Lucie Delvigne v. Commune de Lespesses(Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union — Articles 39 and 49 — European Parliament — Elections — Right to vote — Citizenship of the European Union — Retroactive effect of the more lenient criminal law — National legislation providing for the deprivation of the right to vote in the case of a criminal conviction by a final judgment delivered before 1 March 1994))
Lucie Delvigne v. Commune de Lespesses(Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union — Articles 39 and 49 — European Parliament — Elections — Right to vote — Citizenship of the European Union — Retroactive effect of the more lenient criminal law — National legislation providing for the deprivation of the right to vote in the case of a criminal conviction by a final judgment delivered before 1 March 1994))
Categories Case Laws, EU, Regional Mechanism Decisions
Tags case law, Charter of Fundamental Rights, citizenship, Commune de Lespesses, Criminal Code, criminal conviction, criminal law, deprivation of civic rights, deprivation of the right to vote, electoral procedure, electoral roll, electoral system, EU law, EU law implementation, European Commission, European Communities, European Parliament, European Parliament elections, European Union, French law, fundamental rights, implementation, lawfulness, legal context, Lucie Delvigne, National legislation, proportionate, retroactive effect, retroactive effect of criminal law, Right to Vote, right to vote in European Parliament elections, voting ban
The case "Lucie Delvigne v. Commune de Lespesses" involved a reference for a preliminary ruling concerning the interpretation of Articles 39 and 49 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (EU). The case revolved around the right to vote in European Parliament elections and the retroactive effect of criminal law on this right.
₦500.00