treaty is to add in the Constitution a habilitation clause (such as article 88–1 after the 1992 Decision or article 53–2 after the 1998 Decision)Footnote 37 authorizing such an undertaking as compatible with national sovereignty.Footnote 38
Such a mechanism raises once again the question of the actual normativity of the French Constitution and of its true interaction with international (or even foreign relations) law. It is of course clear that, in theory, still nothing changes as far as the supremacy of the French Constitution in the French legal order is concerned. The mere fact that the international treaty cannot be ratified without previous amendment of the Constitution goes to show that the latter prevails normatively over the former. However, when a Constitution is over and over again amended in order for international treaties to be ratified and a fortiori when some of the modifications at hand consist in a simple addition of a habilitation clause, it cannot be denied that such a Constitution seems less ‘rigid’ than the ones that leave no place to that kind of amendments. The theoretical place of the French Constitution in the hierarchy of norms may be the same as in other constitutional countries, but its actual normative density can be questioned, since the executive, the Parliament and the Constitutional Council can all influence the outcome of a constitutional amendment through their conduct of foreign relations.
V Critical Assessment of the Conseil Constitutionnel’s Different Decisions That Applied the ‘Limitation of Sovereignty’ Doctrine
What is striking in this panorama of the Constitutional Council’s case law – other than the relative ‘hypocrisy’ of the assertion concerning the absolute primacy of a Constitution that is revised as and when the ratification of a new international treaty needs it – is the rather arbitrary way in which the Council decides which limitations of sovereignty are tolerable and which are not, at least as far as the substantial content of ‘national sovereignty’ is concerned. Indeed, the review of those few decisions does not allow to predict for the future which international treaties will be considered by the Council as respecting the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty. It does not allow either to dress an inventory of different substantial criteria (other than purely material/formal ones) taken into account by the Council in order to decide or to provide some guidelines as to how it will exercise its control power.Footnote 39 Notwithstanding the constancy of the reasoning itself, the actual arguments and results are essentially built on a case by case basis.
Concerning the actual determination of what ‘national sovereignty’ entails and which are the ‘essential conditions’ for its exercise, the only decision that tried to identify some elements was the 1985 one, as seen above. However, not only the three elements put forward in that case by the Constitutional Council did not survive in the subsequent decisions, but also and foremost the deliberation minutes of the 1985 decision indicate that there was no real intention to define ‘national sovereignty’ by those three elements invoked.Footnote 40 The consequence is a rather confusing case law as to why one international treaty is considered to infringe the essential (?) conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty (?), whereas another international treaty is not. The consultation of several deliberation minutes (henceforth available for the earlier decisions) reinforce this impression of obscurity and arbitrariness.Footnote 41 As a matter of fact, the doctrine of ‘essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty’ is only a partial and incomplete one at best.
The only common factor that can be identified throughout the different decisions (besides the ‘reciprocity’ criterium invoked again and again by the Council, but also found in paragraph 15 of the Preamble 1946) is material concerning the conditions of the international engagement.Footnote 42 In short, if France maintains a certain liberty of action (for instance, to denounce the treaty even if the treaty does not actually contain a denunciation clauseFootnote 43 or to invoke an exception derogatory clause in case of urgency or necessity) and if the Constitutional Council is able to review any future undertaking going further than the previous ones, then it seems that the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty are respected.
However, if the Council seems to have a clear course of action as to the material conditions of powers’ exercise that the treaty must satisfy, there is little indication (besides the mere listing of the spheres enumerated in the different decisions up to today) as to the domains in which the treaties can intervene in order for the undertaking to respect the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty. Certainly, the Council asserts that ‘the international agreements entered into by the authorities of the French Republic may not adversely affect the exercise by the state of the powers that are at the core of its national sovereignty’.Footnote 44 It also refers to ‘arrangements which deprive the Member States of their own powers in a matter which is vital to the exercise of national sovereignty’.Footnote 45 Still, no clear list of which those matters are is given nor the criteria to identify those matters are laid down. In other words, the ‘national sovereignty’ in its substantial meaning is not really defined by the Constitutional Council (as it is not defined by paragraph 15 of the Preamble 1946 either), although this same Council establishes itself in its case law as the ‘national sovereignty’s’ guarantor.
Thus, the executive branch has no real guidance as to which international treaties are likely to be deemed respectful of the essential conditions for the exercise of national sovereignty by the Council and which are not. If it is free to conduct foreign relations as it wishes, and if the French legal order encourages international cooperation, the executive is never immune from a Conseil Constitutionnel’s incompatibility decision resulting in a long process of a prior Constitution amendment in order for the treaty in question to be ratified. Of course, when the a priori constitutional review is not compulsory, referral to the Council will depend on the will of the executive (President of Republic and Prime Minister) or of the legislative (President of one or the other of the Houses or sixty Members of the National Assembly or sixty Senators). Thus, the possible interference of the Constitutional Council in the conduct of foreign relations is not without limits and its role remains closely linked to the one of the executive and the legislative branches. Still, it is clear that the Council conserves great power and discretion as to its review and its possibility to weigh upon the ratification process of the most important international treaties. In other words, its position in the management of France’s foreign relations is rather significant.