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A Stitch in Time? Mutual Trust as the EU’s Fix-All in Case C-183/23
by
O'Neill, Ruairi
in
Citizenship
2025
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A Stitch in Time? Mutual Trust as the EU’s Fix-All in Case C-183/23
by
O'Neill, Ruairi
in
Citizenship
2025
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A Stitch in Time? Mutual Trust as the EU’s Fix-All in Case C-183/23
Journal Article
A Stitch in Time? Mutual Trust as the EU’s Fix-All in Case C-183/23
2025
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Overview
In Case C-183/23, the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled on the legality of Malta’s investor citizenship scheme, holding that national citizenship cannot be acquired on a purely transactional basis. Since Union citizenship is automatically conferred upon the acquisition of national citizenship, the Court anchored the former in the EU value of solidarity, effectively imposing analogous conditions on the latter. The judgment further reinforced this reasoning by invoking the principle of mutual trust, which serves as the constitutional foundation for the cross-border recognition of national citizenship and the derived rights of Union citizenship. This landmark ruling is significant for two key reasons: first, it explicitly links Union citizenship to mutual trust, and second, it frames the free movement of Union citizens as a concrete expression of the values enshrined in Article 2 TEU. However, uncertainties remain regarding the judgment’s future implications – particularly whether Member States may refuse to recognise Union citizenship status and its derived rights, or whether more generally the disapplication of a measure based on mutual trust could simultaneously protect an EU value while infringing individual rights. This would be an exceptional, and therefore extremely unlikely, outcome, which raises questions about the reliance on mutual trust (dealing with the effects of citizenship acquisition in other Member States) in an infringement action against a Member State concerning an administrative mechanism for the award of national citizenship in that Member State (dealing with the citizenship status itself).
Publisher
European Papers. A Journal on Law and Integration
Subject
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