A. Introduction
There are probably only few areas of EU law that have seen an evolution as rapid and profound as the right to effective judicial protection has in the last few years. The swift and sharp decrease in adherence to the fundamental values of the EU by some of its Member States have sparked a forceful response by the ECJ, thereby transforming Article 19(1)(2) TEU into an autonomous ground to assess the respect for effective judicial protection—and with it the right to an independent tribunal established by law—in the European Member States. While that jurisprudential move by the Court and the concrete judgments it issued in its wake have already been the topic of a mountain of scholarship, it also made it a most relevant aspect to discuss the topic of the systemic criterion in EU law. Given the more structural and abstract questions on judicial independence that have since been brought before the Court, its case law has rather quickly also gained a more structural and systemic character.
This article explores the use of the systemic criterion by the Court in its case law on issues of judicial independence. It starts from the observation that the novel interpretation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU has allowed the Court to conduct a more abstract assessment of questions of domestic judicial independence (Section B). Yet, despite that evolution, the notion of “systemic” has not been used more often and is only rarely used explicitly by the Court. There are only two strands of case law that mention the criterion, neither of which tell us much about how the Court understands it (Section C). After a brief detour touching upon the Court’s contextual approach in independence-related cases (Section D), this article further argues that the systemic criterion could and should play a more important role in the Court’s case law on judicial independence, and that the Court should explicitly limit the finding of a violation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU to those issues that have a systemic impact on the functioning of the domestic judiciary, meaning they endanger the proper functioning of the judicial system (Section E). Such a use of the systemic criterion would allow to strike an appropriate balance between protecting domestic judicial independence, on the one hand, and respect for the institutional autonomy of the Member States, on the other. Section F concludes.
B. A Brief Recap: The Evolution Towards an Abstract Assessment of Domestic Judicial Independence
The topic of this article cannot be framed properly without at least briefly going back to the point where it all started: The Court’s novel interpretation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU, which it introduced in the judgment of Associação Sindical dos Juízes Portugueses Footnote 1 and confirmed many times since. That line of case law has already been discussed countless times in great detail,Footnote 2 and here is not the place to do all of that again. Yet, for the sake of this article, it is important to stress that that provision, as interpreted by the ECJ, now requires all domestic courts or tribunals, which may be asked to apply or interpret Union law, to provide effective judicial protection. While the Court indicated already in ASJP that that meant that they should be independent,Footnote 3 it later clarified, following calls in legal doctrine and by Advocate General Tanchev in that regard,Footnote 4 that it equally requires that domestic courts are established by law.Footnote 5
Essentially, Article 19(1)(2) TEU is now understood to create an autonomous requirement in EU law, free from the constraints inherent in Article 51 of the Charter, that domestic courts and tribunals are independent and established by law. In doing so, the Court instrumentalized a theretofore dormant provision of Union law, and gave the value of the rule of law a much sharper edge.Footnote 6 Recent history has shown that a lot of actors within the broader EU institutional framework quickly and gratefully made use of that possibility. It gave the Commission a welcome new basis upon which to introduce infringement proceedings.Footnote 7 Moreover, it sparked an onslaught of preliminary references from national courts, asking increasingly detailed questions on whether the national institutional set-up as such respects the requirement to have an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. While the majority of these cases stem from Polish and Romanian judges, who use the preliminary ruling mechanism and its access to the Court of Justice as some sort of lifeline, similar questions can now be found from judges from all over Europe.Footnote 8
Since Article 19(1)(2) TEU now imposes a general duty on the Member States to organize their judicial system in a way that respects the right to effective judicial protection,Footnote 9 it simultaneously provides the Court, as the final interpreter of that provision, with the power to conduct an abstract assessment of the domestic judicial system.Footnote 10 With ASJP, the Court thus placed questions of domestic judicial organization and governance squarely within its own purview.Footnote 11 It simultaneously made it easier to raise questions that were not strictly speaking about the courts themselves, but about other actors within the broader judicial architecture, that are crucial for judicial independence, such as disciplinary bodies, or bodies that are involved in the appointment process. As a direct consequence, the Court is now confronted with questions that more clearly address the way in which the judicial system as a whole operates.
