| 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 (56)
Accelerating the phase-out of Russian gas and other Russian energy commodities in the EU (debate)
Mr. President! When you listen to someone here in the European Parliament, you can better understand that we are still using Russian gas. I don't have to mention names. We know who it is. There is someone here who does not think that Putin has done anything wrong and who, incidentally, thinks that the door should be wide open. It leaves more work and responsibility to the rest of us, and we must take care of that. Every day we import Russian gas, we pay for the missiles that hit families' homes. It has to stop at any cost. All countries must stop importing Russian gas, and we must support that being possible now. We need to speed up the expansion of other energy, wind in the north and solar in the south, hydrogen and Power-to-X and what it's all called. And we need to invest massively in Europe's energy infrastructure so that we can transport energy in Europe. That's how we get rid of Russian gas. This is how we help the Ukrainians. That's how we help the climate, and that's how we preserve our own freedom.
Geopolitical and economic implications for the transatlantic relations under the new Trump administration (debate)
Madam President! Ladies and gentlemen, dear Greenlanders. Greenland has built a proud society. A society built on values that we recognise here in Europe. Values such as democracy, freedom, welfare and the rule of law. What the future of Greenland should look like should be solely up to the Greenlanders. You can't buy your future. You can't buy Greenland. This ambition is a mockery of the Greenlandic people. But in the modern world, independence is the right to decide who you want to depend on. And that right is yours. And, of course, we still need to work closely with the Americans on, among other things, the defence and extraction of raw materials. Certainly, it is at least that we in the EU and in Denmark will always support Greenland for the future that Greenlanders want.
Restoring the EU’s competitive edge – the need for an impact assessment on the Green Deal policies (topical debate)
Mr President, Commissioner Ribera, dear colleagues, we are at a turning point. We must not just prevent climate disaster, we must also be more competitive. Europe must work on both agendas. And let us be clear: no U-turn, no rolling back on our ambitious and needed Green Deal. We should not let China run away with first place in changing to a low‑carbon economy and be competitive. Our ability to compete and our need to decarbonise go hand in hand. To move forward, we need a clean industrial deal and we must simplify existing rules. We must stop double reporting. We must remove bureaucracy in the EU system and in our countries, and we must build lower electricity prices in there. We must invest together, and together we will stand stronger.
Foreign interference and espionage by third country actors in European universities (debate)
Mr. President! In the summer of 2020, a Russian citizen who had lived in Denmark for twelve years was arrested. The following year he was sentenced to three years in prison for espionage and deportation from Denmark. For a number of years, the convicted person had handed over information against payment to a Russian intelligence service. ‘As open as possible, as closed as necessary’ – this is and must be our motto when we talk about a competitive and secure Europe. This also applies to our universities. The future of Europe is being shaped in our research laboratories and in our universities. But the future is also under attack. There are others who want to steal it. It shows the case, as I mentioned. What we need now for universities and the like is, of course, a one-stop shop and a toolbox to solve the problem. In the EU, we need to do more to protect sensitive research. This is what our future is all about.
Urgent need to revise the Medical Devices Regulation (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner! How many of you remember the Covid crisis? Do you remember that we lacked medical equipment? We lacked masks. We lacked test equipment. Yeah, we missed most of it. Let's talk about it again. When supply chains break down, it is ultimately the patients who pay the price. And supply chains have broken down in Europe. They've left home. We can no longer sit on our hands and just watch innovative companies move to the United States. We need to make sure that we can produce both critical medicines and medical equipment here - here in Europe. We must be able to do it ourselves - from research, innovation to manufacturing. It is about patient safety. It is about the safety of our citizens across Europe. We have brains in Europe. We have the skills in Europe. We must make sure that the conditions for the companies again become so good that they come home and do not dream of moving out at all. In this way, we can safeguard our citizens in Europe.
One-minute speeches on matters of political importance
Mr President! I've been looking forward to this for two reasons. It is barely a year since I was nominated for the first time as a political candidate, and now I am here speaking in Parliament. I am deeply grateful and very happy for that. I have also rejoiced because this is where we can help solve some of the biggest crises of our time. In the last days, at least 10 people have died a few miles, 100 kilometers from here and from my homeland. Denmark, Romania, Austria, Poland, the Czech Republic are under water, and it burns in Portugal and Greece. The European Union will of course come to the aid of those in need, but we will also have to act now if similar and perhaps worse disasters are not to be part of everyday life in Europe. In fact, the average temperature in Europe has already risen above 2 degrees, i.e. more than in the whole world, which is 1 degree. We need to act now, and we need to act together across Europe, because we need to fight the climate crisis.