EU watchdog faults Commission for rushing key policy proposals
Probe finds weak justification on agriculture, reporting and smuggling
The EU's Ombudswoman accused the European Commission on Thursday of rushing to propose measures on sustainability reporting, agriculture and migrant smuggling without following its own rules on transparent and evidence-based lawmaking, reported Reuters.
The watchdog of EU institutions said the Commission had failed to justify the urgency of the measures, citing findings from an inquiry prompted by a complaint by climate and human rights campaigners.
"Taken together the shortcomings amounted to maladministration," Ombudswoman Teresa Anjinho said. "Certain principles of good lawmaking cannot be compromised even for the sake of urgency."
The European Commission said it would look carefully into the recommendations, but maintained it produced solid evidence on problems and the response required, and that its decision-making included input from consultations.
The complaint by eight organisations in April said the Commission had proposed a weakening of sustainability rules after private meetings with industry lobbyists, without first consulting the public about the suggested legal changes or assessing their impact.
The organisations said on Thursday that any political agreement should be grounded in evidence and in line with EU climate goals.
"If this cannot be secured, the Commission should withdraw its proposal," their statement said.