C. The (Lack of) Use of the Systemic Criterion in the ECJ’s Case Law
Many commentators have noted that systemic, structural character inherent in Article 19(1)(2) TEU.Footnote 12 Some pending preliminary references are even explicitly phrased from such a systemic angle.Footnote 13 Yet, perhaps somewhat surprisingly, that increased systemic character of the cases brought before the Court is not reflected in the judgments themselves, at least not in the vocabulary used by the Court. When one looks at the judgments, words like systemic, structural, institutional, or closely related words are used only very rarely by the Court. In fact, there are only two strands of case law in which the systemic criterion explicitly pops up.
The first of those two relates to the topic of the appointment of judges and was mentioned for the first time in the A.B. judgment. There, the Court held that Article 19(1)(2) TEU in principle does not require a legal remedy in the context of judicial appointments, but that the situation may be different
in circumstances in which all the relevant factors characterising such a process in a specific national legal and factual context are such as to give rise to systemic doubts in the minds of individuals as to the independence and impartiality of the judges that are appointed at the end of that process.Footnote 14
Here, the systemic criterion is thus used as a sort of benchmark to assess when Article 19(1)(2) TEU is violated. Yet, the requirement of systemic doubts is a remarkable one when seen in light of the rest of the case law. The concept of “systemic doubts” is used nowhere else in the entirety of the Court’s case law.Footnote 15 In other cases, the Court rather uses the notion of reasonable or legitimate doubts.Footnote 16 It is not immediately clear how these two standards relate to each other. The most logical understanding would be that systemic doubts require a higher threshold than mere reasonable or legitimate doubts. Yet the question remains why in this very specific instance, the level of doubt needs to be systemic. One potential explanation could be that the Court wanted to indicate that the doubts in the minds of individuals must stem from the entirety of the circumstances surrounding the system of judicial appointments, in the sense that the system in itself instills doubts about the independence of the judges it appoints. The Court indeed refers to the circumstances “in which all the relevant factors characterising [the appointment] process in a specific national legal and factual context, and in particular in which possibilities obtaining judicial remedies which previously existed are suddenly eliminated, are such as to give rise to systemic doubts.”Footnote 17
But again, it is not exactly apparent how the issue here would be so fundamentally different from cases like A.K., where the case concerned the appointment of the judges to the new Disciplinary Chamber in light of the newly composed national council of the judiciary, but where the Court did use the benchmark of reasonable doubts.Footnote 18 The confusing nature of the term can also be seen in its application in a recent opinion by Advocate General Collins. In that opinion, Advocate General Collins repeated the abovementioned excerpt from the A.B. judgment. However, he then followed it by saying that the referring court did not put forward any specific evidence “either of a systemic nature, other than the three factors to which it refers, or of an individual nature to substantiate the existence of legitimate and serious doubts in the minds of individuals.”Footnote 19 Thus, instead of using “systemic doubts” as a substantive threshold, the Advocate General referred back to the standard test of legitimate and serious doubts, and rather verified whether there was evidence of “a systemic nature” that could lead to such doubts. All things considered, the current use of the notion of systemic doubts seems to add little to the case law and it seems preferable to replace it by the standard test of reasonable or legitimate doubts.
The second strand of case law in which the Court uses the systemic criterion is much more prevalent. It relates to the question whether a person may still be surrendered on the basis of a European Arrest Warrant, despite fears that he or she will not enjoy a fair trial by the issuing authority. In the well-known LM judgment,Footnote 20 the Court applied the test which it had developed under the prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in the judgment of Aranyosi and Căldăraru Footnote 21 to the right to a fair trial under Article 47 of the Charter. That test involves a two-step verification: The executing authority must first assess whether the issuing Member State shows signs of systemic or generalized deficiencies, and second whether the requested person will run an individualized risk for a breach of the essence of his or her fundamental right to a fair trial.Footnote 22 Both steps of the test need to be fulfilled before an executing authority may refuse to surrender the requested person.
