For over three decades, European markets have remained open to goods from illegal Israeli settlements, despite repeated international rulings against their presence. A proposal to restrict these imports is now gaining traction, backed by a coalition including Ireland, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Slovakia. The debate hinges on whether the measure is classified as foreign policy, which requires unanimous approval, or trade policy, which permits a qualified majority vote.
Proponents of the unanimity requirement argue that such a move constitutes a geopolitical decision. However, the European Court of Justice has long maintained that trade measures aimed at upholding human rights fall under trade law, not foreign policy. The EU previously set a precedent by restricting Russian energy imports via a qualified majority, overriding objections from Hungary and Slovakia. If that threshold sufficed for energy security, the argument for a higher bar on settlement goods appears increasingly hollow.
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