| Rank | Name | Country | Group | Speeches | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Lukas Sieper | Germany DE | Renew Europe (Renew) | 494 |
| 2 |
|
Juan Fernando López Aguilar | Spain ES | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 463 |
| 3 |
|
Sebastian Tynkkynen | Finland FI | European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) | 460 |
| 4 |
|
João Oliveira | Portugal PT | The Left in the European Parliament (GUE/NGL) | 288 |
| 5 |
|
Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis | Lithuania LT | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 276 |
All Speeches (517)
Protection of the European Union’s financial interests – combating fraud – annual report 2023 (debate)
Date:
05.05.2025 19:32
| Language: ES
Speeches
No text available
Establishment of a European Day of the Righteous (debate)
Date:
03.04.2025 10:26
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Commissioner, I signed, in March 2012, the Declaration that the European Parliament made to establish 6 March as the European Day in memory of the Righteous, in memory of all those who sacrificed themselves in the tortured 20th century in Europe to save lives in the face of Nazi-fascist and Stalinist totalitarianisms, but, above all, of those who sacrificed themselves to save lives from the genocides perpetrated by those totalitarianisms that went through the 20th century, from Armenia to Cambodia to Bosnia to Rwanda. That memory of the Righteous also reminds us that genocide is an international crime for which the International Criminal Court is responsible, as it is against crimes against humanity and against crimes of aggression. It is therefore sad and shameful that we know today that Hungary withdraws – the only withdrawing Member State – from the Rome Statute, which is upheld by the International Criminal Court, following Netanyahu’s visit, in flagrant violation of its obligations as a Member State of the European Union.
Delivering on the EU Roma Strategy and the fight against discrimination in the EU (debate)
Date:
02.04.2025 19:59
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Commissioner, the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union absolutely prohibits any discrimination based on race, ethnic origin or membership of a minority. However, all these discriminations occur too much against the Roma community. That is why, within the framework of the EU Anti-Racism Action Plan 2020-2025, a European strategy against anti-Gypsyism was developed. However, five years later, the result is that, for the first time in this legislature, there is no member of the Roma community in the European Parliament. And look how great we've had them. The European strategy calls on Member States to have national frameworks against anti-Gypsyism, including their inclusion, equality and participation. It is therefore for the Commission to ensure that, with the assistance of the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights and the National Contact Points, all remaining obstacles to the integration, inclusion and full participation of the Roma community are effectively removed. So, Commissioner, there you have a task as an equality officer. In addition to crisis preparedness, Commissioner for Equality has the task of monitoring that Member States effectively comply with their national frameworks and that no one misses the appointment of the elimination of discrimination against the Roma community and its members.
Recent legislative changes in Hungary and their impact on fundamental rights (debate)
Date:
02.04.2025 17:33
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner McGrath, yes, we already know that there are countless debates and resolutions that this European Parliament joins against the government in Hungary of Viktor Orbán. Fifteen years of crushing minorities in their despotic and corrupt drift and violation of European law and all the rights of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. Starting with the prohibition of non-discrimination. We can talk about the school law, we can talk about the ban on LGTBI demonstrations, we can talk about their favoring Putin in the Council, which has forced everyone else to form a coalition of volunteers to circumvent the rule of unanimity. We can talk about him receiving Netanyahu by violating that Hungary is part of the International Criminal Court, which has issued an arrest warrant against him. You will not be impressed by infringement proceedings, Commissioner McGrath, because you have not even been impressed by the judgments of the Court of Justice of the European Union. The only remaining step is, finally, to implement Article 7, which was activated by this European Parliament, with all its consequences and, therefore, to demand from the Council that, excluding Hungary, it takes the decision once and for all to deprive Hungary of its voting rights.