Despite vocal criticism,Footnote 23 those two steps, requiring both systemic deficiencies and an individualized risk, have been repeatedly confirmed by the Court in subsequent judgments.Footnote 24 Later, the Court indicated that the same test should apply when concerns are raised about whether the issuing judicial authority is properly established by law rather than sufficiently independent.Footnote 25 Notably, that same test has later also been applied in other areas of EU law.Footnote 26 In the Sped-pro judgment, the Tribunal applied the principles that the ECJ had established in LM to the area of competition law and the requirement of independence for the national competition authority.Footnote 27 In a more recent judgment—without however referring to any of the previous case law—the ECJ appears to use a similar test in stating that a domestic court may apply a provision of forum necessitatis so as to hear an application for maintenance under Regulation No. 4/2009, in order to mitigate a risk of denial of justice. In this respect, the Court held that the domestic court “cannot rely solely on general circumstances relating to deficiencies in the judicial system of the third State, without analysing the consequences that those circumstances might have for the individual case.”Footnote 28
Up until now, the case law has not been very specific on when exactly the first step of systemic and generalized deficiencies in the functioning of the judicial system can be understood as being fulfilled. The only guidance that can be found is that that step requires an overall assessment, which must be based on objective, reliable, specific and duly updated material, which must be conducted in light of the standards on the right to a fair trial set out in the Court’s case law.Footnote 29 Generally speaking, it seems like that step thus boils down to a general assessment of the level of respect that a Member State, specifically its legislative framework, shows for the right to an independent tribunal established by law.Footnote 30 Yet, there is nothing in the case law that provides any guidance on when the potential issues reach the level of systemic or generalized deficiencies.Footnote 31 There is no indication on whether that step is only met when the deficiencies that are described affect a large part of the judiciary, threaten certain important institutions within the judicial system, reach a certain level of gravity, or perhaps something different still. A big part of the reason for this lack of guidance must most likely be found in the fact that most of the judgments so far have concerned Poland, where the presence of such systemic and generalized deficiencies in the functioning of the judicial system have essentially been taken as a given.Footnote 32 Nevertheless, it seems inevitable that questions will pop up on this first step as well and when they do, it is up to the Court to then give the referring court(s) some clear guidance.Footnote 33
D. The Contextual Approach as a Replacement for the Systemic Criterion?
The last section showed that, as the case law stands today–despite the increased systemic and structural character of the cases brought before it–the Court only rarely explicitly relies on the systemic criterion in its judgments on judicial independence. The two strands of case law where we do find the criterion being used tell us very little on how the Court actually understands this notion. At this point, it is worthwhile to make a little detour and address an aspect of the Court’s case law on issues of judicial independence that may also prove relevant for the topic of this article: The Court’s contextual approach. Indeed, several scholars have pointed out this context-sensitive approach by the Court, where it takes on board the institutional, legislative and political context surrounding the case before it in its reasoning.Footnote 34
One can find examples of such a contextual approach in infringement proceedings, as well as in preliminary references. As to the infringement proceedings, the clearest example can be found in the case about the disciplinary regime for judges in Poland.Footnote 35 In that case, the Court had to decide, among other things, whether Poland had infringed Article 19(1)(2) TEU, since the new Disciplinary Chamber in the Supreme Court was allegedly not independent and impartial. At the start of its assessment, the Court recalled that the creation of that chamber took place in a wider context of major reforms to the judicial system in Poland. It then spent over 20 paragraphs pointing to such contextual factors as the lowered retirement age of Supreme Court judges, the autonomous position of that chamber within the Supreme Court, the dismissal of the members of the Polish judicial council and the appointment of its new members under new rules, and the timing between all those various measures.Footnote 36 Later in the judgment, the Court also discussed the fourth complaint by the Commission, regarding the rights of defense of the Polish judges in the disciplinary proceedings and concluded that the national procedural rules may
especially where … they are applied in the context of a disciplinary regime displaying the shortcomings referred to [above], prove to be such as to increase still further the risk of the disciplinary regime applicable to those whose task is to adjudicate being used as a system of political control of the content of judicial decisions.Footnote 37
A similar style of reasoning can be found in several other judgments concerning preliminary references. In cases such as A.K., CP and DO,Footnote 38 A.B.,Footnote 39 W. Ż.,Footnote 40 Prokuratura Rejonowa,Footnote 41 and AFJR,Footnote 42 the Court clearly frames its response to the questions by the referring courts in the broader institutional and legislative framework. In doing so, it indicated to the referring courts that they as well should take such contextual factors into account when ultimately deciding on the case.Footnote 43
This contextual approach is also relevant for the topic of this article. By drawing in the surrounding factors, the Court shows, by virtue of its reasoning, that the issue in front of it may indeed be part of a wider, more structural and systemic narrative, without necessarily using any of those words. By doing so, it may show how one circumscribed question relating to judicial independence, may become problematic or all the more problematic when assessed in light of the entirety of changes made to the judicial system,Footnote 44 and may ultimately affect how the judicial operates as a whole, which is something that comes close to a cumulative effect doctrine.Footnote 45 As mentioned quite explicitly by the Court in A.K. “[a]lthough any one of the various facts referred to … above is indeed not capable, per se and taken in isolation, of calling into question the independence of a chamber such as the Disciplinary Chamber, that may, by contrast, not be true once they are taken together.”Footnote 46
This contextual approach by the Court in cases relating to judicial independence is convincing. It acknowledges that judicial governance is a difficult system of often interrelating checks and balances, in which one can hardly see the true impact that a certain measure may have without properly placing it within the broader institutional context of formal—and perhaps informal—power relationships. In somewhat more colloquial language: it allows to take on board the forest through the trees.
