Obie wrote:What i think they mean by national legislation, is the national legislation they used to transpose the directive into national law. Like the 2006 Regulation that Ireland used to transpose directive 2004/38C into law.
Yes, I think you might be right there, Obie.
In which case, in the case of Ireland anyway, this is an example of a Member State's implementation of the Directive being
less ambiguous than the Directive itself. After all, Ireland's Statutory Instrument 656 of 2006 is perfectly clear (see my previous post for relevant quotes).
What is not obvious, to me anyway, is
why the Directive feels it necessary, in Article 3(2) only, to require that the host Member State shall do something specifically in accordance with its national legislation. Other areas of the Directive require the host Member State to do something, but it is not stipulated, in
any other area, that it must be done in accordance with its national legislation. My understanding is that the point of the Directive, in fact - any EU directive, is to provide instruction to the Members States to transpose its contents in to national legislation.
See what I mean?
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