Safeguarding the access to democratic media, such as Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (debate)
Date:
01.04.2025 19:43
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, this debate on the executive decision of the Trump presidency to withdraw through the United States Agency for Global Media all funding and support for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which have great symbolic value, is, in my view, one of the many debates in which we can entertain ourselves in detail without losing sight of the category, the underlying problem. The underlying problem is that Trump presidency, completely disruptive and against freedoms, in an example of a manual in which a populism voted at the polls shakes hands with authoritarianism and autocracies, and directly attacks a freedom as fundamental as that which allows in a free society the formation of a public opinion formed through the contrast of the veracity of the news and information pluralism. Therefore, the European Union now has a duty to accelerate its mission to fill that gap as well, and it can do so only if it acts together with the necessary resources to not only support those means, but also to ensure that that freedom of information is not left unprotected.
Improving the implementation of cohesion policy through the mid-term review to achieve a robust cohesion policy post 2027 (debate)
Date:
01.04.2025 18:29
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Mr Vice-President Fitto, do you know that cohesion policy is surely, together with the fundamental right to free movement, the most precious asset of European integration? If it needs reform, it is in no case to end its shared management, its territorial approach and its multilevel governance. Surely it needs reform, to begin with, to increase its resources in the next multiannual financial framework and also to allow it to speed up its management to respond to natural disasters, which are increasingly frequent. But above all, it needs reform to boost the social dimension of cohesion in regional policy, which is absolutely sensitive, particularly for the most vulnerable regions and the outermost regions. And let's not say to ensure social inclusion: introducing a housing policy at European level that gives hope to the new generations and also, of course, ensuring a social policy that remains the main engine for legitimising European integration.
Madam President, Commissioner Lahbib, a European preparedness strategy to improve its capacity to respond to threats and risks certainly requires pointing out what those threats are, be they natural disasters and increasingly frequent extreme weather events, man-made disasters, cybersecurity attacks, hybrid threats or even geopolitical crises with imminent aggressions. But above all, it requires anticipation in a civil protection mechanism that is capable of integrating civilian and military capabilities and public and private capabilities. And, most importantly, let there be no concession to fear, no longer to the caricature of the survival kit, but above all to fear, which is the seed of populism and regressive dystopias in which the soul of the European Union is lost. Effective pro-European communication is therefore absolutely essential for preparing for the worst.
Presentation of the New European Internal Security Strategy (debate)
Date:
01.04.2025 15:45
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Commissioner Brunner, European security has an external dimension that we have been discussing a lot for some time, but it was high time that we discussed internal security with that strategy that should succeed the one currently in place from 2025. And you will understand that none of your tools can surprise those of us who have been advocating for them for a long time. Firstly, the operational coordination and complementarity of Europol and Eurojust in order to optimise their results. Secondly, of course, we have an anti-drug and anti-gun plan. Why not relentlessly enforce the criminal legislation against arms trafficking that we have already put in place in this European Parliament? And, in the same way, to complete the negotiations to ensure the protection of minors from online sexual abuse, because this Parliament has also done its job and it is now up to the Council to do so. But above all, action must be taken against terrorism. Of course, not only against its sources of funding, not only against the spread of its contents online, but also against the radicalisation that produces and encourages it. And finally, digital infrastructures, digital information, sharing digital information so that we are able to protect our critical communications with even tools. But none of this would be complete if we did not also consider the importance of combating all forms of hate speech, anti-Semitism, anti-Gypsyism and racism. Hatred that directly incites crime and violence. Because without it our internal security strategy will not be complete.
Human rights and democracy in the world and the European Union’s policy on the matter – annual report 2024 (debate)
Date:
01.04.2025 15:04
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Mrs Kallas, in a turbulent world of global disorder in which authoritarianisms and autocracies clash with national-populisms to the detriment of human rights, the European Parliament’s 2024 human rights report analyses not only trends and challenges, but also the tools at its disposal. I underline some important ones. The first is to target visa policy in favour of human rights activists – humanitarian visas. The second is to give priority in the funding of European programmes to United Nations agencies dealing with human rights and non-governmental organisations in order to strengthen civil society. The third is to condemn those restrictive measures against officials and workers of the International Criminal Court. And the fourth, to focus on the prohibition of arms sales to those regimes that massively violate human rights. In addition to ensuring that spyware purchased by the European Union is in no case used against human rights activists.
