| Rank | Name | Country | Group | Speeches | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Lukas Sieper | Germany DEU | Non-attached Members (NI) | 390 |
| 2 |
|
Juan Fernando López Aguilar | Spain ESP | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 354 |
| 3 |
|
Sebastian Tynkkynen | Finland FIN | European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) | 331 |
| 4 |
|
João Oliveira | Portugal PRT | The Left in the European Parliament (GUE/NGL) | 232 |
| 5 |
|
Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis | Lithuania LTU | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 227 |
All Contributions (176)
Implementation and streamlining of EU internal market rules to strengthen the single market (debate)
Ms President, Commissioner. In Malta we understand more the importance of the common market. And why do we do that? Perhaps more than other Member States. Because we are an island country that necessarily want to import the most essential products from the European continent on a daily basis. We can talk a lot about legislation, about streamlining the rules of the European internal market. But ultimately, when do our citizens, our consumers appreciate the European single market? It's when they go to pay. And what our consumers, especially Maltese and Gozitan consumers, are noticing is the difference in the price they are paying for the most essential products compared to other Member States. And so this reduces trust, trust in the European single market which, ultimately, is the most fundamental and important element for the European project. And so we have to see and work so that, in addition to having common standards, we have low prices and higher product quality. Thus, the European internal market remains relevant in the eyes of people. We can give the best deal to our customers.
Package travel and linked travel arrangements: make the protection of travellers more effective and simplify and clarify certain aspects (debate)
Madam President, before I conclude, I would like to thank first and foremost to all the shadows that have collaborated to find consensus on this very important file. We have different political opinions; a different political background; we come from different Member States with very different realities, with specific interests, specific practices, also in the tourism industry; but still we came together and struck a balance between what we have heard from travel agents and also what we have heard from consumer associations, and directly from consumers, to find the right balance between these different interests. And in this delicate exercise, which we will take forward towards the Member States in the trilogue negotiations, we are hoping to ultimately find the right balance to increase consumer protection, but at the same time also strengthen our tourist operators. Therefore we want to keep vouchers voluntary – and this is an important line for my political group. We want to keep the protection and insurance of travel organisers in case of bankruptcy in place. Let us see the positive in this file that can make the difference for holidaymakers around Europe. And I count on your support in the vote that we have tomorrow.
Package travel and linked travel arrangements: make the protection of travellers more effective and simplify and clarify certain aspects (debate)
Mr President, dear Commissioner, dear colleagues, it is the worst possible holiday experience being stranded in a far-off place as a traveller because your travel organiser went bankrupt. Luckily, we have strong EU consumer protection in place that makes sure that travel organisers and their consumers are insured. Still, we as Parliament asked for an update to the rules for package travel. We need to learn from the experiences from the default of Thomas Cook, which affected hundreds of thousands of European holidaymakers. In addition, the consequences of travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic made it necessary to update our rules on what will happen in extraordinary circumstances and also to regulate the use of vouchers. We have to thank, first and foremost, the European Commission for a very ambitious proposal, which I took as a firm basis in my work as rapporteur. For me personally, and also for my political family, the interests of our citizens, of our consumers and strengthening their protection is the starting point and number one priority. Coming from Malta, one of Europe's finest holiday destinations, the tourism industry is something which is very close to home. Many travel agencies that organise these packages are small, privately owned businesses and we want to support them and therefore we needed to find a very balanced approach. It is my conviction that we achieved such a balance in the report that we will be voting on tomorrow. One aspect that received quite some attention was the definition of 'package travel'. This, in the end, decides whether or not a consumer will receive protection from the Directive. We kept a special eye out for potential circumvention