BETA

47 Amendments of Enrique GUERRERO SALOM related to 2015/2041(INI)

Amendment 1 #
Motion for a resolution
Citation 1
– having regard to its decision of 15 April 2014 on the modification of the inter- institutional agreement on the Transparency Register1 (EU lobby register); __________________ 1 Texts adopted, P7_TA(2014)0376.
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 18 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital C a (new)
Ca. whereas, according to Transparency International, six out of ten European citizens consider their government to be seriously influenced or entirely co-opted by a few vested interests;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 21 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital D
D. whereas non-transparent, one-sided lobbying lobbying constitutes one of the key corruption risks facing Europe and poses a significant threat to policy-making and to the public interest;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 22 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital D
D. whereas non-transparent, one-sided lobbying can poses a significant threat to the integrity of policy-makers, policy-making and to the public interest;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 28 #
Motion for a resolution
Subheading 1
Introducing a legislative footprint, making the lobbtransparency register as mandatory as possible
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 37 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1
1. Believes that the Commission, Parliament and the Council should record and discloseevaluate if all input received from lobbyists/interest representatives on draft policies, laws and amendments as a ‘legislative footprint’could be collected centrally, e.g. by the Committees’ secretariats, and made public online; suggests that thisa legislative footprint should consist of a formbe annexed to reports, detailing all the lobbyists with whom thoseconsisting of a form, detailing organizations with which the rapporteur in charge of a particular file have mets been in contact with in the process of drawing up each report and a second document listing all written input received;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 45 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 2
2. Calls on the Commission to expand andfurther improve its existing initiative as laid out in its decision of 25 November 2014 on the publicby expanding the practice to meet only organizations of information onr self-employed individuals which are registered in the Transparency Register to all Commission staff; considers that the publication of scheduled meetings held between Members of the Commission and organiszations or self-employed individuals; considers that the recording of meeting data sh with the purpose of influencing EU-legislation could be expanded to include everyoneall Commission staff involved in the EU’s policy-making process, by publishing the Commission unit(s) and the external organisation(s) present at the meetings;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 70 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 5
5. Suggests that the Code of Conduct should be amended so as to make it mandatory for rapporteurs and committee chairs toshould adopt the same practice of exclusively meeting lobbyists registered lobbyin the Transparency Registser and publish information on such meetings online and for rapporteurs to publish a legislative footprscheduled meetings having the purpose to influence EU-legislation onlinte;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 79 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 6
6. Believes that an amendment should introduce mandatory monthly updates on lobby expenditures;deleted
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 88 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 7
7. Reiterates its longstanding call to back up the EU lobbtransparency register with a legal act, if it is not possible to close all loopholes and achieve a fully mandatory register for all lobbyists with an inter- institutional agreement; considers that the proposal for this legal act could take into account the progress achieved by changes in the inter- institutional agreement and Parliament’s Code of Conduct;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 94 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 8
8. Reiterates its call to the Council to join the lobbtransparency register as soon as possible;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 98 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 8 a (new)
8a. Suggests advocating the approval of a code of ethics concerning the activities of lobbyists;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 101 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 9
9. Considers lobby transparency through monthly reporting by lobbyists about their meetings as a keyof lobbying activities as an essential element for future EUa better legislationve process in the EU;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 104 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 10
10. Considers that, when interpreting ‘inappropriate behaviour’ within thBelieves that the Rules of Procedure should be ameanded ing of point (b) of the Code of Conduct, this expression should be taken to include turning down formal invitations to hearings or committees without sufficient reasonrder to withdraw access badges to the European Parliament from representatives of organisations that have refused to cooperate with a parliamentary inquiry; believes that repeated incidents should lead to a temporary suspension from the EU transparency register;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 116 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 11
11. Insists that registered law firms which are also active in lobbying should declare in the lobbtransparency register all clients on whose behalf they perform covered activities with the purpose of influencing EU- legislation; points out that law firms can only refer to the attorney client privilege when giving legal advice;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 124 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 12
12. Asks the Bureau to restrict access to Parliament’s premises for non-registered organisations or individuals by makEmphasises that the European Parliament as the European citizens’ chamber should retaing all visitors to its premises sign a declaration that they are not lobbyists falling within the scope of the register or otherwise declare their n open door policy towards the citizens and that no unnecessary obstacles should be created, which could discourage citizens from visiting the European Parliament’s pregmistrationes;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 132 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 13