Conclusions of the European Council meeting of 20 March 2025 (debate)
Date:
01.04.2025 11:07
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Mr President Costa, Commissioner Šefčovič, often the most useful Council conclusions are those that have not been written down but can be read between the lines. The first is the untenable unanimity in foreign policy decisions, which has forced 26 Member States to form a coalition of volunteers to once again exclude a Hungary whose government is increasingly incompatible not only with its responsibilities as a partner of the Union but even with the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union – as we will discuss elsewhere in this plenary session. The second is that when the importance of the external dimension of migration policy is stressed, there is always an emphasis on returns and instrumentalisation, but never enough that it will only be possible to negotiate with the countries from which desperate people come if there is also a diplomatic architecture, with agreements that are mutually interesting, in addition to a common visa policy that includes humanitarian visas and legal and safe pathways. And the third, when we talk about multilateralism with rules, we must insist that the European Union must have a common strategy for reforming the United Nations system, which is becoming increasingly obsolete, and at least a consonant representation in the Security Council with the two members that Europe has in the Security Council.
One-minute speeches on matters of political importance
Date:
31.03.2025 22:23
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner Roswall, on 28 March the General Affairs Council met to discuss the future of regional and cohesion policy in the multiannual financial framework to come after 2027. It is an extremely sensitive issue for the most vulnerable regions of the European Union and particularly for the outermost regions. Next week the representatives of the outermost regions will meet and this meeting will also involve parliamentarians who were born and reside in those regions, such as the Canary Islands, and we have two concerns that will resonate in their conclusions. The first is that, on the horizon of the new foreign and security and defence policy priorities, the classic policies of the European Union will never be harmed. Regional and cohesion policy certainly is. But, secondly, that there is also enough to meet the new priorities: housing, the fight against poverty and the emergency fund against these disasters, which are increasingly common in remote regions. But there is also a concern about maintaining the shared management system and the regional horizon that allows regions to be a decisive step in the management of regional policies and cohesion policies.
Need to ensure democratic pluralism, strengthen integrity, transparency and anti-corruption policies in the EU (debate)
Date:
31.03.2025 20:37
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, this parliamentary term of the European Parliament starts as it all does, forced to learn from your experiences, and particularly from the bad ones. It does so with a commitment to strengthening its integrity, transparency and accountability. Why? Because in the last legislature we had a bad experience with the so-called 'Qatargate', which forced this European Parliament to take very seriously the obligation to strengthen its standards of accountability and transparency. That is exactly why we negotiated and agreed with the other European institutions, in accordance with the legal basis provided by Article 295 of the Treaty on the Functioning and Article 13 of the Treaty on European Union, an interinstitutional agreement. Therefore, it is already in time to fulfil the mandate acquired by this European Parliament to reform its Rules of Procedure to put in place an ethics body that incorporates representatives of the institutions, but also five independent experts. They will help to share best practices and raise the European Parliament's accountability standard. This is in addition to the Anti-Corruption Directive, which is already in advanced negotiation with the Council, and the Special Committee on the European Shield of Democracy, which sends a message to citizens. We cannot miss the opportunity to say that we have to reform the Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament, without dragging our feet, in order to finally put the ethical body on its feet. The sooner the better.
Mr President, Commissioner Hansen, this debate on the confiscation of Russian assets has been presided over by the living awareness of this European Parliament that it has done everything in its power to help Ukraine in the face of a Russian war of aggression, which, incidentally, is an international crime under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court, as this Parliament has also declared. We have supported the freezing of EUR 250 billion and we are ready to support the political objective, to give a solid legal basis, by amending the Regulation, to transform the freezing into confiscation. But this affects not only foreign and security and defence policy, but also the internal market in its financial market variant. It must therefore be done with complete legal certainty, which is what makes the difference to any arbitrariness and creates a permanent legal regime. Thus, this precedent – which effectively makes it possible to finance the necessary reconstruction of Ukraine and thus fulfil the prognosis that we will support Ukraine as much as it takes, not only as long as it takes— It has continuity and sends a message to the world that we are willing to confiscate the assets before...
