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The Data Retention Directive was adopted in 2006 in very controversial circumstances. Article 15 of the Directive placed a clear obligation on the European Commission (EC), to submit "no later than 15 September 2010" a report on the evaluation of the Directive and its impact on economic operators and consumers". Today is the 203rd day since that evaluation report was due to be published. This raises the obvious question - why has the Commission, as "guardian of the treaties" failed to respect its legal obligation and when will it finally comply?
The main reason for the delay is that some crucial mistakes were made at the beginning of the review process. Firstly, the Commission failed to recognise that, under the Charter on Fundamental Rights, the Directive is only legal if it is both "necessary and genuinely meet(s) objectives of general interest." Its second mistake was to reach its conclusion ("data retention is here to stay") before starting the research, thereby limiting its scope and assuming that the Member States would have answers to its questions about the assumed value of data retention. The Commission then limited itself further by not seeking any information from Member States that had not implemented the Directive. This definitively prevented the Commission from being able to compare how much essential extra data is stored as a result of the Directive, thereby making the legislation "necessary".
As a result, when the Commission asked for data in the second quarter of 2010, it received little useable information from the Member States. As a result, Commissioner Malmström made a personal plea to Member States during the July 15 Justice and Home Affairs Council, followed by a letter (linked below) from the Commission to Member States. The letter betrays the Commission's disregard for the Charter (which each Commissioner swore a legally binding oath to support) by showing that it is not seeking to demonstrate "necessity" - "without this information it will be difficult for the Commission to adequately demonstrate that the Directive is useful". It further lowered the level of evidence it was requesting by asking for examples of where data retained under the Directive "played a determining role", rather than asking for examples of where data that would not otherwise have been retained played a determining role.
Having created this untenable situation, the Commission managed to dig itself even deeper during the "Taking on the Data Retention Directive" conference in December 2010. For reasons that are far from obvious, Commissioner Malmström made a speech arguing that "data retention is here to stay", despite the fact that inadequate information had been received from the Member States (who mostly ignored her personal plea at the July Council meeting) and despite the fact that her services were still months away from being able to provide a useable summary of the paltry information that was provided by the Member States.
So, where are we now? The Home Affairs Directorate General (DG HOME) of the European Commission submitted a draft evaluation report at the end of February, resplendent in blank spaces where the Member State information should have been put, for review by colleagues from the rest of the Commission. These have now provided their feedback which, by all accounts, did not lavish praise on the work done so far. When and how the DG HOME will update the document based on this feedback is not yet clear - what is clear is the disastrous position their prejudging of the outcome of this process has created.
The Commission has simply no basis, on the weak evidence presented by the Member States, to argue that the value added to law enforcement by the Directive shows that it is "necessary" (and therefore legal). It therefore cannot move forward with a revision of the Directive. For the same reason, it cannot opt simply to do nothing. It also cannot refine the Directive by learning from the experience of Member States, like Germany and Romania, that have not implemented the Directive, for the simple reason that it did not request any information from those countries. And, having pandered to the wishes of certain large Member States by proclaiming that "data retention is here to stay," even a tactical retreat seems politically difficult, even if it is legally and practically the only reasonable step left.
Perhaps the Commission should stop digging and start listening, learning from the insightful words of a Swedish Liberal MEP on the day that the Directive was adopted in the European Parliament. "This is a difficult issue on which to adopt a position. Reflection is required, together with a solid factual basis in relation to the privacy aspect, the technical consequences and the actual costs for telecommunications operators and thus consumers."
Data retention Directive
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2006:105:00...
Letter from the Commission to Member States (27.06.2011)
http://www.edri.org/files/drd_letter.pdf
Czech Constitutional Court rejects Data Retention Law (31.03.2011)
http://www.edri.org/czech-decision-data-retention
EDRi-gram: Romanian Constitutional Court Decision against Data Retention
(2.12.2009)
http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number7.23/romania-decision-data-retentio...
EDRi-gram: German Federal Constitutional Court Rejects Data Retention Law
(10.03.2010)
http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number8.5/german-decision-data-retention-...
Commissioner Malmström's "data retention is here to stay" speech (3.12.2010)
http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/10/723
Explanations of vote in the Euopean Parliament on the Data Retention
Directive
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//TEXT+CRE+2...
(Contribution by Joe McNamee - EDRi)