Yet, that strength may simultaneously also be one of its sore points. In preliminary reference procedures it is ultimately the referring court that, with the guidance provided by the ECJ, will have to decide on the case at hand. It will then fall to the domestic judge to put the Court’s contextual approach into practice, which may require them to have an intimate understanding of the whole system and its working, even at the highest and partly invisible level and assess its impact. As pointed out by others, that is a daunting task.Footnote 47 Moreover, it has the drawback of leaving the potentially politically very sensitive decision to the domestic court, without much more backing from the Court besides the requirement to take all contextual factors into account.Footnote 48
E. Towards a Greater Use of the Systemic Criterion: The ECJ Tying Itself to the Mast
As mentioned, the contextual approach essentially allows the Court to show that a certain issue may be more structural or systemic than may appear from the case before it, by drawing in surrounding factors. Yet, that approach in itself still tells us very little about how Article 19(1)(2) TEU is actually to be operationalized. It does not give us any clear indications of when that provision applies, what its scope of application is, or when it is violated. In fact, those questions, and others surrounding the use of Article 19(1)(2) TEU, have animated the Court for some time now.
One of the first points of discussion concerned the material scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU. Several Advocates General were rather quick to stress that it should be limited. Advocate General Tanchev argued that that provision should be confined to correcting problems with respect to a “structural infirmity”Footnote 49 or “a structural breach”Footnote 50 in a given Member State, meaning that the measure in question should affect entire tiers of the judiciary, and thereby also making a link to the systemic or generalized deficiencies as mentioned in the test set out in LM.Footnote 51 Advocate General Bobek in turn held that Article 19(1)(2) TEU only applied to “issues of transversal, structural changes to the national judicial function,” which would be “indiscriminately applicable to any and all functions exercised by national judges.”Footnote 52 Nevertheless, the Court quickly showed that it understood the material scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU broader and did not confine the scope of application of that provision to breaches of a structural, transversal nature.Footnote 53 As later mentioned by Advocate General Bobek, as the case law stands now, the material scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU seems to be essentially limitless,Footnote 54 both institutionally and substantively.Footnote 55 Institutionally, since it covers all courts which may potentially apply EU law, and substantively, because it captures any and all rules or practices that may negatively affect the obligation of Member States to set up effective—and thus independent—remedies.Footnote 56 Advocate General Tanchev also stated in his opinion to the case of A.B. that in view of the Court’s case law, he no longer defended the view that the material scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU was confined to correcting problems with respect to a structural infirmity in a given Member State.Footnote 57
The Court moreover seems to draw increasingly on Article 19(1)(2) TEU as the main legal basis in its judgment. Perhaps the clearest example in this regard is the AFJR judgment. Advocate General Bobek was adamant in urging the Court to rely on the CVM decisions and Article 47 of the Charter as they provided a more concrete provision than Article 19(1)(2) TEU.Footnote 58 The Court, nevertheless, used Article 19(1)(2) TEU as the main framework of assessment, with the CVM decisions and Article 47 of the Charter playing almost no role in its reasoning.Footnote 59 For another example, one could compare the Court’s approach in the A.K. judgment with that in the later judgment in Euro Box Promotion. In both cases, both Article 19(1)(2) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter were applicable. Yet, whereas in the former the Court held that it did not appear necessary to conduct a distinct analysis under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, since it could only reinforce that under Article 47 of the Charter,Footnote 60 in the latter it took the complete opposite approach, stating at the end that a separate examination of Article 47 of the Charter appeared unnecessary, since it could only substantiate the finding already set out under Article 19(1)(2) TEU.Footnote 61
Thus, as matters stand now, the Court has shown a willingness towards the use of Article 19(1)(2) TEU,Footnote 62 a provision that is universally applicable to the judicial system of all Member States and which has an apparently limitless material scope. In such circumstances, the need clearly increases for a clearer picture of where exactly the substantive limits of Article 19(1)(2) TEU are, and what yardstick is used to assess whether it is violated.Footnote 63 So far, the Court’s case law has not taken any clear stance in this regard.Footnote 64