13. Believes it to be necessary, as a matter of urgency, to introduce a proper monitoring system for submitted information in order to ensure that the information that registrants provide is meaningful, accurate, up-to-date and comprehensive; calls in this regard to substantially increase the resources of the Transparency Unit within the European Parliament and the Joint Transparency Register Secretariat;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 143 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 14
14. Believes that at least 5 % of declarations should be checked by the Transparency Unit each year;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 154 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15
15. Believes that representations of national, regional and local governments should not fall under the EU lobby register if they have their own mandatory lobbtransparency register, and do not offer workspace for private or corporate actors within their representationss they are part of the EU’s multi-level system of governance;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 170 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 16
16. Believes that the members of the Advisory Committee chosen from among Members of the European Parliament should be complemented by a majority of externally chosen members who must be qualified experts in the field of ethics regulation and should be drawn from an open call and include members of civil society; omposed of MEPs should be chosen according to their expertise, inter alia in accounting, legal affairs and ethics regulation; underlines that the composition of the Advisory Committee must at the same time reflect the political balance in the European Parliament, for example through a rotation system;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 183 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 17
17. Believes that the Code of Conduct should be amended to additionally empower the enlarged Advisory Committee to adopt final decisions instead of the Presidentinitiate the procedure for investigating a possible breach of the code of conduct for MEPs, and to empower the Conference of Presidents to adopt final decisions instead of the President; requests that the Advisory Committee is informed about the final decision in due course;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 186 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 17 a (new)
17a. Deems it necessary that the Advisory Committee has access to information and documents relevant to cases it has to examine, including the results of OLAF investigations;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 195 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 18
18. Believes that the Rules of Procedure should be amended with regard to Members’ declarations of financial interests to task the Advisory Committee andintroduce more accurate categories for income from external sources and to task the supportive administration with factual checks in samples and to empower them to ask for proof where necessary;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 207 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 19
19. Believes that Article 3 of the Code of Conduct for Members should be rephrased to include a clear ban on Members holding paid side jobs or other paid work, except where previously authorised by the Advisory Committee, and provided that it could not lead to a conflict of interest; takes the view that in such cases the parliamentary salary paid to Members by Parliament should be reduced by half;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 222 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 20
20. Believes that Members should have the remuneration paid to them by Parliament reduced by half of what they earn, whether as employees or self- employed persons, from any outside activity in parallel to their office as Members of the European Parliament;deleted
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 247 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 21
21. Believes that the Code of Conduct should be amended to provide for a three-wo years ‘cooling-off period’ during which former Members may not engage in lobbying work in the area of their parliamentary responsibilitieshave to notify the European Parliament of any post-term-of- office occupation they intend to take up;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 260 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 22
22. Believes that for Members of the Commission the ‘cooling-off period’ should be extended to threewo years and that a two-year cooling-off period should also apply to all Commission staff involved believes that all EU officials including the drafting or implementation of EU legislation or treaties, includemporary, contract agents and national experts must undergo full training contract staff how to deal with lobbyists;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 277 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 24
24. Supports the Ombudsman’s call for entry in the lobbtransparency register to be made a requirement for appointment to expert groups provided that the Members concerned are not government officials and do not receive all or the vast majority of their other income from state institutions such as universities;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 290 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 25
25. Considers control by Parliament of the financing of European political parties to be an unnecessary conflict of interestNotes that under Regulation No 1141/2014 applying from 1 January 2017 the total amount of Union funding awarded to the eligible European political parties and foundations is determined under the annual budgetary procedure and that the distribution between the eligible European political parties and foundations follows a fixed distribution key; notes further that the control with respect to Union funding is exercised by the independent Authority for European political parties and European political foundations on the basis of external audit reports, whose decisions may be the subject of court proceedings before the Court of Justice of the European Union;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 293 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 26
26. Calls for control of the financing of European political parties to be assigned to a neutral body;deleted
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 310 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 27
27. Calls for citizens to have the same right of appeal whenon all EU-institutions to handle citizens’ requestings for information asin they enjoy when requesting specific documents most favourable manner, without prejudice to the right of citizens to get access to specific documents under Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 315 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 29
