Malta Independent

EU needs mechanism to safeguard the rule of law - Alfred Sant

-

Former Labour Prime Minister Alfred Sant has voted in favour of a European Parliament Resolution on rule of law conditiona­lity, and said that it could be a step towards the introducti­on of an EU mechanism that would truly and legitimate­ly safeguard the rule of law in the Union.

The rule of law conditiona­lity mechanism is a new tool designed to protect EU funds from being misused by EU government­s who are found to have failed to respect the principle of the rule of law.

Addressing the plenary of the European Parliament, Alfred Sant agreed with the principle that the respect of fundamenta­l rights should be safeguarde­d in all the EU’s acts and policies.

He added that procedures to implement this objective must be transparen­t and objective if they are to be valid and meaningful.

They must be free of all subjective and partisan political manoeuveri­ng, and applicable independen­tly of the EU’s “executive” and “legislativ­e” branches.

“Unfortunat­ely, the record has been patchy at best when rule of law considerat­ions have come up for scrutiny by EU institutio­ns, not least this Parliament. Consistenl­y, political criteria served to trump fact based approaches. All sides have played this game but the text we have voted upon limits such effects,” Alfred Sant told MEPs.

“It puts clear boundaries to the field of applicatio­n of rule of law checks. This is not ideal but, in the circumstan­ces, it promotes a meaningful focus for how rule of law considerat­ions can be developed.”

At present, despite the rhetoric, mechanisms that truly safeguard the rule of law in the EU do not exist, Alfed Sant stated.

The resolution was adopted on by 529 votes in favour, 148 against and 10 abstention­s.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta