Hungary

EU court clears way for funding cuts over rule of law breaches

Reading Time: 2 minutes

The European Union’s top court ruled that it can reduce funds to member states over rule of law concerns, rejecting a legal challenge from Poland and Hungary, on Wednesday. 

Hungary called the verdict “an example of how Brussels is abusing its power”, while Poland condemned the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) ruling as “an attack on our sovereignty”. Hungarian Justice Minister Judit Varga said “the CJEU made a political decision because of our upcoming referendum on child protection.” 

Nevertheless, the court ruling is the final word in a legal battle that began in earnest in 2020 when the EU introduced the “conditionality” mechanism. The two countries challenged the mechanism in court, arguing that the regulation “violates the EU treaties” and “fails to guarantee legal certainty” to member countries. However the CJEU verdict means that from now on the receipt of financing from the EU budget will be subject to the respect for the rule of law, clearing the way for stronger action against democratic backsliding. 

“It is highly likely that the mechanism will be triggered against Hungary, probably in March, but not yet against Poland,” Mujtaba Rahman of the Eurasia Group consultancy said. “It will take several months for the process and politics to play out, meaning any suspension of EU budget funds is not likely until the third or fourth quarter if this year – if at all,” Rahman added.

Marta Pardavi, co-chair of the human rights NGO the Hungarian Helsinki Committee, said the “ruling underscores that the dismantling of the rule of law will have financial consequences and must lead to triggering the conditionality regulation without delay. The Hungarian government’s latest attempts to attack the CJEU’s independence should not be taken lightly: it is yet another challenge against the rule of law, this time at a European level: this must stop,” Pardavi added.

Orsolya Vincze, legal expert at the Hungarian anti-corruption body K-Monitor said “The Hungarian Government has a long history of using EU funds to enrich and cement its own clientele –  the European Union has watched this helplessly over the last decade. Today’s court ruling has finally opened the way for the European Commission (EC) to take more effective actions against the systemic misuse of EU tax payers’ money in its member states.”

Vincze underlined, however, that “this instrument will only make a difference, if the EC is determined to make use of it. Beyond examining formal compliance with EU rules, it now becomes essential to go after those systemic malfunctions of public administration and law enforcement that have turned out to be the real enablers of corruption.” 

CET Editor

Recent Posts

Austria coalition ends five months of limbo

Austria’s centre-right People’s Party (OVP), centre-left Social Democrats (SPO) and centrist, liberal NEOs have now…

1 day ago

Dodik ban from public office sparks protests in BiH

Republika Srpska (RS) president Milorad Dodik is once again at the centre of political turmoil…

1 day ago

Ukraine, Slovakia ranked most bureaucratic countries

Except for wartorn Ukraine, Slovakia has the most red tape in Central and Eastern Europe…

1 day ago

Trump’s verbal attack on Zelenskyy prompts security rethink in CEE

The dramatic breakdown of relations between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, US President Donald Trump and…

1 day ago

Trump’s self-defeating trade war with Europe – opinion

US President Donald Trump underscored this week that he intends to impose 25% tariffs on…

5 days ago

Zelenskyy gathers support from CEE leaders

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called on European leaders to step up their efforts towards peace…

1 week ago