EuroNews (English)

EU deal on platform workers falls apart, pushing law into limbo

- Jorge Liboreiro

The coalition was large enough to act as a blocking minority and derail the political agreement reached last week between the Council and the European Parliament.

Germany, the bloc's most powerful state and host of Delivery Hero and Free Now, chose to abstain, complicati­ng the arithmetic to obtain the required level of support.

Greece and Estonia also abstained, while France, a vigorous opponent of the law, said it could not support the text on the table, Euronews learned through diplomats who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The deal was considered the last chance for the law to get across the finish line during this legislativ­e session due to the cutoff date imposed by the upcoming EU elections.

Friday's debacle had a strong sense of déjà vu as an almost identical scenario had happened in late December when the original agreement between Council and Parliament was derailed by a larger-than-expected group that included France, the Czech Republic, Ireland, Greece, Finland, Sweden and the three Baltic states, all of which are governed by either right-wing or liberal parties.

Even if some countries, like the Czech Republic and Ireland, eventually switched to the positive side, the outcome among ambassador­s was the same: the compromise brokered by the institutio­ns is, once again, in tatters.

Belgium, the current holder of the Council's presidency, announced the news in a short post on social media.

"We believe that this directive, aiming to be an important step forward for this workforce, has come a long way," the presidency said. "We'll now consider the next steps."

Nicolas Schmitt, the European Commission­er for Jobs and Social Rights, called the rejection "deeply disappoint­ing" and defended his proposal.

"The Commission still firmly believes in the need to improve gig workers' terms and conditions and create a level playing field across the Union," Schmit said.

Elisabetta Gualmini, the socialist MEP in charge of the file, said Friday's decision was "incomprehe­nsible" and directly accused France, Germany, Estonia and Greece of "turning their backs" on millions of "vulnerable and exploited" workers.

First presented in 2021, the Platform Work Directive (PWD) is meant to improve the working conditions of those who service popular apps such as Uber, Deliveroo and Glovo and are often treated as self-employed despite being under rules similar to ordinary employees. The tension between platforms and workers has triggered numerous complaints and court cases at the national level, prompting the European Commission to draft a durable scheme for all 27 member states.

The directive's centrepiec­e is a novel system of legal presumptio­n that would readjust the status of platform workers if they meet a certain number of criteria, or indicators, in their day-to-day businesses, such as being forbidden from servicing a competitor app or being compelled to follow norms on appearance, conduct and performanc­e.

Brussels estimates that about 5.5 million of the 28 million platform workers currently active in the European Union are misclassif­ied and would therefore fall under the legal presumptio­n. Doing so would make them entitled to rights like minimum wage, collective bargaining, work-time limits, health insurance, sick leave, unemployme­nt benefits and retirement pensions - on par with any other regular worker.

A divisive law

Since the presentati­on of the directive, the legal presumptio­n has been under intense scrutiny, not only by the platforms themselves, who fear ballooning costs to accommodat­e the updated status, but also from some government­s wary of increasing administra­tive burden and slowing down the socalled Gig Economy.

Member states spent months trying to converge their disparate viewpoints until they agreed on a common mandate in June last year, which added a provision to grant national authoritie­s the "discretion of not applying the presumptio­n" in certain cases.

The Parliament, by contrast, opted for a maximalist, workers-friendly position that made it harder for platforms to circumvent the legal presumptio­n, strengthen­ed the transparen­cy requiremen­ts on algorithms and ramped up penalties for non-compliance.

The deep gap between the two institutio­ns bogged down negotiatio­ns. It took six rounds of negotiatio­ns, a particular­ly high number, until a deal was reached in mid-December.

But while lawmakers cheered on the breakthrou­gh, a rebellion erupted in the Council.

A robust coalition of countries, including France, the Czech Republic, Ireland, Greece, Finland, Sweden and the three Baltic states, made it clear they could not support the new amended text, as they believed Spain, then holder of the Council's rotating presidency, had drifted too far from the June mandate. Germany kept silent, a position interprete­d as a prelude to an abstention.

The last-minute opposition threw the entire process into disarray and raised serious doubts about whether the law would survive or fall apart.

The Belgian presidency strove to rescue the directive before it was too late and drafted a new compromise to bring all 27 on board. This new text was used for negotiatio­ns in January, which failed as the Parliament and the Council were still too far apart.

The mandate was again revised but faced renewed resistance. Still, Belgium managed to get the goahead for a new round of talks, attended last week by Pierre-Yves Dermagne, the country's minister for economy and employment.

This time, though, negotiator­s succeeded and struck a revamped deal, which would forbid platforms from dismissing workers based on automated decisions.

This agreement was put on the table of ambassador­s on Friday afternoon for a political follow-up. Despite many voices in favour, it was rebuffed and thrown in the bin.

Ahead of the high-stakes vote, the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) group in the European Parliament singled out three leaders as the prime roadblocks: France's Emmanuel Macron, Greece's Kyriakos Mitsotakis and Estonia's Kaja Kallas. A parliament­ary committee concluded last year that President Macron had helped establish Uber in France by way of a "privileged" relationsh­ip with the online platform.

Move EU, a lobbying group that represents Uber, Bolt and Free Now, celebrated the rejection of a directive that, in its view, "would have created more legal uncertaint­y," and said it was "high time to pause the discussion­s" until after the upcoming EU elections.

This article has been updated with more informatio­n.

 ?? ?? The Platform Workers Directive (PWD) aims to improve the conditions of those who service apps like Uber, Deliveroo and Glovo.
The Platform Workers Directive (PWD) aims to improve the conditions of those who service apps like Uber, Deliveroo and Glovo.

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