The General Data Protection Regulation and its Violation of EU Treaties

Mario Rosentau
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

While the EU General Data Protection Regulation, which entered force on 25 May, is generally good and necessary in its vigorous protection of the fundamental rights of self‑determination and identity of European people, the article identifies a core issue that has gone unnoticed: the GDPR violates EU treaties. It is, at base, a ‘European law’, yet European laws are banned under the TEU and TFEU. The article examines the background for this conflict. The ambitious plan for ratification of 2003’s draft treaty establishing a constitution for Europe fell at the first hurdle in 2005. The draft Constitution envisaged a legislative innovation: the European law and European framework law, directly applicable in the Member States and superior to them. These legal instruments, envisaged as replacing EU regulations, could readily be cited as a major federalist pillar of the draft. Yet there would be no European laws – they were rejected with the draft constitution in the 2005 referenda, and the current treaties do not foresee any law-like European legislation. The author outlines the GDPR’s nature as a European law thus: the regulation 1) potentially concerns all residents of Europe, albeit by adding to the rights of individuals and protecting their freedoms; 2) addresses virtually all legal entities and undertakings acting, physically or through a network, in the European judicial area; 3) addresses the Member States and the EU itself; 4) and has cross-border applicability and covers the whole EU. Furthermore, its reach extends to service providers outside the EU if their service targets EU data subjects. There are substantial impacts on subjects on whom obligations are substantial. Hence, the author concludes that the GDPR’s scope, depth, and impacts exceed all the limits that the EU treaties permit for regulations. Furthermore, the treaties do not even know the term ‘general regulation’. Since the GDPR possesses the characteristics of a ‘European law’ – and even is ‘seamlessly’ positioned in a place reserved by the draft EU Constitution for the ‘European law on data protection’ – while such laws have been rejected, a key issue is highlighted: how deep an EU-level political integration and relinquishment of the individual European nations’ sovereignty do the Member States actually want? For instance, most analyses of the causes of Brexit cite loss of sovereignty of the UK as one of the main factors in the decision. The author concludes that, since the GDPR is with us to stay, amendment of the EU treaties can no longer be avoided. Noble objectives cannot justify infringements of the present ‘European Constitution’ and the constitutions of the Member States.
《通用数据保护条例》及其对欧盟条约的违反
虽然5月25日生效的《欧盟通用数据保护条例》在大力保护欧洲人的自决权和身份方面总体上是好的,也是必要的,但该条款指出了一个没有被注意到的核心问题:GDPR违反了欧盟条约。从根本上讲,这是一项“欧洲法律”,但欧洲法律在TEU和TFEU下是被禁止的。这篇文章探讨了这场冲突的背景。批准2003年欧洲宪法条约草案的宏伟计划在2005年遇到了第一个障碍。《宪法》草案设想了一项立法创新:欧洲法律和欧洲框架法,直接适用于成员国并优于它们。这些法律文书被设想取代欧盟法规,可以很容易地被认为是草案的主要联邦支柱。然而,不会有欧洲法律——它们在2005年的公民投票中被宪法草案否决了,而且目前的条约也没有预见到任何类似欧洲立法的法律。因此,作者概述了《通用数据保护条例》作为欧洲法律的性质:该条例1)可能涉及所有欧洲居民,尽管增加了个人权利并保护了他们的自由;2) 涉及在欧洲司法领域实际或通过网络行事的几乎所有法律实体和企业;3) 针对成员国和欧盟本身;4) 具有跨国界适用性,覆盖整个欧盟。此外,如果欧盟以外的服务提供商的服务以欧盟数据主体为目标,其覆盖范围将扩大到这些服务提供商。对承担重大义务的主体产生重大影响。因此,作者得出结论,GDPR的范围、深度和影响超过了欧盟条约允许的所有监管限制。此外,条约甚至不知道“一般规则”一词。由于GDPR具有“欧洲法律”的特征,甚至“无缝”地定位在欧盟宪法草案为“欧洲数据保护法”保留的位置,而这些法律已被拒绝,强调了一个关键问题:成员国实际希望欧盟层面的政治一体化和放弃个别欧洲国家的主权有多深?例如,大多数对英国脱欧原因的分析都认为,英国主权的丧失是做出这一决定的主要因素之一。作者得出的结论是,由于《通用数据保护条例》与我们同在,对欧盟条约的修改再也无法避免。崇高的目标不能成为违反现行“欧洲宪法”和成员国宪法的正当理由。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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