and made sure that if a travel organiser directly retargets a traveller with additional services within 24 hours, this will still constitute a package. In exchange, we removed the concept of linked travel arrangements that was very unclear for organisers and not useful either for consumers. This was an important request coming directly from the travel industry. Another important element are the rights of consumers to terminate a package without paying a fee in the case of extraordinary circumstances at the place of departure, destination and journey. If such a circumstance prohibits you from travelling in the 28 days before your travel you have the right to terminate. When deciding if the consumer can cancel the travel warnings of national authorities, like the ones during the COVID-19 pandemic, are also taken into account. The right to a refund must happen within 14 days, and the right to a refund will become a right that each and every traveller can enjoy. For the first time, we are regulating the use of vouchers and we make it clear that they should remain voluntary for consumers to accept. After a validity of 12 months, travellers that did not use a voucher should get a refund of the original value of the amount that they paid for the travel package. For all these rules enforcement, like everything, will always remain key. This is why we introduced two new aspects: harmonisation of fines and, very importantly, a complaint handling mechanism. Those companies that infringe the Package Travel Directive can face a minimum fine of 4 % of annual turnover, which we introduce. In addition, to make sure that you get an answer in case of issues, we created a complaint handling mechanism with mandatory deadlines to keep. You need to get a first answer within 7 working days and a reasoned reply within 30 working days. Consumer protection on paper looks nice, but this mandatory complaint mechanism will help you to get your rights respected as a traveller. I know that there is a growing political divide in this House on many different political issues, but I am happy to see that we can come together in a broad majority on issues that really matter for our voters: to book and enjoy a holiday with peace of mind and get help or protection if something goes wrong, or if they are faced with unexpected circumstances. If you support this report, we will deliver on a good piece of legislation for holidaymakers. This is close to the people we try to serve in this very House.
State of the Union (debate)
When discussing the state of the European Union, Ms President, we cannot ignore the state of the world around us. Our electorate is asking you to stop the murder in Gaza. The association agreement with the Israeli Government as a whole, not parts thereof, has been completely terminated. There can be no business as usual with a country committing genocide. This is contrary to our treaties. European citizens are also concerned about what could happen, what could emerge from an unpredictable President in the White House. And today we have heard the total silence about it. We cannot be blackmailed to weaken our digital laws due to tensions in transatlantic trade. Following what the US administration said about the DSA, you should activate the anti-coercion mechanism as soon as possible. Europe must become more resilient and invest in its digital public infrastructure. We are 80 percent dependent on foreign technologies. It should be our priority to bring this figure down by 2030, i.e. at the end of the digital decade. We need the right to disconnect, an ambitious affordable housing strategy and more social assistance for our citizens as soon as possible.
European Citizens' Initiative 'Cohesion policy for the equality of the regions and sustainability of the regional cultures' (debate)
Mr President, colleagues, the European citizens' initiative is a strong reminder of the central role that citizens should play in European politics. When it comes to cohesion policy, the role of our citizens who are directly affected, ultimately, when it comes to this policy, when it comes to funds directly directed towards cohesion, is more crucial than ever. And today I will be speaking as a representative coming from the smallest Member State, Malta. It is a country facing multiple challenges; challenges of double insularity, our demographic vulnerability and unequal access to various opportunities, centrally also the European common market. And so the opportunities and cohesion policy for small Member States, island Member States such as Malta, are crucial. Crucial in order to protect our regions with different cultural characteristics, different linguistic characteristics, distinct ethnic characteristics. And so funding, respecting local voices and preserving the rich diversity of the European Union must remain crucial, central in our cohesion policy. Let us recognise this initiative as an important contribution to European cohesion policy, justice, dignity, the tangible progress of all regions, regardless of their size and status.
EU-US trade negotiations (debate)
Vice-President of the Commission, I do not hesitate for you and those who are currently leading the negotiations with the US administration. It is impossible to work with an erratic and unreliable person like President Trump. Today he announces the tariffs and the next day he postpones them so that the next day he will also start threatening them again. Trade relations definitely don't work like this. Ultimately it is our citizens who will have to bear the burden through increased prices that consumers will have to pay. There is an imbalance. There is an imbalance in trade with America, not only when it comes to goods but also when it comes to services and Europe to date is still too dependent on American Big Tech. The last thing we want is to weaken our digital regulations, such as the Digital Markets Act to please Americans. We should no longer fall into this trap. If they want to do business in our market, a market of five hundred million consumers, they have to abide by our rules. Our move towards a value-based digital transformation is not an exchange tool in these negotiations. If Apple, Google, Meta and X do not respect the law, they should be fined. We expect the Commission not to hesitate to enforce our digital rules.
Presentation of the programme of activities of the Danish Presidency (debate)
Ms President, Prime Minister, there could not be a better moment for Denmark, one of the most digitalised countries, to take over the presidency of the European Union. The dispute over Greenland has shown that Denmark, whose country and the European Union are too dependent on American technologies. It is time to take concrete steps and strengthen our sovereignty over technologies. Digital competitiveness requires Europe to build its capacity in key digital technologies. Innovation is achieved by investment supporting alternative digital solutions. We want to create European alternatives that break the inethical financial models of date harvesting u profiling. Only through these options can we overcome the challenges of protecting young people from abusive content, stopping addictive algorithms and limiting excessive use of digital gadgets. I agree that we urgently need a strategy for start-ups, scaleups and technology infrastructures in order to strengthen our technological ecosystems. I am confident that the Danes have the knowledge to make progress on our digital agenda.
Stopping the genocide in Gaza: time for EU sanctions (topical debate)
Ms President, Finally, after twenty months this parliament has risen from sleep and we have the title that suits the Israeli State: genocide, shootings, killings of innocent people. Even now, we are seeing a situation where refugees who are queuing to be given a piece of bread, to be given a bottle of water, are also being killed while waiting for food. This is unacceptable and now is the time after the European Commission liked to hide its own report, which was indicating that this is genocide, that war crimes have been committed. Now is the time to take action. And yes, action can be taken, action can be taken, first and foremost, to put an end to the Association Agreement as far as possible, on the basis of Article 2, in order to impose the strongest sanctions on this State committing genocide and ultimately to stop this parliament, among others, granting red carpet treatment to those who are part of the government of Netanyahu, a government that is directly associated with genocide and war crimes. Let's get up from sleep. Let's take a look at these victims who are on a daily basis...
Implementation report on the Recovery and Resilience Facility (debate)
Ms President, Commissioner, when Europe found itself in an increpative position when the pandemic broke out, in this room we chose to make the necessary investments. The European Fund to recover from Covid has made it possible for our Member States to invest billions in our future, especially when it comes to the digital and environmental transitions. However, we must also be a bit critical of the results. Despite the fact that one fifth of investments must be allocated to the digital transition. Europe remains dependent on foreign technologies, so that society, the economy and even public services can function. When Draghi talks about competitiveness and Letta about innovation, we must listen more to the focus of investment in digital infrastructures. The results of the recovery and resilience fund are mixed and the digital divide between Member States is still present. That is why we are advocating with the European Commission to take stock of the experience gained in designing the new programme for our digital future. A digital sovereignty fund that finances technologies that make us resilient.
Combating the sexual abuse and sexual exploitation of children and child sexual abuse material and replacing Council Framework Decision 2004/68/JHA (recast) (debate)
Ms President, first of all a message to the far-right colleagues: child abuse is not committed on the basis of sexual orientation, child abuse is, unfortunately, committed by straight persons and even persons of different sexual orientations. That is, let's not try, we do not try to throw an ugly shadow on an important minority part of our society. As a father, it is one of the most worrying things that tomorrow can see my daughter be abused in a world in which ultimately our children feel comfortable to interact. But unfortunately, online sexual abuse is on the rise. Until yesterday, I was confronted with a case of an 11-year-old girl who was threatened with pornographic material on her, which was created with artificial intelligence and so today the responsibilities on us even based on the evolution of technology are far greater than we are. And I think that this directive must place more responsibility on Big Tech so that they are also responsible for the material that is generated and promoted on their platforms. It is important, it is vital that in these cases which have no border of any kind, it is important to have, so more coordination and so it is vital that we continue this work on this directive and see that as a European Parliament we all speak with one voice.
Improving mental health at work (debate)
I would like to start by sending first and foremost a message to far right colleague Anderson, who has just spoken: or is living in a parallel world, and has no idea of the enormous mental health problems our citizens are facing. Forty-six percent of European citizens, in the latest Eurobarometer survey, confirmed that they are facing mental health problems and so it is more urgent than ever that the European Commission – and therefore we must give our full support to the European Commission – needs to legislate today before tomorrow the right of, among others,right to disconnect, to finally see that this disconnect, which is so important and so important, is so important that in the end, the fundamental rights of our workers to maximum working time, the minimum rest time that they should enjoy are enjoyed with their families, their loved ones, are enjoyed in the world that today the world of work has changed, and so in turn one message to the Vice-President of the European Commission: will find our full support after all the discussions held with the social partners, after this European Parliament has already approved the legislation of theright to disconnect, to make this right a reality for all European workers.
Single Market Strategy (debate)
Mr President, Vice-President of the Commission, It is important for us always, when talking about the European Single Market, to keep in mind first and foremost the interests of European consumers, and therefore as a group of Socialists and Democrats, we have always pushed forward the idea, especially during the discussions on the European Digital Services Act, of having to level playing field: what is illegal on an offline basis should also be illegal on an online basis. But we've got level playing field in European regulations we do not achieve it by burdening our consumers, our most vulnerable consumers with more burdens. And here I am also referring to the intention, on the part of the European Commission, to burden consumers – and I say the most vulnerable consumers, the least able consumers, who choose to shop online from outside the European Union – with additional burdens. Additional weights are not the solution. The solution is for distributors, producers outside the European Union, who are using platforms to directly charge European consumers, to make the same regulations applicable to European producers and distributors. Only then will we be able to protect first and foremost the interests of our consumers, for the health and safety of the most vulnerable consumers on our market, but also at the same time, we will be able to protect the interests of European industries, not by burdening our consumers with exceptional extra burdens. This is not the solution.
Old challenges and new commercial practices in the internal market (debate)
Mr President, The European single market remains one of the most important elements in the European project for our citizens. But it is important that this market continues to evolve, its rules continue to evolve, so that ultimately we can see that the realities of the most bordering Member States, islands, these same rules are also working in their favour. And here I would also like to talk about the different particular realities that small Member States such as Malta are facing, especially because of price increases, inflation of the most essential products in this common market. And so it is important to make sure that we have more flexibility when it comes to European single market regulations so that small and island Member States can ultimately benefit from this right, the right of movement and the freedom of movement for goods and services, which ultimately benefits much larger countries than us. But at the end of the day it is also essential to make sure that we have stricter rules when it comes also to the import of products outside the European Union. In a market where it is going more on an online basis than in traditional shops it is important to see that we have the same kind of rules and the same kind of rights for consumers buying on an online basis and those buying on an offline basis. But we can never do this by burdening our consumers with more burdens, especially financial burdens.
The fine against TikTok and the need to strengthen the protection of citizens’ rights on social media platforms (debate)
Madam President, within the European Union, all tech platforms need to respect the rules that we have democratically enacted. When it comes to our privacy and our personal data the GDPR has been the cornerstone of the EU's leading role when it comes to regulating the online world. However, rules are only strong when they are properly enforced, and that is why we are happy to see that the Irish Data Protection Authority took action against TikTok – and when we are speaking of TikTok, we are speaking of a platform that is being used daily by millions of European children. We have to go by what they published so far. But we have the fullest confidence in the diligent process that led to the decision of the independent authority. It cannot be that the personal data of EU citizens ends up in the hands of the Chinese Government. Our data may not be transferred outside the EU unless the Commission takes a decision on the adequacy of the data protection in a third country, or appropriate safeguards are guaranteed for China. I believe that no such decision was taken, and we cannot expect such a decision to come any time soon, when the way it deals with personal data in its domestic approach is totally different from how we deal with data based on our values. The fact that TikTok did not offer full transparency on the transfer of data and submitted wrong information to the inquiry makes the matters worse. A fine of EUR 530 million is hefty and should be a deterrent for TikTok, but the decision of the Data Protection Authority to bring its data processing into line with the GDPR within six months is the most important element today. We need to be vigilant and if in six months TikTok is still not compliant with Europe's data rules, more extreme enforcement measures should be taken. Either TikTok abides by our rules and stops the transfer of data to China completely, or it should be banned from operating or sold to a new entity that is willing to keep the personal data in Europe.
Malta's Golden Passport scheme circumventing EU sanctions against Russia (debate)
Mr President, can I make a point of order because some misconceptions have been repeated by our colleague here? As already held in 2022, applicants from Belarus and Russia have stopped both pending applications and applications...
Malta's Golden Passport scheme circumventing EU sanctions against Russia (debate)
Mr President, Malta will respect the judgement of the European Court. A ruling that is still strange because it is contrary to the opinion of Irish Attorney General Collins who also said last October that there is no case against Malta. A ruling also contradicting the European Commission's view that in January 2014 the Maltese investor citizenship scheme is not contrary to the Treaties of the European Union. It is clear, however, that today's discussion is misguided from the beginning to the end and let me tell you why. Firstly, since March 2022, all applications of Russian citizens and Belarus have been suspended. Therefore, I cannot understand the title of today's discussion that this scheme has been used by Malta to evade sanctions against Russia. I also wonder how Austria, a Member State with a scheme identical to the Maltese one, was completely left out of the discussion. I wonder how Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Portugal and Spain that all have investor residence schemes can run similar schemes, but vis-à-vis Malta because there are enthusiasts, all the winds arise. We will follow the Court's decision to have a continued wealth-free scheme, because Malta has nothing less than other Member States.
Winning the global tech race: boosting innovation and closing funding gaps (topical debate)
Mr President, our digital future is not a game, this is not a race we can win against China or the United States. We want to build a digital world where our society, our economies flourish, based on European values and respecting privacy laws, towards consumer protection laws. The problems we face are that Europe is too dependent on other continents, on foreign Big Tech, the digital infrastructures, essential that our citizens use on a daily basis. We must urgently recuperate and invest, in a European digital ecosystem, with a European technology enterprise working for alternative solutions across all layers of digital technology; from programs on mobile phones to computers to hardware, to cloud infrastructure. We have the talent, but we have to scale up the capacity. Expecting European capital markets to provide entrepreneurial capital on the Silicon Valley model is just a dream. We have to find our way. If we want to take digital sovereignty seriously, we want a European digital sovereignty fund that corresponds to our ambitions, which corresponds to our values. It is useless to speak of resilience when we remain dependent on technology coming from outside the European continent. Let's invest seriously today before tomorrow.
Conclusions of the European Council meeting of 20 March 2025 (debate)
Ms President, today the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is catastrophic. We have seen, up to the last few hours, a mass grave that included fifteen humanitarian workers killed by the Israeli regime. This is not just a tragedy, but a rampant violation of international law. The International Court of Justice has made it clear that every state around the world must intervene in order to stop genocide and ensure accountability for war crimes. And so today is an occasion where we have the Commission, the President of the European Parliament and the President of the Council who call on them to take urgent action to put an end first and foremost to the association agreement between the European Union and Israel, to impose sanctions and to support the reconstruction plan in Gaza. The Palestinian people have already suffered for decades. We cannot be silent in the face of this genocide. This is a moral test for us and for the values we embrace. The European Union must act now for the sake of justice, the exercise of international law and above all humanity.
EU Consumers Day: filling the gaps in protecting 440 million consumers in the EU (debate)
Mr President, if we want the European project to remain relevant we must be sure that the European market works fairly in favour of all consumers. In a world where platform shopping continues to grow, there is a need to have rules that give consumers the same rights to shop online as those who shop physically in shops across the same Union. We need to protect our children with strong legislation so that toys entering from outside the European Union are of the same level as those produced within the European Union. We need to fight practices such as dynamic pricing, where thousands of consumers every day buying playing or football tickets or music concerts are being stolen. There is a need for a European market that fights inflation in essential food products and energy products, without which we will not pass. It cannot be that the rigidity of the European market means that in small Member States and islands such as Malta we end up with a single market that works in favour of a few big importers and against the common good of our citizens. It is necessary, today before tomorrow, to extend the freedoms of the European movement for medicinal products – it cannot be that the Maltese and Gozitan patient continues to pay the price of Brexit, as the system of fragmented legislation and registration of medicinal products has continued to lead to the further exclusion of small Member States. There is a need for stronger, more ambitious legislation on the rights of consumers to book their holidays, so we need to have a package travel law that works in favour of our consumers. Let's work together towards a European market that works for the rights of the many and not the few.
Threats to EU sovereignty through strategic dependencies in communication infrastructure (debate)
Mr President, digital infrastructure has become as important as traditional infrastructure such as our bridges and roads. And I come from Malta, a small Member State, an island, I am more aware of the importance of this infrastructure, especially for thecables submarine internet, which are equally crucial for the functioning of the lives of our citizens and critical infrastructure in every Member State. And so I think it is time for the experiment we have done with the setting up of the agency ENISA, to ensure that we have coordination when it comes to cybersecurity, cybersecurity, it would also extend to this critical infrastructure by either setting up a separate agency, or giving ENISA more and more expertise to ensure that we have more coordination, more protection, on this infrastructure. In addition, we need to further strengthen resilience and therefore, the Digital Sovereignty Fund should be set up as soon as possible.
Silent crisis: the mental health of Europe’s youth (debate)
Mr President, Mental health problems among young people, among our children are a very serious problem. It is a problem that is making suicides the second largest cause of death among young people across the European Union. However, I believe that as a European Union, it is important to focus more on prevention. And today we had a golden opportunity as a European Union, in theCommission Working Programme and its presentation, in order to take the first step. The Internal Market Committee in the European Parliament has, during the past legislative term, prepared a report on theaddictive designs platforms. Something that is intrinsically affecting so many and so many young people, whether it's about cyberbullying But even depression, burnouts, which are something that is directly linked to the enormous time our young people are spending on an online basis. And so today we had an opportunity, as we called several times in different committees, for the European Parliament and the European Commission to take the first action with thedigital fairness act. Unfortunately, because of thedigital fairness act nor theright to disconnect, two important legislations to protect mental health, did not see the sunlight. A great misfortune.
