| Rank | Name | Country | Group | Speeches | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Lukas Sieper | Germany DE | Renew Europe (Renew) | 487 |
| 2 |
|
Juan Fernando López Aguilar | Spain ES | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 454 |
| 3 |
|
Sebastian Tynkkynen | Finland FI | European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) | 451 |
| 4 |
|
João Oliveira | Portugal PT | The Left in the European Parliament (GUE/NGL) | 284 |
| 5 |
|
Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis | Lithuania LT | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 273 |
All Speeches (54)
Dear President, Dear President, Dear President, Dear President, Dear President, Dear President, Dear President,, the future of European industry and competitiveness is not built on low wages or unrestricted deregulation; It is built with a strategy for innovation, a strategy that we lacked. The initiative Chose Europe, now presented, adds €500 million, making it possible to value our qualified young people and new research centres. But the increase in funding also opens the door to recruiting the best scientists who are no longer in Europe. I am talking about those who, in the United States and other countries, have suffered cuts in support of their work and who feel the science threatened by those who in Gaza threaten children, but who in the world threaten the truth. This is a unique opportunity to reinvent Europe as the leader of a new era of knowledge in decarbonisation, artificial intelligence or health biotechnologies. But let's be clear, the future won't wait for us. And that is why, more than it is important to present, it is urgent to do. This must be sufficient reason for the Old Continent to be once again the most enlightened.
The EU's response to the Israeli government's plan to seize the Gaza Strip, ensuring effective humanitarian support and the liberation of hostages (debate)
Date:
21.05.2025 16:39
| Language: PT
Questions
Don't miss it so much, honourable Member. It's like that again and it's like that for you. His party says it wants a reflection on a two-state solution. You say you want to negotiate, but you refuse to recognize one of them, Palestine. But what's more, he says he doesn't recognize Palestine because he understands that there, in Palestine, are no free citizens. And therefore, if I acknowledge that the honourable Member is so outraged by the deaths in Palestine, by the damage to Israel and the Palestinians, what I ask him is whether he is able to recognise that the lack of freedom of these Palestinian citizens is precisely because of Israeli invasions such as are still happening today.
Resilience and the need to improve the interconnection of energy grid infrastructure in the EU: the first lessons from the blackout in the Iberian Peninsula (debate)
Date:
07.05.2025 16:39
| Language: PT
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, 28 April is remembered as the day when the Iberian Peninsula went dark and our fragility was exposed. In Civil Protection, the Portuguese government spoke late and did not provide security. He left the Portuguese to their fate and resigned from the required leadership. Louis Montenegro failed. And if Louis Montenegro was unable to lead a 12-hour blackout, hiding from the problems, imagine what it would be like in a scenario of a new war or a pandemic. Further to the right, while populists rushed to attack the right bet on renewables, central to our sovereignty and, by the way, to our independence from the homeland, information began to enter our homes and deny their theses. The truth, colleagues, is that in energy resilience we have had the bill for the little investment in the modernisation of networks and the lack of interconnections with the rest of the continent that makes us an energy island. It is when extremists take advantage of the blackout and those who fail to protect the people hide in the darkness that we most need light in Europe.
Resilience and the need to improve the interconnection of energy grid infrastructure in the EU: the first lessons from the blackout in the Iberian Peninsula (debate)
Date:
07.05.2025 16:08
| Language: PT
Questions
The honourable Member said that this blackout was planned. I think that the honourable Member, if he is not Messiah, is at least the only enlightened Portuguese. But let's go a little further. Clarified as you are, there was a Member of Parliament who, in the dark in the Assembly of the Republic, being from his party, said that the big problem was that we had shut down coal-fired power stations. Now, we came to realize that this was not only a lack of truth, it was to take advantage of the blackout to, while the prime minister was hiding, try to deceive the Portuguese. It would be much clearer if you came here to say that we need more interconnections, because if you do not, you only show that you understand very little about electricity, as you do very little about energy policies.