It is argued here that this is where the systemic criterion can and should play a fundamental role in the Court’s case law concerning issues of judicial independence. Article 19(1)(2) TEU should be interpreted in such a way that it is only violated when a specific measure creates systemic issues, meaning—as will be elaborated further in this article—that it implies a threat for the proper functioning of the judiciary as a system.Footnote 65 The systemic criterion would thus be used as imposing a substantive threshold for finding a breach. The main advantage of such an approach would be to limit the impact that Article 19(1)(2) TEU—and the ECJ as its interpreter—have on the domestic judicial organization, and to find a balance between the protection of judicial independence and the rule of law on the one hand, and respect for national autonomy on the other. It would, moreover, make sure that the application of Article 19(1)(2) TEU does not allow to simply circumvent the limits that Article 51 of the Charter imposes on Article 47 of the Charter. While not necessarily wanting to go as far as Advocate General Bobek, who argued that Article 19(1)(2) TEU should be an extraordinary remedy for extraordinary situations,Footnote 66 there are cogent reasons for such a more limited understanding of that provision.
A first argument is textual in nature. Article 19(1)(2) TEU mentions that Member States shall provide remedies sufficient to ensure effective legal protection in the fields covered by Union law. It thus imposes an abstract, general obligation to establish a functioning system of effective remedies. As the Court held itself, “it is for the Member States to establish a system of legal remedies and procedures ensuring for individuals compliance with their right to effective judicial protection in the fields covered by EU law.”Footnote 67 That would indicate that Article 19(1)(2) TEU is concerned by the effectiveness and the functioning of the system as a whole, meaning that, in order to fall foul off that provision, a domestic measure should be systemic, in the sense that it is liable to affect the proper functioning of the system.
A second argument is more normative in nature. The application of Article 19(1)(2) TEU will almost automatically intervene with the organization of domestic judiciaries and as such the institutional autonomy of the Member States.Footnote 68 By indicating what is and is not acceptable under that provision, the Court inevitably intervenes in institutional and perhaps constitutional issues, inextricably linked to questions of separation of powers and checks and balances. Those are areas deeply rooted in issues of national sovereignty or constitutional tradition,Footnote 69 where the argument to intervene only when it is absolutely necessary becomes all the more weighty.Footnote 70 Decisions of (constitutional) institutional organization should have a particularly strong claim to national autonomy.Footnote 71
To be clear, the ECJ does indicate that it is aware of this. It consistently holds—following the case law of the ECHR in this regardFootnote 72 that neither Article 2 TEU, nor Article 19(1)(2) TEU, nor any other provision of EU law requires Member States to adopt a particular constitutional model governing the relationships and interaction between the various branches of the State.Footnote 73 Yet, that point is then followed by the statement that Member States must, nevertheless, comply with the requirements of judicial independence stemming from those provisions of EU law.Footnote 74 The Court’s case law thus inevitably draws certain reds lines as to how the Member States can—and more importantly cannot—organize their institutional judicial architecture.Footnote 75 That case law also has forward-looking effects that extend far beyond the confines of the case at hand.Footnote 76
There is, moreover, not much that the Member States can do to resist such effects. Since Article 19(1)(2) TEU is endowed with direct effect,Footnote 77 it has primacy over any provision of national law, including those of a constitutional nature. A claim based on respect for national or constitutional identity as enshrined in Article 4(2) TEU also seems an unlikely avenue. While the Court already seemed rather unreceptive to such arguments in earlier case law,Footnote 78 it took it one step further in its judgment on the Rule of Law Conditionality Mechanism. It held that while the Member States under Article 4(2) TEU enjoy a certain degree in discretion in implementing the principles of the rule of law, it in no way follows that that obligation may vary from one Member State to another as to the result to be achieved.Footnote 79 On the contrary, the values under Article 2 TEU define the “very identity of the European Union” as a common legal order, and the Union cannot be criticized for implementing the necessary means in defense of that identity.Footnote 80 While that “already iconic”Footnote 81 statement by the full court marks yet another step in the Court’s clear efforts in protecting the Union’s foundational values, it also suggests that identity-related arguments will not easily persuade the Court in cases that concern issues of judicial independence.
