Amnesty Law and the Court of Justice of the European Union
9 Articles
9 Articles
If we were to confirm the position of the EUJ attorney general in the Court's amnesty ruling, as is foreseeable, we would be facing the end of an episode that has marked the entire legislature This week we have heard the report of the Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the European Union confirming the conformity of the Amnesty Law with European Union law, in which he refutes the arguments of the various bodies that sought the Court's o…
A disguised return of the EU private message monitoring project after its rejection following public indignation: the EU's mass surveillance plan is back; renamed and more invasive than beforeThe controversial "Chat Control 2.0" proposal of the European Commission, which aims to monitor private digital communications, raises a number of concerns as European governments prepare to vote on the draft regulation. Presented as a means of "...
The problem is Europe When a supranational entity like the EU, populated with anonymous officials who run our destinations with remote control, like magic wand or celestial scepter, dictates, via a lawyer (the worst species, with the forgiveness of the lawyers), that the Amnesty Law is just fine, baby... and it does not pose any problem, turn off and let's go. It means that we pass our Constitution — that beautiful wet role — through the same pl…
The Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the European Union is already an old acquaintance in our country when, as President of the European Court...
The report issued this week by the Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) endorses the main provisions of the amnesty law. The opinion on the questions referred for a preliminary ruling states that the rule in the substance does not conflict with Community law and opens the way for a future favourable judgment. As a general rule, the European High Court of Justice usually fails in the vast majority of cases in the …
The thirteen defendants in the so-called Judas operation are beginning to see light at the end of the tunnel. It is not the first time that it seems that the case will be filed imminently, but the Spanish Court of Justice is running out of cards to prolong the game. On Thursday, the Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) published his conclusions on the amnesty. Regarding this case, he recommended that the European…
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