Dear Member, as you will understand and as you can read, not only in this Commission's programme, but from what our Group has brought here, you can see that employment contracts are always guaranteed when there is wealth creation. What we cannot tolerate, what we cannot accept, is that the relocation of jobs, which – yes – affects a large part of the workers of the European Union, millions of workers, is embodied and from investment that is made outside the Union. That's why we're talking about innovation, that's why we're talking about interconnections, cheaper energy, but that's why we're also talking about investment in sustainable energy. Contrary to what the blocs on our right say, relying on other nations hostile to the Union is not good either for workers or for our countries.
Madam President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, the loss of European competitiveness is unfortunately nothing new. After decades of underinvestment in innovation and a bet on cheap imports, the results are in sight and 850 000 jobs in industry have disappeared in the last four years alone. These are not numbers, they are lives. Many people for whom work has ceased to be a source of stability and has become a battle and an uncertainty. So when we talk about recovering industrial strength, as it is well presented, we talk about restoring hope and freedom through decent employment and fair wages to those left behind. And this must start with a strong bet on safe, cheap and sustainable energy. Reducing exposure to blocks hostile to the Union, increasing our renewable production and ensuring interdependence between our Member States are the first steps towards the industrial success of the world’s largest single market. Our well-being and our freedom depend on our courage and our responsibility.
Conclusions of the European Council meeting of 20 March 2025 (debate)
Date:
01.04.2025 11:08
| Language: PT
Speeches
Madam President, dear President-in-Office of the Council, dear Commissioner, in times of fear, let us hope. And on the Council's conclusions, I have to say that since the arrival of Donald Trump, the word we have heard the most has been the word crisis. And had the Greeks known that the word crisis — krisis — would be employed with more will to danger and with less hope of will, perhaps they would not have employed it in the same way. And it's about this optimism, which I don't know if it's annoying or not, that we should look to the future. The future of the European Union is a future of unity when we talk about the market for prosperity. The future of the European Union is not that of the war industry, nor of defence, it is that of the peace industry, because it alone saves the peoples and gives them security. But it is also a future of realism. And here, in the few lines we find from the Council for prosperity, but also for sustainability, we need to ensure that a fairer world is one in which those who can most also contribute their own resources so that the Union can develop. Finishing with Thomas Jefferson, I must say: Times change, constitutions must change with them. What cannot change is our way of looking at the will of the peoples and moving forward with it.
Dear Member, as I mentioned in my speech – and you also mention it well – the most important thing at the moment is to reduce the price for families, for small and medium-sized enterprises, for those who need it. This obviously means looking at the price formation mechanism, understanding it and redesigning it. And that is why I am delighted that this Commission, for the first time, is facing this challenge and says, not only for the future, but also for the present, that the Member States also have a responsibility to design mechanisms that can already foresee this. Look at our case in Portugal: it is the responsibility of the Portuguese Government to start designing these mechanisms, this decoupling mechanism. It is not acceptable that in a country where renewable production is so high, prices continue as they are. And so that's a good measure, that's a good proposal.
Mr President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, investing in renewable energy production is not an ideological issue: it is the right bet for a Europe that wants more strategic autonomy, a favourable price path and less polluting emissions. We know that in the short term, it will be very difficult to compete with energy prices, either from American competitors or from Chinese competitors. We lack endogenous natural resources and dependence on cheap gas from Russia, which is now dying out, has long inhibited investment in alternatives. But this is the way – and the way is right. Commissioner Jørgensen, you will have my full support for your plan for affordable energy. But, as the Draghi report says, there is a way for Europe to already ease electricity prices today. And that's moving towards ending gas price indexation. We count on you for this battle. Energy policy and the climate transition need to deliver results for people and small and medium-sized enterprises, not for large energy companies, nor for speculators in the financial system, whose interests are not European interests.
I've seen that you come from the Sovereignists, and it's very curious that you speak about energy, about energy prices and sovereignty, while at the same time recommending that the Commission still allow Russian gas and Russian oil to come into the European Union, therefore increasing prices, and therefore reducing our sovereignty. So my question to you, colleague, is very simple: what kind of sovereignty are you speaking about? The one that is reducing Ukraine? The one that is reducing Europeans? Or the one that is attacking the families that you claim to protect?