29. Considers that Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 on access to documents should be updated as a matter of urgency, as required by the Treaty of Lisbon, by widening its scope to encompass all EU institutions, bodies, offices and agencies currently not covered, such as the European Council, the European Central Bank, the European Court of Justice, Europol and Eurojust;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 326 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 30
30. Requests that the Commission make sure that non-EU actors which receive EU funds should be as aceffectively countable as EU institutions are wrols then spending such fundof EU funds by non-EU actors;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 338 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 33
33. Believes, therefore, that preparatory meetings within the Council should be as public as meetings of Parliament’s committees;deleted
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 351 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 34
34. Believes that the chairs of Parliament’s committees should proactively publish minutes and all documents used in trialoguesInsists that Parliament’s negotiators in trilogues fulfil their obligation under Rule 73 (4) of the Rules of Procedure to report back to the following meeting of the responsible committee and to make documents available which reflect the outcome of the last trilogue; calls for both the oral report and the documents to contain information on the state of the trilogue negotiations; calls furthermore for a list of the dates of trilogue meetings and the names of the direct participants to be made publicly accessible;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 361 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 35
35. Calls on the Presidency of the Council to include allonsiders that Parliament and the Council ought to provide for more transparency in trialogue documents in the documents register to allow for access in accs and conciliation procedures; recalls the need to improve the transparency of legislative negotiations and underlines the impordtance with Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001of publishing the progress of negotiations after each trilogue;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 369 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 36
36. TakWelcomes the view that Members should have access to all Commission documents, where necessary under exceptional circumstances through a reading roomagreement between the European Parliament and the European Commission of 2 December 2015, which gives Members full access to all documents with regards to the TTIP negotiations;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 378 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 37
37. Deems it unacceptable that Parliament has less, or less open,Members of the European Parliament have less access to documents in trade negotiations than some members of national parliaments;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 388 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 39 a (new)
39 a. Calls on the Council to publish the negotiation mandates for international trade negotiations;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 396 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 40
40. Believes that, when the Commission engages in trade negotiations, it should publish the negotiation mandates, all negotiating positions, and all requests and offers and all consolidated draft negotiation texts prior to each negotiation round, so that the European Parliament and national parliaments, as well as civil society organisations and the wider public, can make recommendations thereon before the negotiations are closed for comments and the agreement goes to ratification; underlines that the Commission must also persuade negotiating partners to increase transparency at their end to make sure that this is a reciprocal process in which the EU's negotiating position is not compromised;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 404 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 41
41. Calls on the Commission to propose an inter-institutional agreement in order to codify those principles for all trade negotiations, as foreseen under paragraph 40 of the draft inter-institutional agreement on Better Law-Making;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 422 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 43
43. RegretNotes the Ombudsman's finding that mostsome EU institutions have not yet properly implemented rules to protect whistleblowers; points out that to date onlythe European Parliament, the Commission, the Ombudsman and the Court of Auditors have adopted such rules;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 426 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 44
44. Believes effective whistleblower protection to be a key weapon against corruption and therefore reiterates its call to the Commisscalls on the Member States and the EU-institutions to prepare a whistleblower protection directive, including minimum Europe-wide standards of protectionensure the protection of whistleblowers on their respective level;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 440 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 45
45. "Believes that the ongoing review of EU elecpolitical parties are best placed to contribute to the fight against corruption lawand should include a rule thattherefore play a stronger role on this issue by excluding persons found guilty of high-level corruption against the EU's financial interests or within Member States may not run for office in the next two terms of the European Parliamentfrom electoral lists for European elections";
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 460 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 47 a (new)
47a. Calls for the candidate nominated for the Presidency of the European Central Bank to appear before the corresponding committees and undergo an evaluation process;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 461 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 47 b (new)
47b. Suggests that it should be possible, as part of the accountability process, for the European Parliament to table a motion of censure against a Commissioner in connection with management activities for which that Commissioner is accountable;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO
Amendment 466 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 48 a (new)
48a. Recalls that the power to set up committees of inquiry is an intrinsic feature of parliamentary systems around the world, and the Treaty of Lisbon provides for a special legislative procedure for the adoption of a regulation on the right of inquiry in Article 226(3) TFEU; stresses that, in accordance with the principle of sincere cooperation, Parliament, the Council and the Commission should agree on the adoption of a new regulation;
2016/03/01
Committee: AFCO