And at the top of Page 4
This research paper was requested by the European Parliament's Committee on Constitutional
Affairs and was commissioned, overseen and published by the Policy Department for Citizens’
Rights and Constitutional Affairs.
Now I don't know about you but requested, overseen and published, to me, retains quite a significant portion of responsibility. But you are right, only the EU parliament could commission a document, oversee it and publish it then claim that it represents the opinions of the author....
Certainly it is published on the European Parliaments own web site under their
think tank.
Absolutely no reason for thinking it represents the way they view it. None at all.
Of course the qualifications of the lead author are not very valid for this...
Qualifications
Field of research
FIELD OF RESEARCH: 2. Culture and Society; 2.7. Law; CERCS SPECIALTY: S155 European law
As for other articles on the unilateral revocation of A50?
This is a good argument in favour of interpreting a notification pursuant to Article 50 to be revocable provided there is political agreement among the repentant state and the EU-27.Or, more interesting, the judgement of the UK High Court:
At paragraph 10 of Thursday’s judgment, the High Court outlined that it was ‘common ground between the parties …[that] a notice under Article 50(2) cannot be withdrawn, once it is given’.There is, of course,
this article from UK Matrix Law, which argues the semantics of "intent" over something more positive, like, actually leaving. For anyone who is unsure about the differences between EU law and UK law, I recommend wasting many hours looking at Caveat Emptor, as it applies in UK law, especially it's applicability in the UK and the opposite for any contract which extends beyond the UK into other EU parties.
Finally after a lot of digging, I found some of what you are getting at.
The three knights opinion
notification would have to be treated as having lapsed because the constitutional requirements necessary to give effect to the notified intention have not been met”…“it would be incompatible with the European Union Treaties for a Member State to be forced out of the Union against its will, or contrary to its own constitutional requirements
There is only one slight problem with that line of thinking. The Miller case did not mandate that the Government had to keep on going back to Parliament to get approval, only that the Government had to seek Parliamentary approval to notify intent.
See the bill.
Under the terms of the treaty, the UK only has to
decide to withdraw from the Union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.
Which it clearly did with the referendum and the bill to trigger A50.
Reading the
letter from the PM to Tusk, There is not one single thing about the requirement of the member state to meet its constitutional requirements to agree to the "exit deal". There is a very good reason for this, the UK does not have that competence, the EU does.
Having read the arguments for unilateral revocation, I find that the Opinions against have stronger ground. The opinions for unilateral revocation all revolve around semantics, obscure points of law, an expectation that UK law overrules EU law in this case.
This is totally in opposition to the paper commissioned by the EU parliament and published on their website.
I also note that the "three knights" are all British....