Adoption of the proposal for a Parenthood Regulation (debate)
Date:
12.03.2025 18:20
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Commissioner Hansen, the alleged legal arguments invoking the sovereign right of the Member States to their family laws and the need for unanimity to change that competence actually hide prejudices – that is, ideological prejudices – which are incompatible with the obligation of the Member States to respect the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, which enshrines free movement without discrimination and, in particular, protects the best interests of the child. This is exactly the aim of the European Parenthood Regulation, which it is essential to take forward in order to ensure that no child is discriminated against in any Member State on the basis of his or her origin; because it is not acceptable for the child to be made guilty of the alleged family from which he comes and which he does not like in certain Member States. No one is required either to accept same-sex marriage or to accept surrogacy. What they are required to do is to respect the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, which, with the same legal value as the Treaties, is binding on all Member States.
White paper on the future of European defence (debate)
Date:
11.03.2025 19:43
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, three clear lessons emerge from this debate on European defence. The first is that strengthening European defence cannot depend on increasing 27 fragmented national budgets, because without interoperability and common structures we will not have any deterrent capacity vis-à-vis Russia, even though our army and our joint budgets are superior to theirs; Not, of course, without the NATO umbrella and with a White House detached from the collective security commitment of Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty. Secondly, in order to correctly reinterpret the collective security clause of the Treaty on European Union (Article 42(7)), what we need to do is to specialise in the combination of military capabilities, innovation and cybersecurity by adding value. And the third lesson is that this cannot be done at the expense of either the European Pillar of Social Rights or European cohesion, so it is imperative to test new financing tools and instruments, including, of course, the common debt to underpin Europe's defensive effort.
Presentation of the proposal on a new common approach on returns (debate)
Date:
11.03.2025 17:17
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, as far as the Return Regulation is concerned, you have heard points and criticisms that must be addressed, because a regulation creates obligations for the Member States and it is not, therefore, a matter of opening up to them the margin of manoeuvre in the view that migrants and asylum seekers are a threat to our security. First point: For returns to be possible, what is needed is an architecture of agreements with countries of origin and transit that allow them to be dignified, a diplomatic architecture that currently does not exist. But secondly, detention centres in third countries, which are neither of origin nor of transit, for up to two years, are not only not an imaginative solution, but run counter to the human rights standard to which the European Union is owed. And one last point: there is no point in modifying the safe third country regime that we negotiated and established in the EU Common Asylum Procedure Regulation before giving it the opportunity to enter fully into force.
One-minute speeches on matters of political importance
Date:
10.03.2025 21:49
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, in this debate in the European Parliament there has been talk of an omnibus package and we have referred to the needs of the outermost regions. There is also talk of the European Social Fund and the reformulation of regional policy, which requires that this regional dimension be respected in the definition and implementation of the policy that corresponds to the particularly vulnerable outermost regions, but with a specific legal basis as well. We will also be talking about outermost regions when we discuss the Return Directive tomorrow, because they are external border regions that, in any case, show – as happens when we discuss the disaster on the island of Réunion and the need to specialise emergency response and civil protection in regions increasingly exposed to extreme weather events – that we have a special legal basis to protect those particularly vulnerable regions that are the external border of the European Union. Commissioner, that is the common thread and, therefore, there must be commitment to the external border regions and to the outermost regions in all the defining chapters of the European Union because, if we want to reformulate European policy, we cannot ignore that it is portrayed where it is most needed: in border regions.
