Yes, and where does it say "...they were due to their concerns over it being a Commission power grab..."?Diocletian wrote: ↑Sun Mar 28, 2021 2:07 pmThe building of the German Federal Supreme Court (Bundesgerichtshof) is seen in Karlsruhe
Judges at Germany's top court temporarily halted the ratification process
Germany’s top court said on Friday that the country's president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, cannot yet sign off on a law ratifying the EU's €750 billion ($884 billion) coronavirus recovery fund.
In a statement, judges at the constitutional court in Karlsruhe said they must first investigate several legal challenges against the debt-financed investment plan.
The ruling comes after both chambers of parliament ratified legislation this week, did not give a time frame when a legal decision could be expected.
Legal filings did not name the five individuals who brought the initial challenge, but judges said the ratification "shall not be executed pending the decision of the Federal Constitutional Court on the temporary injunction application."
The court gave only the first alphabet of each of the challengers' names, although members of the far-right AfD party had vowed to fight passage of the EU fund.
Lawmakers' approval of the huge fund marked a breach in a German taboo against pooled debt.
German leaders have argued that it was necessary to get the bloc back on the road to growth after a pandemic that has ravaged the economy.
The massive fund is part of a €1.8 trillion budget up to 2027 agreed by the EU’s 27 members in December.
jf/aw (AFP, Reuters)
The Joy of brexit
Re: The Joy of brexit
- Diocletian
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Re: The Joy of brexit
In an article in another German publication that I saw yesterday but cannot now find. You could of course use your own fingers to search. It was originally on the Facebook News tab.
Ticking away, the moments that make up a dull day.