Fidesz MEP László Trócsányi said the foundations of a democratic European Union are at risk of being overtaken by a federal union, created without legitimacy and against the will of member states and their citizens.
In an article published by Magyar Nemzet, the former justice minister noted a recent open letter in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung signed by 30 German constitutional judges calling on the European Commission to abandon an infringement procedure against Germany. The procedure was launched in response to a decision by the German Constitutional Court last year, saying that national constitutional courts should retain the right to review EU measures to protect their constitutional identity. Otherwise, the EU would have free hand in gradually stripping member states of their competencies, he said.
“In the end, this could lead to the emergence of a federal European Union lacking legitimacy, against the will of member states and their citizens. If the EC refuses to drop the infringement procedure [against Germany], the treaties, the rule of law and European democracy, and … European integration will be put at risk,” Trócsányi said. Whereas European law derives from a consensus among the member states, its primacy over state legislation was "something the European Court of Law stated in the 1960s in order to cement its own power and prepare the ground to assume states’ rights stealthily,” he said.