Cutting red tape and simplifying business in the EU: the first Omnibus proposals (debate)
Date:
10.03.2025 19:52
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, this omnibus package is the first major legislative initiative of the von der Leyen II Commission and sets the tone for the legislature. But the tone of this European Parliament's response has been announced: Simplification is not deregulation. Can the reform of the InvestEU Regulation move in the right direction because it makes it possible to optimise all currently available instruments and funds – even legacy ones – to try to incentivise innovation, research and competitiveness without renouncing the commitment to sustainability and the environment, to which almost half of the Regulation’s investments are dedicated? The degradation of due diligence, climate targets and environmental commitment may, but is not moving in the right direction. Because if the Commission does that in the service of the big economic interests that complain about overregulation, we have the right to suspect that it will do the same when it comes to degrading the Digital Agenda at the service of the big tech corporations, or the Pact on Migration and Asylum to give back to the states the competence that we have finally got from the European Union. And in the face of that we say quite clearly that you will find a resounding no in this European Parliament to any setback.
Honouring the memory of Ján Kuciak and Martina Kušnírová: advancing media freedom, strengthening the rule of law, and protecting journalists across the EU (debate)
Date:
12.02.2025 19:33
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Commissioner McGrath, Ján Kuciak and his colleague Martina were murdered not only for practising journalism, but also for defending the right of citizens, not only Slovaks but also Europeans, to truthful information. And we must not only condemn that murder and, of course, fight for there to be no impunity for the murderers of Ján Kuciak and Martina, nor for those of the Greek Karaivaz or the Maltese Daphne Caruana or the two people killed in the Netherlands for exactly the same thing in recent years, but we must also honour the commitment that "never again". And in this European Parliament we have done the job. The Digital Services Act and the Directive on strategic lawsuits against public participation entered into force, i.e. against abusive processes and intimidating litigation aimed at intimidating and silencing journalists, but above all the European Media Freedom Act, which aims to create a European area of guarantees, transparency, accountability, institutional advertising and thus access to information pluralism at European level. That is the work we have to do so that a journalist never again has to pay with his life the risk of doing his job for European citizenship.
Need for targeted support to EU regions bordering Russia, Belarus and Ukraine (debate)
Date:
12.02.2025 16:55
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Vice-President Fitto, cohesive solidarity is Europe's raison d'être: It began as inter-territorial and regional solidarity and then achieved social and intergenerational solidarity. If I have defended this with passion for the outermost regions that border other continents, with the same conviction I defend it for the regions that have a border no less than with Russia, Belarus and Ukraine, under a cruel war of aggression that has not only resulted in thousands of deaths, but also with eleven million displaced people who have entered the territory of the European Union, four million of whom remain in the neighboring countries: not only Finland, with its 1,300 kilometers of border, not only the three Baltic republics, but also Poland with Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave in the middle of the European Union. Therefore, the solution to all those people who need assistance is European funds, in no case talk of instrumentalization (or weaponisation, in English) of immigrants as weapons, because they are people, but those countries need assistance to be able to care for them and provide services that comply with their fundamental rights. A strong and robust European cohesion policy is needed...
Madam President, Commissioner Šefčovič, before the Commission's work programme, the pro-European response is clear: We need to be more united without making any concessions to reactionary nationalism, which is the opposite of what we need to make an opportunity for the enormous challenges posed to us by disruptive global actors, such as the Trump Administration, or hostile ones, such as Putin's Russia. But it is ironic that, in the face of the most decisive fact in the European Union and in the context of the elections in its Member States – the migratory event – what the work programme proposes in its deregulatory mantra is a new law, a law of returns, as if ignoring that increasing returns does not depend on new legislation, but on an architecture, currently non-existent, of mutually beneficial and interesting agreements both for the transit and origin states and for the European Union. What is imperative is to implement the Pact on Migration and Asylum together with all the legislation that is mandatory for Member States. And that is what we miss in the Commission's work programme.
