The European Tribune is a forum for thoughtful dialogue of European and international issues. You are invited to post comments and your own articles.
Please REGISTER to post.
If in the agreement to come out of the article 50 negotiation the UK does not commit to the jurisdiction of the CJEU within its EEA competences, then the UK will be automatically suspended from the EEA on the 29th of September of 2019 (six months after breach, as provisioned in article 102).
Could the UK not become subject to the jurisdiction of the EFTA Court in that instance, similar to Iceland, Norway and Lichtenstein? As I understand it, May has a particular problem with the CJEU. I have never heard her mention the EFTA court and Davis has talked of coming to some arbitration agreement with the EU as part of a trade deal. The EFTA Court could be a ready made solution in that instance, always assuming we are in the business of looking for solutions... Index of Frank's Diaries
One thing I do not is if the EFTA court can have jurisdiction over a non EFTA member. luis_de_sousa@mastodon.social
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 26 3 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 31
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 22 3 comments
by Cat - Jan 25 50 comments
by Oui - Jan 9 21 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 13 28 comments
by gmoke - Jan 20
by Oui - Jan 15 90 comments
by gmoke - Jan 29
by Oui - Jan 2731 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 263 comments
by Cat - Jan 2550 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 223 comments
by Oui - Jan 2110 comments
by Oui - Jan 21
by Oui - Jan 20
by Oui - Jan 1839 comments
by Oui - Jan 1590 comments
by Oui - Jan 144 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Jan 1328 comments
by Oui - Jan 1219 comments
by Oui - Jan 1120 comments
by Oui - Jan 1031 comments
by Oui - Jan 921 comments
by NBBooks - Jan 810 comments
by Oui - Jan 717 comments