The European Parliament’s ‘Qatar scandal’ is just the tip of a corruption iceberg
By: Rachel Marsden
The EU is only now considering enacting lobbying-related guardrails that
should have been put in place a long time ago
In a corruption scandal that strikes at the heart of European Union governance,
a vice-president of the European Parliament, Eva Kaili, of Greece, has been
stripped of her responsibilities by the EU Parliament, had her assets frozen,
and has been charged after police alleged to have found “bags of cash” at her
residence.
There also was a raid on the home of a Belgian MEP, Marc Tarabella, the
vice-chair of the EU’s delegation for relations with the Arab peninsula. Belgian
authorities paid another no-knock visit to the home of an assistant to yet
another MEP. Earlier this week, authorities searched the EU Parliament offices
like it was a common crime scene, reportedly seizing data. So far, €1.5 million
has been seized from private homes, with the Belgian federal prosecutor’s office
accusing the four people arrested and charged with “participation in a criminal
organization, money laundering and corruption.” It turns out that the officials
alleged to have been involved are accused of also lobbying for visa-free EU-Qatar
travel and whitewashing Qatar’s labor rights record.
For an institution like the European Union, which constantly preaches to other
countries about how to clean up their act, you’d think they’d have some strong
guardrails in place to prevent the kind of things that these charges allege.
That isn’t the case. “The allegations are of utmost concern, very serious,” said
an uncharacteristically measured European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen. She proposed an independent ethics body to set rules for EU institutions
“where there are very clear rules,” adding that it“would be a big step forward.”
You mean that didn’t already exist? Why not?
Those who believe that Western democratic institutions practice what they
constantly preach might be surprised to learn that the lack of checks and
balances to prevent corruption at home is actually pretty staggering. Earlier
this year, for example, three US congressional representatives introduced
bipartisan legislation to close loopholes allowing foreign funding of think
tanks, government officials, and elections. “Right now, foreign governments are
able to secretly fund think tanks to push their own agendas, hire former public
officials and military officers to lobby for their interests, and have their
agents raise millions of dollars for political campaigns,” explained bill
sponsor, Congressman Jared Golden.
It’s almost like systemic corruption is just an open secret that benefits from
an omertà as very few officials actually seem to want to acknowledge or address
the issue.
When von der Leyen had the opportunity to address the matter with the Brussels
press corps on Monday, she stonewalled journalists – much to their frustration,
which they weren’t shy about expressing on Twitter. According to Politico, one
journalist even shouted at von der Leyen as she was leaving, “You didn’t answera
single one of the questions.” It’s not exactly the kind of behavior you might
expect from someone who routinely speaks of holding others accountable for
corruption, a lack of transparency, and other undemocratic practices.
European Parliament President Roberta Metsola portrayed the scandal as something
happening to the EU, rather than a phenomenon for which it’s actually
responsible or accountable through its systemic practices at worst or lack of
lobbying-related safeguards at best. “Make no mistake: the European Parliament,
dear colleagues, is under attack. European democracy is under attack. And our
way of open free democratic societies are under attack,” Metsola said.
Metsola’s comments echo mainstream press reports referring to a “Qatar
corruption”scandal at the EU, but it should be considered first and foremost a
European Union corruption problem. Shifting blame onto Qatar lets the EU off the
hook and gives the false impression that the troubles begin and end with a
single country. Just how many other countries could be enjoying similar
“lobbying arrangements” with folks in positions of political power and influence
in Brussels?
Transparency International suggests that this kind of thing is actually pretty
commonplace. “This is not an isolated incident. Over many decades, the
Parliament has allowed a culture of impunity to develop, with a combination of
lax financial rules and controls and a complete lack of independent (or indeed
any) ethics oversight,” said the NGO’s director, Michiel van Hulten.
Another problem with this fiasco for the EU is that it harms its well-crafted
messaging that constantly drives home two points. The first point is how
virtuous and righteous Europe wants people to believe it is. This scandal shines
a spotlight on a dirty issue in a dark corner that no one ever evokes, and
ultimately tarnishes their halo, which they’re constantly brandishing. The
second point that the EU always promotes – and which this all hinders – is how
Russia is responsible for all of the EU’s self-inflicted wounds because the EU
is so innocent and infinitely competent and trustworthy with absolutely no
hidden or special interests.
Corruption in the EU seems to be relative, and open to use as a bargaining chip
or to dial up or down pressure. The bloc recently blocked funds to Hungary under
the pretext that the country’s institutions are so flimsy that the cash could be
used to fuel corruption. But when Hungary agreed to lift its veto of more
funding for Ukraine, then suddenly the funding became unblocked, and corruption
concerns vanished.
If all of this is just the visible tip of the iceberg when it comes to shady
activities in the EU, then how big is the actual iceberg? And is anyone
interested in actually digging any deeper to find out?
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN