20
May
2026
Watch
High time to deliver on the Single Market, providing certainty and predictability for EU businesses and quality jobs (debate)
Madam President, Madam President of the Commission, ladies and gentlemen, the time has come: "One Europe, one market" and - I add - one future together. Twenty-six years ago, Europe pledged in Lisbon to be the most competitive economy in the world, but that ambition ended up turning into a maze of bureaucracy. And today we continue to pay that price, because bureaucracy is not just paperwork. Bureaucracy is the invisible frontier that divides Europe into 27 markets, driving up the cost of industrial production, driving out talent, curbing innovation, driving away investment and generating multimillion-dollar losses for our businesses. All this weakens us as a Union. That is why we in the European People's Party are firmly committed to 'One Europe, One Market', with five clear objectives: regulatory simplification, removal of obstacles for our companies and entrepreneurs, new trade agreements with more countries, cheap energy for our industry and a firm commitment to digital transformation and artificial intelligence. We therefore call on the Commission to ensure that this is not another promise and that deadlines, measurable objectives, commitment and accountability are met. Because the single market is much more than economic policy, it is a geopolitical tool with which we can curb Putin's threats, compete on an equal footing with China and the United States, multiply European supply chains and, above all, shield the future of our young people by creating quality jobs. And, speaking of quality employment, let me today dedicate my words to the two Spanish civil guards killed by a drug dealer 12 days ago on duty in the Atlantic. For our police officers across Europe, quality employment starts with something basic, which is to serve with safety, means and recognition. And our political and moral obligation is that Europe finally approves their recognition in Europe as a profession of risk and catalogues the aggressions against them as Eurocrimes, not as a symbolic gesture, but as an act of pure justice. That is the true meaning of 'One Europe, One Market', a Europe that is more united, more competitive, stronger and more committed to all our workers, including those public service workers who protect us every day.