Speaking before the American European Community Association in Brussels on 25 April, Anti-Fraud and Administrative Affairs Commissioner Siim Kallas expressed his belief that an "emerging agreement on a 'one-stop shop' register" could be found. Describing the report as it stands as "a very good basis for inter-institutional discussions, including with the Council," Kallas expressed his readiness "to work with the European Parliament and Council on a common register that meets the expectations and special requirements of all institutions".
Commissioner Kallas stressed that he will "continue to defend the view that there is nothing wrong with lobbying," insisting that "the Brussels lobby world is in no way penetrated by scandals".
Recent debate has also focused on who exactly will be included in the register. "The Commission considers it sufficient for organisations to register" as "the interests represented can be assessed without requesting individual names," Kallas said.
Provided that the report is approved in plenary, an inter-institutional working group will be established to prepare a proposal on a common register by the end of the year. In the event that such an agreement cannot be reached, the report suggests "mutual recognition between Parliament, the Commission and the Council" of separate registers.
But full financial disclosure still needs to be defined "more explicitly" and Parliament needs to improve "its own rules on lobbying transparency and ethics" before the inter-institutional register can become a reality, the Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regualtion (ALTER-EU) will argue in a letter to MEPs ahead of a plenary vote on the Stubb report scheduled for 8 May.
Moreover, ALTER-EU believes the end-of-year target date for agreement on a mandatory inter-institutional lobbyists register between the Commission, Parliament and Council should be "much more ambitious".
Tom Spencer of the European Centre for Public Affairs (ECPA) said a common, mandatory register for all three institutions is "an absolute must", particularly as "key lobbying activities take place in co-decision between the Parliament and the Council".