In such circumstances, there is a rather strong normative argument to limit the finding of a violation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU to situations that reach a certain level of gravity and are liable to affect the functioning of the judicial system as such. Such an approach would have a less intrusive impact on the various systems of separation of powers and checks and balances that exist throughout the Member States and thus better respect the constitutional pluralism in the European Union.Footnote 82 To be clear, it must again be pointed out that the ECJ does not seem unaware of such considerations. It is rather commonly accepted that the fact that the Court adopts a test based on the appearance of reasonable doubts,Footnote 83 instead of imposing clear-cut institutional requirements, is meant to mitigate the far-reaching effects on the Member States’ constitutional autonomy.Footnote 84 The Court rather provides a procedure for finding a violation, and one which allows different institutional set-ups to coexist.Footnote 85 However, two caveats should be made here. First, the appearance test is not always used by the Court. In certain judgments it does assess the domestic legal framework and quite directly indicates what is and what is not allowed under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, without leaving any room via the appearance of reasonable doubt.Footnote 86 Second, the substantive scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU now also covers certain aspects—in particular the right to a tribunal established by law—for which the appearance test is less appropriate than for the right to an independent tribunal, or simply cannot be used at all.Footnote 87 In other words, the case law under Article 19(1)(2) TEU still entails a potential of a far-reaching impact on the constitutional autonomy of the various Member States.
All of this ties into a third and closely related argument. Article 19(1)(2) TEU only provides a thin legal foundation for such far-reaching effects. As mentioned above, that provision requires Member States to establish a system of legal remedies and procedures to ensure effective judicial protection. It thus only imposes a requirement of effectiveness, unlike, for example Article 47 of the Charter, which explicitly mentions that a court should be independent, impartial and established by law. Compared to the latter, the effectiveness requirement in Article 19(1)(2) TEU creates a very vague framework of assessment,Footnote 88 as also became clear from the diverging points of view in the legal literature on what exactly should be understood to fall within the material scope of that provision.Footnote 89 Such an open norm creates a void that leaves a lot to—perhaps overly eager—judicial interpretation.
On the basis of the above, this article argues that the Court should limit the finding of a violation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU to breaches that have a systemic impact. As such, the material scope of the provision would remain very broad—in line with the Court’s case law—but there would be a substantial threshold before it is violated. At this point, it is time to discuss how the notion of ‘systemic’ should then exactly be understood. In other words, at what point does a measure that affects the independence of the judiciary reach the threshold of systemic? For this, it is useful to look at the opinions of the various Advocates General. While they rarely discuss the concept of systemic explicitly as such,Footnote 90 those opinions do offer an insight in how exactly they understand the notion. In some opinions it was used to point to measures that affected entire tiers of the judiciary, meaning that several courts were affected.Footnote 91 In another opinion it was used rather to describe any problem that arises in a larger number of cases.Footnote 92 In other opinions the notion of systemic is used rather as a synonym for serious difficulties, without any further qualifiers.Footnote 93 Finally, that same notion has also been used to refer to a single, important institution within the judicial system, namely the Polish Supreme Court.Footnote 94
While these various opinions refer to the notion of systemic in ways that may perhaps conceptually be distinguished from each other, they do have a common core; they refer to situations that go beyond mere isolated and particular instances and concern the way in which the judiciary, as an institution, can robustly perform its role.Footnote 95 Systemic issues are thus those problems that threaten the proper functioning of the judiciary in a domestic system of checks and balances.Footnote 96 It denotes those problems that either reflect on, or reverberate throughout the judicial system as an operative body of separate, yet interrelated institutions.Footnote 97 As correctly pointed out by the various Advocates General, that may be the case because the measure in question affects the entire judiciary—for example the Polish muzzle law—or a substantial part of it— for example the lowering of the retirement age for judges in Poland—or because it affects an institution that is crucial for the proper functioning of the judiciary—for instance the Polish National Council for the Judiciary, or a disciplinary institution.
