The creation of an ethics body became more urgent after Belgium
charged MEPs and others linked to parliament with receiving cash
from World Cup host Qatar to influence decisions. The Gulf state
has denied wrongdoing.
The new body, with representatives from the institutions and
five independent experts, will seek to agree common standards
before parliamentary elections in June 2024, which will trigger
an overhaul of top jobs in Brussels.
"Democracy can thrive only if citizens trust their institutions.
People around Europe do not distinguish whether a scandal has
originated in one or the other institution," Commission Vice
President Vera Jourova said in a statement.
In a survey on Tuesday, 60% of EU citizens said they were
dissatisfied with EU efforts to fight corruption in general, a
12 percentage point increase from mid-2019.
The rules will apply to more than 1,000 EU posts, including
European Central Bank board members, judges at the European
Court of Justice and members of the European Parliament (MEPs).
The new body will not launch investigations, as some wanted, but
will set standards regarding acceptance of gifts, hospitality or
travel, meeting lobbyists, financial interests, and on
conditions for activities after terms have ended.
The standards would be seen as a minimum and not water down
higher guidelines, such as regarding financial interests of
high-level ECB officials. They might tighten rules for MEPs who
are not required to declare travel and other perks or expenses
paid by third parties.
Each institution would likely need to update current procedures
to deal with breaches, with the ethics body monitoring
compliance and promoting transparency.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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