Adoption of the proposal for a Parenthood Regulation (debate)
Date:
12.03.2025 18:12
| Language: EN
Questions
Mr David, thank you very much for your intervention. Every time we hear someone from your political family, you are speaking about families, you are speaking about defending them, and you are truly right about that. But just today, in the plenary, you voted against the European care strategy to defend all types of large families in your vote in the plenary. So, my question is very simple: are these only words or are you really working to defend the working-class people and working-class families?
Threats to EU sovereignty through strategic dependencies in communication infrastructure (debate)
Date:
13.02.2025 12:05
| Language: PT
Speeches
Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, five years ago, with the pandemic, it became clear that we cannot rely on China for health goods. We said we'd learn from the mistake. Then, three years ago, it was time to realize that relying on Russia for cheap energy was also a mistake. We said again that we would learn. And today, even though Trump threatens us almost daily, there are those who want to rely more on the United States of America, whether for weapons, energy or digital platforms. If Europe wants less vulnerability, it is now that we must avoid it. The new communications infrastructure, from submarine cables to the 5G network, is key to our autonomy and must be built by Europeans. The creation of new social and information networks is also crucial for our sovereignty. So instead of learning from old mistakes, let us avoid making them.
Links between organised crime and smuggling of migrants in light of the recent UN reports (debate)
Date:
22.01.2025 17:48
| Language: PT
Questions
Mr President, let me begin by saying that there is absolutely nothing in the report that mentions making such a correlation. But we are already accustomed to the false truths or the many lies of your party. Let me bring you a dice. In the year 2023 to 2024, irregular immigration into the European Union decreased by 40%. And since we're talking about data, let's also bring facts. The first, in the last week, in which a member of his party, Rita Matias, decided to call rats to immigrants in Portugal. The second, from a deputy also from his party, who is now accused of stealing, stealing suitcases, by the way, from Portuguese, immigrants and foreigners entering our country. And what I want to ask you very quickly, honourable Member, is whether you can establish the same...
Madam President, I want to evoke today Rule 40 of the Rules of Procedure that relates to the respect of fundamental rights. I want to evoke it on the Article 11 that states the right for everyone to receive information without interference, regardless of frontiers. Today, censorship has started on Meta. I invite all Members here in the House to search for the hashtag #Democrat on Instagram or Facebook and to see the 0 results that are displayed due – imagine – to alleged sensitive content. Yet, if you search for the hashtag #Republican or the hashtag #WhiteSupremacy, there are millions of results. For the far right, democracy is sensitive. For us, proud Europeans, democracy is fundamental.
Need to enforce the Digital Services Act to protect democracy on social media platforms including against foreign interference and biased algorithms (debate)
Date:
21.01.2025 10:43
| Language: EN
Questions
I've seen your posts on the internet and you seem someone that is often speaking about freedom. You are very worried about freedom. You are worried about the content that is being lectured in schools. When it comes to gender, you are worried about sexual and reproductive rights. You are worried about lecturing social rights in school. But you are not very worried when it comes to the internet or to the algorithm spreading lies to our children. So, my question is very simple: are you worried about science, or are you much more worried about the lies that are being spread by the algorithms that you protect on X and on Meta?
Human rights situation in Kyrgyzstan, in particular the case of Temirlan Sultanbekov
Date:
18.12.2024 20:30
| Language: EN
Speeches
Mr President, dear Commissioner, dear colleagues, Temirlan Sultanbekov is a young political activist in Kyrgyzstan. And he is not only a young political activist, he is one of the most brilliant democrats in his country. Last month, he was unfairly detained and denied these rights in an attempt to prevent him from standing in the next elections. This is not the first time that this administration has sought to silence the opposition and, in the face of such actions, the European Union cannot stay quiet nor tolerate violations of democratic values. We must speak loud and clear. Intimidation campaigns have to stop, all arbitrary arrests must cease, and the respective politicians, journalists and activists must be released. That is what we owe to Temirlan and to all the young political activists. Not just our solidarity, but our commitment to end this situation and to ensure that the authorities in Kyrgyzstan correct their course by respecting freedom and democracy. That is what we stand for here in the European Parliament, and that is what the European Union is all about.