It is certainly possible that the Court—or at least some of its judgesFootnote 98—already understand Article 19(1)(2) TEU in a sense that it only precludes such systemic deficiencies in the domestic judiciary. Yet, even if that would be the case, it is important to make this explicit as it would entail some important advantages. Some of those advantages are a logical extension of the arguments that were raised above in favor of an understanding of Article 19(1)(2) TEU that is only violated in case of systemic problems. First, the case law would more clearly reflect the text and purpose of Article 19(1)(2) TEU. Second, and more importantly, it would strike a balance between, on the one hand, the protection of the independence of the domestic judiciary, something which is absolutely crucial for the proper functioning of the EU,Footnote 99 and on the other, respect for the institutional choices of the Member States as to the organization of their judiciary. By explicitly introducing the systemic criterion as a qualifier in its case law under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, the Court would, like Odysseus, tie itself to the proverbial mast so it steers clear from overly specific and detailed issues of institutional architecture or domestic judicial governance, thereby also running the risk of incrementally pushing the boundaries of Article 19(1)(2) TEU further and further. This does not mean that breaches of the principle of judicial independence or the right to a tribunal established by law that do not reach the required seriousness are to be allowed under EU law, but rather that Article 19(1)(2) TEU is not the proper legal basis to challenge them. Such issues could still be brought before the Court, but via the more specific and detailed Article 47 of the Charter, in the understanding that the requirement within Article 51(1) of the Charter is fulfilled. Of course, such issues could also still be raised in front of the domestic (constitutional) courts, and ultimately the European Court of Human Rights.Footnote 100
Beyond those two advantages, one could point out two more reasons why such an explicit use of the systemic criterion would be beneficial to the jurisprudence. A first reason is that it would lead to greater consistency in the Court’s case law. As mentioned above, in cases concerning judicial independence, the systemic criterion has so far been used virtually exclusively in the so-called two-step test, in cases concerning the surrender of a person on the basis of a European Arrest Warrant where doubts arise about his or her right to a fair trial.Footnote 101 If the Court were to introduce the systemic criterion under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, it would create a degree of conformity between those “horizontal” cases of rule of law protection and the more “vertical” cases stemming from infringement proceedings or preliminary references coming from the country itself. It would further also provide guidance to the domestic courts on how this first step of the LM test should actually be conducted. Moreover, a systemic understanding of Article 19(1)(2) TEU would be in line with the Court’s current contextual approach and would actually help to make it more concrete. As mentioned above,Footnote 102 by drawing in the surrounding factors, the Court shows, by virtue of its reasoning, that the issue in front of it may indeed be part of a wider, more structural and systemic narrative, without necessarily using any of those words. That contextual approach would thus help to provide the necessary building blocks in the Court’s reasoning for the potential finding of a systemic deficiency under Article 19(1)(2) TEU as described above. In other words, the contextual considerations would help inform the assessment of the finding of a breach of Article 19(1)(2) TEU, which in turn could be seen as an operationalization of the Court’s current contextual approach.
Finally, the use of the systemic criterion is compatible with, or can potentially even replace, the Court’s current reliance on the appearance test. As mentioned earlier, that test seems to be used by the Court to mitigate overly far-reaching effects on the institutional pluralism within the Member States. Yet, by limiting the finding of a violation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU to systemic deficiencies, the bar is set higher, which protects such institutional pluralism and allows to intervene only in situations where there are powerful reasons to do so. Generally speaking, the introduction of a systemic criterion could thus be seen as providing a degree of harmonization, tying together the various aspects that can now be found in the overall body of jurisprudence.