Competitiveness Compass (debate)
Thank you Mr President, What are the real factors that make the European economy more competitive? Is it the fact that we are the cheapest continent? No, Europe is built on quality products, produced by qualified workers working in the best conditions. We can look at cutting red tape, reducing red tape in order to reduce a number of burdens on companies. It is not a bad thing, but to go in a direction where we lower and restore our standards in order to safeguard competitiveness, where we are grappling with ourselves. Firstly, because it is not true that regulations make Europe less competitive. Our industry needs to have reliable governance and even clear regulations. And this week I was amazed to hear Commission Vice-President Henna Virkkunen talking about reversing the digital standards we have worked so hard for over the past years. It is something, and we were speaking in this same plenary a month ago, where we started to say that we have attacks coming from other continents. It is something that is showing the attacks not only come from the US and Trump's presidency, but are unfortunately also coming internally and so it is essential that we continue to work on the best conditions for our workers, because the social compass remains that compass that makes us really different from others and more competitive. We need to work towards a directive on AI in workplaces and a directive on the right to disconnect implemented as soon as possible. Let's invest in our economies and not reduce conditions.... (the Chair interrupted the speaker)
Commission Work Programme 2025 (debate)
Madam President, first of all, I would like to speak about the disrespect shown today in front of this House when we were treated – and it was clearly stated by the Commission – as not ‘high-level’ enough. And I ask the Commission, what is 'high-level' enough for the President of the Commission? Today I would like to talk about the ambition we need as a European Commission and also as a European Parliament. It's a feeling that we're totally missing out on this program that has just been presented to us. First of all, important initiatives that have been totally sidelined and do not appear entirely anywhere in this plan. First of all, a month ago we were here in this plenary talking about the importance of having protection for digital legislation at European level. What was the result? Two days ago we saw the Vice-President of the European Commission, Virkkunen, tell us that she should remove the red tape from legislation that this Parliament has just approved in the past legislature. AI Act, DSA, DMA: that is how the European Commission will be protecting our digital and other legislation: Right to disconnect, the European social model that is totally missing from this plan. We heard the right to disconnect be approved in this Parliament, about four years ago. We saw him introduced into the Charter of Digital Rights presented by the European Commission, we also saw him humbly in the State of the Union, in the letter given to the visitor, but once again he is totally missing. This shows that the European Commission is completely disconnected from our citizens.
Geopolitical and economic implications for the transatlantic relations under the new Trump administration (debate)
Today is the first day of Trump's second presidency. While pledging a golden era for the United States, it must make this achievement by placing America first and foremost, also on the basis that it plagues our rights Europeans. Its approach to negotiations is either to swallow or to swallow. It places the health exhibition on cooperation across the Atlantic. The Commission must be prepared for this behaviour and must demonstrate the economic strength of the European Union as the largest economic market in the world. American Big Tech companies and their billionaire owners need access to our markets to make money. Let's not let them make money at the expense of our citizens, our democracy. We cannot throw away our reputation as an advanced world force in technology legislation. The rules of the Digital Services Act and other measures are not an exchange tool nor an exchange tool, investigations into X, Meta, Apple and other giants. The Commission must show strength and resist the pressure it will face for the interests of technology oligarchies. We either fight back or throw away weapons. We socialists and democrats have made our choice.
Need to enforce the Digital Services Act to protect democracy on social media platforms including against foreign interference and biased algorithms (debate)
Madam President, when we saw Musk walking into the Twitter office with a sink two years ago, did we expect things to escalate so quickly? It is sinking in that tech billionaires going rogue pose an existential threat to democracy in Europe. Meta's Zuckerberg has joined in and urged the newly inaugurated Trump to force the EU to roll back European rules. We cannot accept these provocations and interferences with democratic processes when Musk uses X to support the far‑right AfD and algorithms are tweaked to spread disinformation in the process. The silence from the European Commission and the lack of appropriate reaction have been deafening. In this game with bullies from the other side of the Atlantic, we must show strength and determination. We would be making a fool of ourselves if, after spending the last five years creating a digital acquis, we did not even sovereignly enforce the common European rules when the first difficulties arose. Investigations have been launched into X and other platforms, but none have been concluded. We have penalties, up to 6 % of the global revenue, but to be credible, these should be applied more swiftly. The announced Commission's European Democracy Shield looks ridiculous if they didn't apply existing European rules. Besides defending fact‑checking, we should also invest in fact‑telling. We cannot rely on US tech oligarchs to provide us with platforms for trustworthy information. We need to invest in alternative digital infrastructure in Europe, a Eurostack with an EU‑made and democracy‑proof alternative for social networking platforms. European citizens deserve a safe digital public space where quality journalism can find its place.