Misinformation and disinformation on social media platforms, such as TikTok, and related risks to the integrity of elections in Europe (debate)
Date:
17.12.2024 16:37
| Language: PT
Questions
Honourable Member, you are not advocating freedom here, you are advocating the victim, in which the victim is your constituents, you are the Honourable Member and you are your political group. Now the freedom that speaks so much is the freedom for intolerance, is the freedom for hatred, is the freedom for false accounts. As I understand that the Honourable Member does not understand the language of freedom of Soares and so many others, I will speak in his language, in the language of security and in the language of families. I think the Honourable Member acknowledges that families, when they do not let children leave the house with strangers, do so for safety. So why should they do so on social media, when there are 25 000 accounts, as in the Romanian elections, which appear ten days earlier? Why should they do it for the tolerance of hatred? And why should they do it when all TikTok users don't tolerate more than their own?
Promoting a favourable framework for venture capital financing and safe foreign direct investments in the EU (debate)
Date:
27.11.2024 18:41
| Language: PT
Speeches
Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, before the financial crisis, the GDP of the euro area was comparable to that of the United States. Today, it's only about 60%. In the face of this economic anemia, the answer cannot and should not be more of the same. We need a European Competitiveness Fund that promotes our industry and skilled employment. But we must also mobilise private investment, creating better conditions for our ecosystem to thrive. startups innovative, by making Europe a desirable destination for venture capital. We want investment in productive sectors with innovative potential, yes. But this exercise of attracting foreign investment cannot be done in a hurry, without discretion. We must not fuel speculation, as so often happens in the case of housing. Nor can we deplete our strategic autonomy by selling public assets in strategic sectors to third countries. By respecting these principles, avoiding the mistakes of the past, we have all the conditions to build a more dynamic, fair and secure European capital market.
Rise of energy prices and fighting energy poverty (debate)
Date:
27.11.2024 16:53
| Language: PT
Speeches
Madam President, ladies and gentlemen, Commissioner, thank you very much for your work. As Mario Draghi said, energy is at the heart of the economy, in traditional industries, but also in new sectors, such as artificial intelligence, where the cost of energy is decisive for companies. If we want to regain competitiveness, attract innovative industries and skilled jobs to Europe, so that it is not the best qualified generation ever, but the best paid generation, the cost of energy is decisive. If we want to, we must start now on the path to ensuring clean and cheap energy, for companies, yes, but also for people. It is not acceptable that for millions of citizens winter means having cold indoors. Fulfilling this goal means bringing the energy union from paper to reality, finally completing the interconnections between our countries to unlock more investment. Simplify rules without deregulating the market to make life easier for all. More European funds for clean and cheap energy production. We cannot step back when it comes to turning our words into action. This is what our citizens expect. It is time for us to ensure freedom of access to cheap energy for all European citizens.
Madam President, ladies and gentlemen, today it is estimated that 1% of the world's population owns more than 40% of the world's wealth. Against this backdrop of brutal inequalities, the G20 heads of state have finally recognised that we need joint solutions to tax the fortunes of the biggest billionaires. It is a historic moment and Europe must lead by example, show people that there is a fair way to have quality public services and well-paid professionals, without the effort continuing to fall on the middle classes, who can no longer pay more taxes or bear more increases. The time has come to build a large majority that will allow us to move forward. I ask our colleagues on the right whether they are ready to take responsibility and contribute to a European solution. And to the Commission, I would like to ask: when do you come up with a concrete proposal? Our group has been advocating the tax on great wealth for years, not because we need to finance the welfare state, but because it is a question of tax justice for all citizens. And contrary to what the far-right MP said, we don't just need more Elon Musks, we need more Elon Musks paying taxes.
