Belgium, (Brussels Morning Newspaper) Strengthening of the integrity of the European institutions, citizens can only keep faith in the EU if the principles of ethics, integrity, and transparency are fully upheld by the European institutions and by their Members. The Qatargate scandal has damaged the reputation and credibility of Europe’s house of democracy as it is the only EU institution where members are elected by citizens.
The President of Renew Europe, Stéphane Séjourné, repeated his call for an independent EU Ethics body with teeth, to oversee the work of the European Parliament, the Commission, and the Council.Renew Europe has tabled a resolution outlining its demands for the EU Ethics body’s scope:
- Monitoring: the EU Ethics body should monitor ethics standards with, for example, the ability to verify the veracity of the declaration of interests, to monitor transparency obligations, and the revolving doors rules.
- Advising: this body should be a point of reference and give advice on ethical rules and their interpretation for Commissioners, Members of the European Parliament, and staff of the EU institutions
- Investigating: the EU Ethics body should have strong investigative powers and be able to initiate procedures in close cooperation with all competent authorities.
Speaking in the debate on this topic, requested by our group during the plenary session, Mr. Séjourné recalled how important it is to strengthen our rules of ethics and transparency in light of the Qatargate scandal:
Stéphane Séjourné, President of Renew Europe, declared:
“Qatargate shows that it only takes the weakness and greed of one of us to bring our European institutions into disrepute. Our European dream is precious. We cannot allow it to be tainted by the corruption of some. An independent European ethics body, which my group has been demanding for many months, is a concrete response to prevent these unacceptable abuses. The Commission must present an ambitious legislative proposal as soon as possible.”
“We ask all the political groups in this Parliament and the EU Institutions to be ambitious and bold. I regret that certain political groups, which pretend to be fervent defenders of transparency and ethics, do not back up their grand speeches with action. The EPP group had abstained from the creation of such a body in 2021. And the ECR group was opposed. We expect better than that.”
Gilles Boyer (L’Europe Ensemble, France), negotiator on the behalf of our group on this resolution and shadow rapporteur on the report adopted in 2021 added:
“We want a more efficient and fair assessment of conflict of interests within the Institutions. Our fellow citizens are watching us. Their demands in terms of transparency and ethics towards their representatives are strong and legitimate. Our ethics are the key to our citizens’ trust in our institutions. The European Parliament has shown that it is ready to move forward on this issue for some time now. It is now the turn of the other institutions, in particular the Commission, to play their part and come up with concrete proposals.”
The Ethics Body
In 2019, a proposal to create a body to monitor ethics in Parliament was put on the table of the EU Commission, but “there was no delivery”, said the Swedish EU lawmaker. Then in 2021, Parliament passed a resolution that called for the creation of an EU Ethics Body once again to enforce the existing code of conduct and to prosecute corruption cases.