Parliament will vote on the report, originally drafted by Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb and for which German MEP Ingo Friedrich (EPP-ED) is now the rapporteur, during its plenary session in Brussels on 8 May.
The upcoming lobbyists register must include "detailed legislative footprints showing which lobbyists were consulted on and contributed to individual bits of legislation" if it is to provide a "strong tool for making the goals and methods of EU lobbyists more transparent," Jana Mittermaier, the head of Transparency International's Brussels office, argued yesterday (7 May).
The anti-corruption watchdog identified the following "most effective means for improving transparency and accountability in lobbying at EU level":
- Naming individual lobbyists;
- Disclosing full financial means of all lobbyists, including think tanks and lawyers;
- Introducing monitoring and sanction mechanisms for cases of lobbying misconduct, and;
- Ensuring there is a strong, detailed and properly enforced code of conduct in place to complement the mandatory register.
Regardless of the outcome of the vote in Parliament, the Commission is expected to launch its own register in the near future.
The EU executive needs to ensure its register is "up and running before the summer break," said Mittermaier, calling for the timeline for this to be accelerated so the future joint register can "build on the experience and the infrastructure" of its counterpart.



