Overview
- An open letter signed by nine EU member states, including Italy, Denmark, and Poland, calls for revisiting how the European Convention on Human Rights is interpreted in deportation cases.
- The signatories argue that recent rulings by the European Court of Human Rights have overly restricted national discretion in expelling criminal foreign nationals.
- Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, known for hardline migration policies, met in Rome to discuss the initiative.
- The coalition claims the Court’s evolving interpretations have shifted the balance of protected interests, limiting democratic decision-making on migration policies.
- The push comes as irregular border crossings into the EU dropped 38% in 2024, but migration remains a contentious political issue ahead of next year’s EU elections.