Abuse of new technologies to manipulate and radicalise young people through hate speech and antidemocratic discourse (debate)
Date:
24.10.2024 11:50
| Language: PT
Questions
Honourable Member, it is incredible to hear you talk about freedom when the problem is really with the truth. While in this Parliament you are debating hate, debating hate speech, debating the proliferation of hate in the digital world, in Portugal we know very well what is happening and with which your party and its representatives do not have the slightest empathy. Let me quote, the parliamentary leader of your party says: “if the police shoot more to kill, the country is in order”; Your party adviser says: "one less criminal, one less Bloc voter" on the death of a Portuguese citizen. What I would like to ask you with empathy, Honourable Member: Can you or can you not condemn this hatred? Can you or can you not condemn these statements?
Closing the EU skills gap: supporting people in the digital and green transitions to ensure inclusive growth and competitiveness in line with the Draghi report (debate)
Date:
24.10.2024 10:30
| Language: PT
Speeches
Mr President, Mario Draghi warned us that Europe is lagging behind – a less competitive, less innovative and import-dependent economy. The answer from the right is always the same: indiscriminate tax cuts mainly to the benefit of large multinational companies. But that's not how we can change our course. Reducing the gap for the United States and China, but also for the internal asymmetries of our Union, by developing peripheral economies, requires a serious industry, which contributes to a reduction in emissions with more renewable energy, a clean, sustainable industry, which offers good jobs for all, whether they are more or less skilled. A digital revolution must also be social. There is no better solution than investing in people. Only in this way can we ensure that Europe today has the skilled workforce we need; More importantly, no one will be left behind in the future. Either this is a socially just transition or you run the risk of never seeing the light of day.
Findings of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women on Poland's abortion law (debate)
Date:
23.10.2024 16:43
| Language: PT
Speeches
Madam President, I think this debate is deeply annoying, I think it should be annoying for everyone. First, because we return to the debate about the decision of the women's body. We do not understand that, here, it is not disputed whether abortion takes place or not. We do not understand that what is being discussed here is whether women and the right to life and health are also women's rights. After regretting that the same right that was so concerned about the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, the same right that, in Portugal, appoints a judge to the Constitutional Court who is anti-abortion, the same right that does not appear in this debate, then deigns to justify its position and its lack of appearance not only with the lack of appearance in this House, but with the lack of appearance in the debate on human rights. The construction of European democracy requires democratic and convinced European forces, Commissioner, an exercise by all and not just a few. To that end, I would like to ask you: what should we do together to ensure that fundamental rights are not undermined in the next term of office?
Findings of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women on Poland's abortion law (debate)
Date:
23.10.2024 15:46
| Language: PT
Questions
You may not have been informed, but this is not a debate about whether or not there is an abortion. This is a debate about the criminalisation of abortion and I regret to inform you that whatever your position may be... (The President interrupted the speaker) I regret to inform you, but this is not a debate about the existence or non-existence of abortion. Abortion has existed for many years and will continue to exist. The debate here today is about the criminalization of abortion. And what we know today is that whenever we go forward – whether in Poland, Portugal or Spain – with the criminalisation of abortion, it is women who suffer the most, psychologically, mentally, physically. And so my question to the honourable Member is very simple: Do you agree or disagree with the right of women to decide on their own health and to decide on their own bodies?
Taxing the super-rich to end poverty and reduce inequalities: EU support to the G20 Presidency’s proposal (topical debate)
Date:
09.10.2024 13:38
| Language: PT
Speeches
Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, taxing the super-rich is a matter of justice for the rich and the poor. Just take back the words of the unsuspecting Bill Gates, who a few weeks ago said that if he himself designed the tax system, he would be billions of dollars poorer. And that is enough to welcome this initiative of the Brazilian government at the head of the G20 presidency. Ensuring that the richest, with billions of euros of personal wealth, pay at least the same taxes as the poorest is as basic as it is trivial. There cannot be a set of rules for workers, middle classes and small businesses and others for multinationals and billionaires who choose rules, who comply or do not comply, where they comply and how much they pay. Because while it is true that globalisation has lifted millions of people out of extreme poverty, it is also true that it has contributed to accelerating inequalities and to living today in the most unequal society we have ever experienced. Dear Members, our success as a society is not measured by the individual success of those who are better off, but by the paths we have managed to create for everyone to have a better life.