-
Paul topples Tiafoe to book Houston ATP final against Burruchaga
-
Jokic out-duels Wemby as Nuggets down Spurs in overtime
-
Trump gives Iran 48 hours to make deal, search for missing airman continues
-
Lens' title push in Ligue 1 hit hard by Lille defeat
-
Arteta demands Arsenal response after FA Cup shocker at Southampton
-
Barca move clear in La Liga as Real Madrid stumble
-
Lakers injury crisis deepens as Reaves out for regular season
-
Lens' title push hit hard by Lille defeat
-
Lewandowski claims leaders Barca vital Liga win at Atletico
-
Arsenal stunned by Southampton in FA Cup quarter-finals
-
Artemis astronauts preparing for historic lunar flyby
-
Burruchaga beats Tirante to reach first ATP final
-
Pegula downs Jovic to reach WTA Charleston final
-
Rosenior in a 'good place' with Fernandez despite Chelsea star's ban
-
Trump gives Iran 48 hours to make deal, as US hunts for airman
-
US 1996 Olympic squad, WNBA stars head Hall of Fame picks
-
Hosts Canada offer heartbroken Italians jersey swap for World Cup
-
Toulouse crush Bristol to move into Champions Cup quarters
-
Israeli strikes kill two girls in southern Lebanon, soldier killed in battle
-
Deshpande, Rajasthan hold nerve to edge Gujarat in IPL
-
Deshpande and Rajasthan hold nerve to edge Gujarat in IPL
-
'He'd play in a wheelchair': Bayern back Kane for Real return
-
Bushehr: Iran's only nuclear power plant
-
Mideast war presents 'serious risk' for Africa: report
-
French boats set sail to join Gaza aid flotilla
-
Erdogan, Zelensky discuss energy security, peace efforts
-
Muriqi strikes late as Mallorca stun Real Madrid
-
Israel strikes Tyre in south Lebanon after evacuation warnings
-
Toulon, Bath reach last eight of Champions Cup
-
Bayern storm back late to win at Freiburg before Real showdown
-
Thousands rally against racism in Paris suburb to defend mayor
-
Slot urges Liverpool to stick together after FA Cup rout at Man City
-
Cambridge win fourth straight Boat Race
-
Police arrest suspect in Jewish ambulance arson case in court
-
Russian strike on Ukraine market kills five, wounds 25
-
French jury upholds jail terms for three rugby players over gang rape
-
Zelensky in Istanbul for security talks with Erdogan
-
Rizvi stars as Delhi down Mumbai to top IPL table
-
Haaland treble destroys Liverpool as Man City reach FA Cup semis
-
Rain, storms kill 121 in Afghanistan and Pakistan in two weeks
-
Russian strike on Ukraine market kills five, wounds 19
-
Canadian astronaut describes 'phenomenal' Artemis journey
-
European drivers choke on rising diesel prices
-
Belgian prison tour lays bare grim reality of life behind bars
-
Iran, US race to find crew member of crashed American fighter jet
-
Brown, Tatum fuel Celtics over Bucks, Mavs teen Flagg scores 51
-
Sri Lanka struggles to avert economic collapse over Mideast war
-
Coughlin builds five-shot lead at LPGA Aramco Championship
-
58 tortillas, five hot sauces and one toilet: life aboard spacecraft Orion
-
Artemis mission shares office space -- and physics -- with Apollo
EU court to deliver key rule-of-law judgement
The EU's highest court will rule Wednesday on whether European Union funds can be slashed for member states flouting democratic standards, a case with major implications for Poland and Hungary.
Both EU countries -- which Brussels says are backsliding on rule of law -- launched the legal challenge being heard by the European Court of Justice (ECJ). They want the so-called "conditionality mechanism" to be invalidated.
But in December the court's advisor, the advocate general, concluded that the Polish-Hungarian challenge should be rejected, arguing that the conditionality mechanism was compatible with the EU's treaties.
Should the judges decide the same, it would open the door to the European Commission cutting their funding.
The European Parliament, which approves the EU's multi-year budgets, has for months called for the commission to do just that, stressing that the conditionality instrument has been available since the beginning of last year.
It has even launched its own legal action, accusing the commission of inaction.
But the EU executive, wary of being wrong-footed by court rulings and aware it needs a qualified majority of member states to approve the mechanism's use, has been determined to build a cast-iron case, step-by-step.
In November, it sent formal letters to Warsaw and Budapest setting out what it sees as the democratic shortfalls.
For Poland, it criticises judicial reforms it believes undermine judges' independence and a refusal to accept the primacy of EU law over Polish law.
For Hungary, it is about public procurement, conflict of interests and corruption.
- Live broadcast -
In a sign of how anticipated Wednesday's judgment is, the court will for the first time broadcast its ruling live.
That decision will then be debated in the European Parliament, where EU budget commissioner Johannes Hahn will stand in for commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, who pulled out to focus on the military crisis over Ukraine.
If the ECJ confirms the right to cut money on these grounds, "we expect the European Commission to start putting the mechanism into action right away", said the head of the conservative EPP bloc in the parliament, Manfred Weber.
Poland's Constitutional Court is due to issue its own conclusions on the EU conditionality mechanism on Thursday. The court is considered to be close to the ruling Law and Justice party that continues to defy Brussels.
If the ECJ ruling goes against Poland and Hungary, it is expected that both countries will throw up more legal challenges to try to overturn it.
The conditionality mechanism was created in 2020, after a summit at the height of the coronavirus pandemic that agreed common borrowing to build an 800-billion-euro ($900 billion) pile of grants and loans for EU countries to recover.
Budget hawks, including Austria and the Netherlands, demanded the conditionality mechanism to put guard rails around the spending of taxpayers' money.
Ch.P.Lewis--AT