17/04/24View in Browser

The fallacy of EU Parliament’s budget discharges

By Max Griera

The European Parliament will vote on the Council’s 2022 financial discharge during the last plenary session of this term, starting next week. Is the Council holding its breath? Not at all.

The Parliament has been rejecting the Council’s budget discharge – its annual financial accounts – since 2009 over legal disagreements on the process, as well as the former’s tendency to mix up what should be a routine financial audit with wider political topics.

While the Council believes the discharge is given to the Commission-allocated budget as a whole, the Parliament believes it can break it down to one per EU organisation or institution.

“The European Parliament has developed over the years an additional practice of pronouncing itself on policies and activities of other institutions in general. The Council believes that this goes far beyond the scope of budgetary discharge,” an EU official said.

And they may have a point.

The Parliament refused on 11 April to approve the 2022 budget discharge for the Council and the rest of the institutions until countries agree to send Patriot missile systems to Ukraine.

“What I find scandalous is that Europe, which is opening the door for Ukraine, and the European Council are not even capable in such an urgency to decide to send a number of anti-missile systems to Ukraine,” liberal MEP and former Belgian prime minister Guy Verhofstadt said before proposing to delay the discharges.

On top of that, an amendment was added to the discharge report calling on the Commission to rescind the controversial appointment of Markus Pieper as the SME Envoy, a move that goes directly against the wish of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Continue reading...
Today's edition is powered by ACE, The Alliance for Beverage Cartons and the Environment
Policy Triangle on the PPWR
In this first discussion, supported by ACE, we delved into the Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive (PPWR). We're thrilled to host three experts on this file, Aurel Ciobanu-Dordea from the European Commission, Larissa Copello from Zero Waste Europe, and Annick Carpentier from ACE.
Watch the discussion here →
Photo of the day

Prime Minister of the Netherlands, Mark Rutte (L) and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speak during a press conference about funds, weapons systems and ammunition for the war in Ukraine in NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, 17 April 2024. EPA-EFE/OLIVIER MATTHYS

Would you like to sponsor The Brief? Contact us
The Roundup

European Union diplomats have been negotiating ‘how positive’ the message they send to Turkey at the EU summit on Thursday should be and whether it should offer something tangible to Ankara, Euractiv has learnt.

The backlash against EU green policies is set to continue, with plans to revive farmers’ protests ahead of June’s European elections and an expected surge in support for the far-right in rural areas.

EU leaders meeting in Brussels will call for the bloc’s competitiveness to be boosted primarily by easing regulatory requirements and leveraging the power of private capital, according to the latest draft conclusions of the 17-18 April summit and a senior EU official familiar with the discussions.

The EU space market should be integrated, because the European space industry is no longer adequate to compete in the current global space economy, Italian MP Enrico Letta (PD, S&D) wrote in his draft full report as seen by Euractiv.

Avian influenza vaccination cannot completely immunise birds, the European Food Safety Authority said in a report published on 17 April, as France banked on it to reduce bird culling, ensure the continuation of exports, and reduce the disease’s economic impact.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced on Tuesday a ban on bottom trawling in the country’s marine protected areas (MPAs), the first such fishing ban in Europe.

Germans must work longer hours and retire later to increase economic growth, the heads of the employers’ federation, BDA, and Deutsche Bank said on Tuesday.

Road safety experts met at the 2024 EU Road Safety Conference event in Dublin on Tuesday to discuss how best to mitigate the human impacts of serious injuries, focusing on ideas like mandatory first-aid lessons, better driver training, and improved post-crash health care.

The lead EU election candidates from the main French parties debated the Green Deal on Tuesday in Angers, expressing fundamentally different views on how Europe should decarbonise.

For more policy news, check out this week’s Green Brief and the Health Brief.

Look out for…

  • Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni takes part in spring meetings of World Bank/IMF in Washington on Tuesday-Friday.
  • Special European Council Wednesday-Thursday.
  • Commissioner Thierry Breton in Slovenia, meets with Defence Minister Marjan Šarec on Thursday.
  • Informal meeting of consumer protection ministers, Thursday-Friday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

Twitter
Instagram
Facebook
Website
LinkedIn
Spotify
Copyright © 2024 Euractiv Media BV, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to receive email newsletters from Euractiv.

Our mailing address is:
Euractiv Media BV
Karel de Grotelaan 1 bus 1
Brussel 1041
Belgium

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from ALL emails from us.