The horizontal clauses of arts 8-13 TFEU address a persistent challenge for the European Union: combining distinct policy objectives across the many areas of Union activity. Whilst they cannot be used as a legal basis for the adoption of EU measures, they legitimize the pursuit of the objectives they set forth, through legal bases that are designed to pursue some other treaty objective. This Article explores case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) on the legal nature of arts 8-13 TFEU, as well as their functions and input to judicial review. The analysis examines whether the horizontal clauses, as construed by the CJEU, create a legal obligation for mainstreaming. It also probes their relationship with the exercise of Union competences in the broader areas that they address (save for art. 13 TFEU due to the lack of an EU competence for animal welfare) and their implications for the choice of the legal basis of a mainstreaming measure. This Article further sheds light on the CJEU’s treatment of the horizontal clauses in cases concerning restrictions of fundamental rights and free movement, it discusses their contribution to the interpretation of EU secondary legislation and examines whether the horizontal clauses may serve to invalidate an EU measure. The analysis overall attests to moderate judicial use of arts 8-13 TFEU but shows that relevant provisions enrich and corroborate the CJEU’s reasoning on different accounts.
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