Protecting the system of international justice and its institutions, in particular the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice (debate)
Date:
11.02.2025 20:37
| Language: ES
Speeches
Madam President, Commissioner, it has cost humanity and its history many wars, much blood and much accumulated pain to put in place an architecture of international justice of which not only the International Court of Justice of the United Nations system is a part, but also the International Criminal Court, which draws lessons from the courts of Nuremberg, Tokyo, Rwanda and Yugoslavia and prevents impunity for war crimes and crimes against humanity. And therefore, the European Union, which makes international law a source of its own law and whose Member States are signatories to the International Criminal Court treaty, has an obligation to defend it against the threats and sanctions of Trump, who seeks to cover up the war crimes perpetrated in Gaza against the civilian population by the Netanyahu government, as well as to ensure that the war crimes perpetrated in Ukraine go unpunished. Therefore, it is not enough just to say that we are part of the International Criminal Court, it is necessary for the Council to send a clear message in defence of the fight against impunity and of the International Criminal Court.
Escalation of violence in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (debate)
Date:
11.02.2025 17:57
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, Commissioner Šuica, you have received the message very clearly: The problem is not new, nor is violence, but its chronification and escalation to morally unbearable extremes demands a forceful response. That intervention by M23, the covert force behind Rwanda's intervention in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is leaving thousands dead and hundreds of thousands displaced, with all kinds of violence, including sexual violence. It is therefore urgent to suspend the cooperation programme with Rwanda and the 20 million euros of investment planned to send the clear message that in no case can raw materials, no matter how strategic they may be, such as coltan, justify the continuation of the bloodshed. Members of the European Parliament were able to hear the absolutely horrifying testimony of the witnesses to that violence the other day. They were calling on the European Union to mobilise all its energies: No country that has had a colonial presence in Africa can do this on its own. In order to compensate for the influence of Russia and China, it must be the European Union that uses all its weight. The message is therefore very clear, Commissioner Šuica: act, and act now.
Continuing the unwavering EU support for Ukraine, after three years of Russia’s war of aggression (debate)
Date:
11.02.2025 12:09
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, after three years of Putin's cruel war of aggression against Ukraine, there are three very clear lessons. We activated the Temporary Protection Directive for the first time with a huge financial effort to help countries that have received 11 million people displaced by war, four million of whom stay indefinitely in Europe. But that cannot under any circumstances be a pretext for not complying with the obligations of the Pact on Migration and Asylum, not even for Poland, which has been so supportive of those displaced from the war in Ukraine. But in order to sustain that effort, it is imperative that we make permanent the mechanism that makes it possible to convert the confiscation of property into permanent sanctions against Russia. This mechanism requires reform of the current European Union sanctions legislation. And, thirdly, it is essential to give solid body to the cooperation with the International Criminal Court, so questioned at the moment by the Trump Administration. In the European Union we have signed the international criminal treaty, with joint investigation teams with...
One-minute speeches on matters of political importance
Date:
10.02.2025 22:02
| Language: ES
Speeches
Mr President, every week that passes, these fragile boats continue to arrive in the Canary Islands, full of desperate people who come from the African continent. The Canary Islands are the European Union, but boats full of the corpses of those unfortunate people who did not get it continue to arrive in the Caribbean as well. And the lesson of so much tragedy is imperative: urges the Commission to accelerate the full implementation of all mandatory laws for the Member States making up the Pact on Migration and Asylum and, in particular, to accelerate the launch of the EU Solidarity Coordinator, allowing for an orderly, fair, equitable and solidarity-based redistribution of those in a very vulnerable situation: women with minors, women victims of trafficking and exploitation of persons, and unaccompanied minors, who also require solidarity in Spain, prevented to date by the opposition of the right. There is an urgent need for legal reform to make this possible, but above all there is an urgent need for the Commission to demand that all Member States comply with their obligations under the Pact and to make it clear that it is not acceptable for a head of government, as we heard this week from Donald Tusk in Poland, to say that he will not implement the Pact on Migration and Asylum, as if he were unaware that European law is binding in its primacy and in its direct effectiveness for all Member States.