A second reason why it would be beneficial to introduce the systemic criterion explicitly in the case law is that it provides more clarity for the national courts that wonder whether they should introduce a request for a preliminary reference. If those courts see that Article 19(1)(2) TEU will only be breached in case of systemic deficiencies, it is likely to prevent them from bringing smaller issues that are connected to the principle of judicial independence, without however jeopardizing the functioning of the judicial system, before the Court. Moreover, it will urge those courts to provide the ECJ with sufficient information and explain why the issue that is the topic of the preliminary reference may have systemic consequences. This information, in turn, will help the Court in providing a contextually sensitive judgment and will make it easier to provide a helpful response to the referring court.Footnote 103
The main argument in this section has been that the systemic criterion, despite currently not being used a lot in the Court’s case law on issues of judicial independence, could and in fact should play a more significant role. While several arguments have been given on exactly why that is the case and what would be the benefits of such an approach, the crucial point is one of balance. By limiting Article 19(1)(2) TEU to breaches of a systemic nature, which affect the proper functioning of the judiciary in a domestic system of checks and balances, the Court strikes a balance between, on the one hand, the necessary respect for its founding values, and on the other, the necessary respect towards the Member States regarding issues of domestic institutional design. Understood that way, Article 19(1)(2) TEU gives teeth to the principle of the rule of law and offers the EU institutions a legal basis to effectively act and intervene when necessary, but does not allow this provision to be (ab)used in order to challenge every minute detail of judicial organization and governance that can be linked to the principle of judicial independence. Or, to put it differently, respect for the rule of law within the EU equally means that the Court does not overstep the limits of its jurisdiction by encroaching upon the competences retained by the Member States.Footnote 104
F. Conclusion
It is, all things considered, not surprising that the EU and its institutions have started to take action to defend its founding values—and with it, its very identityFootnote 105—when certain Member States no longer want to follow the rules of the game.Footnote 106 Article 19(1)(2) TEU, as interpreted since ASJP, gives some teeth to the value of the rule of law and has become, especially in combination with penalty payments,Footnote 107 one of the more effective instruments to challenge measures in the Member States that attack the independence of the judiciary. In this light, the Court has been hailed as the last soldier standing in the fight against rule-of-law backsliding,Footnote 108 with the ASJP judgment being described as groundbreaking,Footnote 109 a judgment belonging to the Pantheon of the most significant ECJ rulings, on par with Van Gend and Loos and Costa/ENEL,Footnote 110 and the key legacy of Lenaert’s presidency.Footnote 111
Yet, if one moves beyond those superlatives, one cannot lose sight of the fact that the Court has gotten—or perhaps more aptly: given itself—a very far-reaching power and one which it should use with caution.Footnote 112 While there may be strong, normative arguments in favor of acting to safeguard the independence of the domestic judiciary, there are also strong, normative arguments that urge such action only be taken in rather exceptional circumstances.Footnote 113 It is that idea of balance between competing interests, that may be understood as underlying the final part of this article.
This article set out to describe the use of the systemic criterion in the ECJ’s case law on judicial independence. Its starting point was that, since ASJP, questions of domestic judicial organization have been brought within the purview of the Court. The cases before the Court have therefore evolved towards a more systemic, abstract assessment of issues of judicial independence. However, despite that evolution, when one delves into the case law, it quite quickly becomes apparent that the systemic criterion is barely used explicitly by the Court in its judgments. Only two strands of case law can be found, neither of which tell us particularly much about how the Court understands that criterion in cases concerning judicial independence. This article then pointed to the Court’s contextual approach. Indeed, by drawing in the relevant contextual factors, the Court may indirectly show the systemic nature of the case before it, without necessarily explicitly relying on that word. Nevertheless, that contextual approach, while a useful argumentative tool, tells us little about the operationalization of Article 19(1)(2) TEU. This article argues that the systemic criterion can and indeed should play a much more important role to play in the Court’s case law on judicial independence. It suggests that a violation of Article 19(1)(2) TEU should be limited to systemic issues, meaning that the measure in question threatens the proper functioning of the judiciary in a domestic system of checks and balances. It is argued that such an understanding of Article 19(1)(2) TEU corresponds most with the text and purpose of that provision and, more importantly, limits interventions by the EU in the domestic judicial organization to those instances where it is most imperative. In other words, an explicit use of the systemic criterion in the Court’s case law, could help to strike the abovementioned balance between defending the values of the EU, on the one hand, and respect for domestic institutional decisions on the other.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank the participants of the conference in Leuven that took place on 17 November 2022 for their useful questions and remarks, as well as the people of the Judicial Studies Institute at Masaryk University for commenting on an earlier draft of this article. All errors of course remain my own.
Competing Interests
The author declares none.
Funding Statement
This article was written in the context of a research event supported by the Institute for European Law of KU Leuven, the RESHUFFLE project (European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, grant agreement No 851621), the Institute for European Studies of the Université Saint-Louis - Bruxelles, and the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research (F.R.S-FNRS).