EurActiv Logo
Actualités & débats européens
- dans votre langue -
Click here for EU news »
EurActiv.com Réseau

TOUTES LES RUBRIQUES

Les groupes de pression européens invités à s'enregistrer dès 2008

Publié 22 mars 2007 - Mis à jour 23 mars 2007
Étiquettes
lobbying
Version imprimableSend by email

Le 21 mars 2007, la Commission européenne a inauguré un système volontaire d'enregistrement des groupes de pression tant attendu. Dès le printemps prochain, les professionnels des affaires publiques devront déclarer le nom de leurs clients et les sommes perçues pour faire valoir leurs intérêts auprès des fonctionnaires de l'UE.

On the issue of perks and gifts for lobbyists, the EU has not yet suffered a scandal like that associated with Jack Abramoff  - a Washington lobbyist exposed in 2005 for cheating clients and bribing US officials to the tune of $66 million - but there have been several recent cases of shady dealings by the chemicals and energy lobbies.

The Commission has said its existing rules for EU officials were "crystal clear," forcing them to seek permission before accepting favors or gifts, and requiring them to declare any potential conflicts of interest. Former staff need to inform the Commission about their new jobs for two years after they leave, it said.

Former telecoms commissioner Martin Bangemann left EU politics in 1999 to join the board of Spain's Telefonica SA for a reported $1 million yearly salary. EU governments launched an ethics lawsuit against him.

The Commission has only recently published a list of special advisers to commissioners, after a transparency group complained that one was on the board of two power companies at the same time as he advised Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs.

 

Réactions : 

Administration, Audit and Fight against Fraud Commissioner Siim Kallas told journalists: "We'll come with observations and proposals in the second half of the year and see where we need to improve the situation and where it can be left alone," concerning the professional ethics of Brussels' civil servants. 

"This is more workable...I find it prudent to act sooner rather than later," the administration commissioner said, adding that reports his original transparency plans had been weakened by Commission President José Manuel Barroso and the trade and industry wing of the Commission were not true. 

On the issue of gifts: "The discussion about gifts sometimes becomes absurd. You cannot create an automatic system that can automatically regulate all things that can be treated as gifts." 

Paul de Clerck, of Friends of the Earth Europe in Brussels, said: "Our concern remains that a voluntary registration system will not secure similar transparency from those organisations which simply choose not to sign up. To achieve the European Transparency Initiative's (ETI) stated objective of improving public trust in the EU political process, the Commission needs to make some major improvements."

"It's a sort of breakthrough," Olivier Hoedeman of Amsterdam-based NGO Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) told the International Herald Tribune Europe. "If a big PR firm uploads a budget that looks far too small then you will know where to start investigating. It is really no more than an appeal to people's consciences or reputations. It's strange to keep it voluntary, as there are such predictable problems: those who have an interest not to disclose information will not do it."

Prochaines étapes : 
  • Spring 2008: Launch of lobbyists' voluntary register.
  • Second half of 2008:  Commissioner Kallas to assess situation and identify areas for improvement.
Contexte : 

Many thousands of people work in Brussels to influence EU legislation. Prior to 21 March 2007, they did not face any binding rules, and there is at present little information to indicate precisely how many of there are and how much money is spent.

Introducing the register, which will be available from Spring 2008, Administration, Audit and Fight against Fraud Commissioner Siim Kallas said: "I hope the lobbying profession will see as an opportunity, rather than a threat - a chance to prove that their business was clean and legitimate." 

"All these groups or bodies are invited to register publicly whom they represent and what their objectives are," Kallas added. "They are invited to declare funding sources and major clients. This ensures the Commission as well as the public can identify and assess the driving forces behind positions taken and interests presented."

While the system will be voluntary, the commissioner explained that only those lobbyists who were registered would be recognised as speaking for clients or a sector of industry when they contribute to comments on EU policy that are taken into account when new legislation is drafted.

Lobbyists who did not register would only be seen as speaking in their own name, undermining the weight of their comments. Those who gave inaccurate information would face sanctions.

The around 22,000 lobbyists working in Brussels will have to disclose information on clients and fees under new European Commission rules. The Commission's blueprint foresees a website run by two EU officials that will list all PR consultancies, in-house corporate staff and public interest NGOs as well as their clients or donors and the fees or budgets they receive to influence EU policy.

Kallas first launched plans for the new lobbyists' register in 2005 as part of a wider transparency initiative also embracing disclosure of receipients from the EU's Common Agricultural Policy. 

But the project was reportedly watered down by Commission President José Manuel Barroso, Single Market Commissioner Charlie McCreevy and Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson when it started looking "too radical," some veteran campaigners say.

But Kallas told reporters on 21 March: "No watering down has taken place. Of course, we have had discussions, but the concept has remained the same."

More in this section

Publicité

Publicité

Publicité