“It took the Commission more than three years to come up with a proposal that is not
only inadequate and messed up but it also treats various lobby groups in different
ways”, says Paul de Clerck (Friends of the Earth Europe). “We are launching an
appeal directly to Commission President Barroso. If he is serious about making EU
decision making more transparent, he needs to intervene now, in order to fix the
flaws in the register”.
The weak transparency requirements for the new register have
been drafted by the Commission’s Secretariat-General, which operates directly under
Mr. Barroso’s responsibility.
“Without names and detailed financial data the register will be a token gesture rather
than a serious step forward in securing transparency around EU lobbying”, says
Olivier Hoedeman from Corporate Europe Observatory. “Launching the register with these glaring flaws would mean that EU citizens will be denied crucial information,
such as how many lobbyists are influencing EU decision-making, on whose behalf
and with which budgets”.
The number of EU lobbyists is generally estimated to be
over 15,000, a large majority representing commercial interests. Industry insiders
estimate the annual turnover of corporate lobbying in Brussels to be up to 1 billion
euro per year. Precise figures are unavailable because of the absence of financial
transparency obligations. The proposed register will not list the individual lobbyists ,
only their firms or lobby groups.
Even though the Commission always indicated that all lobbyists will be treated
equally, the current proposal treats various categories of lobbyists differently. The
financial data in the register are incomparable and cannot be compiled into
meaningful aggregate data.
“All lobbyists should be dealt with in the same way and
should disclose lobbying expenses as well as overall budgets”, says Jorgo Riss of
Greenpeace.
ALTER-EU is particularly concerned about Commission plans to allow lobbying
consultancy firms to opt to declare funding from their clients only in 10% steps
relative to their total income. This favours bigger lobby firms who can choose to be
less transparent about their clients than smaller firms. The weakening of the
transparency obligations for these firms is a direct result of aggressive lobbying by
EPACA and other interest groups representing Brussels-based lobbyists-for-hire.
“It is
unacceptable that the Commission allows large lobby firms, who are mainly working
for big business clients, to be less transparent than others,” says Ulrich Mueller from
LobbyControl.
ALTER-EU calls upon Commission President Barroso to “ensure that the register will
include the names of individual lobbyists as well as meaningful financial data,
disclosing lobbying expenses in ranges of €10.000.
In addition to the letter sent by the ALTER-EU steering committee, the coalition will
this afternoon launch a pan-European letter writing initiative to convince Mr. Barroso
of the need to secure transparency around EU lobbying.
European citizens can participate and write to Barroso via:
http://www.alter-eu.org/en/cyberaction-lobbying-transparency
The letter to Commission President Barroso is available online at:
http://www.alter-eu.org/en/publications/open-letter-3-june-2008
Notes for editors
1: On 28 May, the European Commission presented details of its plans for the new
register in the Communication “European Transparency Initiative - A framework for
relations with interest representatives (Register and Code of Conduct) {SEC(2008)
1926}”: http://ec.europa.eu/transparency/docs/323_en.pdf
See also: “Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) on the Commission’s register for
interest representatives”, http://ec.europa.eu/transparency/docs/reg/FAQ_en.pdf
2: The Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation (ALTER-EU) is a
coalition of over 160 civil society groups, trade unions, academics and public affairs
firms calling for: A EU lobbying disclosure legislation; improved code of conduct for
European Commission Officials; the European EU Commission to terminate cases of
privileged access and undue influence granted to corporate lobbyists. The call for
“Ending corporate privileges and secrecy around lobbying in the European Union”,
the founding statement of the Alliance for Transparency and Ethics Regulation
(ALTER-EU) and a list of signatories are available on www.alter-eu.org

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