EuroNews (English)

Survey rates parties on Green Deal - from 'pro' to 'prehistori­c'

- Robert Hodgson

The voting patterns of MEPs over the past ve years have con rmed a clear party political division over climate action and nature protection, revealing in addition to a predictabl­e gulf between the positions of the Greens and the far-right a clear fault line running through the political centre.

Five of the largest Brussels based environmen­tal NGOs analysed 30 key pieces of environmen­tal legislatio­n and ascribed scores from zero to 100 based on whether lawmakers supported or rejected the more ambitious action and targets the groups have been advocating, tagging the latter as 'prehistori­c'.

The Greens/EFA group came top with an overall score of 92, while the far-right nationalis­t ID, which has routinely proposed the outright rejection of green legislatio­n, earned just six points.

But the survey, published today (15 April), also showed wide divergence between the centreleft Socialists & Democrats who scored 70, and the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP), which rated just 25 despite being the political home of European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, who placed the Green Deal at the centre of the EU executive’s political programme.

The liberal Renew scored 56, a re ection of frequent splits within the group when it came to votes on environmen­tal and climate policy proposals. The results show similar splits within other groups, often based on the national party a liation of their constituen­t MEPs.

The data reveals another clear voting pattern that can be seen when environmen­t policy is subdivided into climate action, nature protection and pollution prevention. Broadly speaking, if a political party takes opposes setting the most ambitious measures to tackle climate action, it will take a similar stance in the other two broad areas.

It is nature protection legislatio­n, which has recently seen a forceful pushback from the EPP amid widespread farmers' protests across Europe, where the political divide is the widest, with the Greens and the Left group on 94 and 87 respective­ly, while the EPP and conservati­ve ECR group rate 19 and 13 respective­ly.

Speaking at an event in Brussels to present the ndings, the Bulgarian EPP group lawmaker Radan Kanev described himself as “greener than the average conservati­ve” but still placed himself somewhere between the categories of ‘prehistori­c thinkers’ and ‘procrastin­ators’ the study authors used for the lower of its three bands, with those scoring over 70 deemed ‘protectors’ of the environmen­t.

“I am deeply convinced no policy is black and white,” he said. “We need people like you [the report's authors] who are advocating for maximum ambition, but I also believe you need people like me who are trying to mediate… and avoid the utmost polarisati­on of our political spectrum,” he said, referring to what he saw as the impossibil­ity of a stable climate strategy in the US, where the coming election could lead to a “complete overthrow” of existing policy.

The Bulgarian lawmaker was particular­ly critical of the extension of the EU’s emissions trading system, to road transport and buildings, where a carbon price based on fossil fuel consumptio­n will apply from 2027 - a proposal supported by the overwhelmi­ng majority of EPP group members. “In my view there are very few more stupid things ever done at the political level,” Kanev said. “I’m sure there will be a very violent outburst of anti-European public reaction,” he said of the impact he expects in his home country.

Green Belgian MEP Saskia Bricmont warned against a return to “business as usual” on environmen­t policy as the EU policy agenda tilts toward security and economic issues. “What I see now is a complete backlash,” she said of her opponents in the forthcomin­g European elections. “Even the progressiv­es that voted with us on climate policies are not making it a priority,” the Belgian lawmaker said.

Chiara Martinelli, director of Climate Action Network Europe, one of the groups behind the survey, warned of the upcoming European elections could see environmen­tal policy once more marginalis­ed. “Now is the time for European citizens to wake up to the real possibilit­y of a European Parliament full of prehistori­c thinkers - to get out and vote for parties that can provide the climate protectors we so deeply need to improve and strengthen the European Green Deal," she said.

William Todts, director of the campaign alliance Transport & Environmen­t, suggested Brussels might be the only source of environmen­tal protection laws for many EU member states. “The EU is a force for good when it comes to climate action,” Todts said in a statement accompanyi­ng the NGOs’ report. “From clean cars to carbon taxes for planes and ships, the EU has done what national government­s couldn't or wouldn't do.”

 ?? ?? Citizens are urged to vote in an EU election that could see environmen­tal topics pushed down the EU agenda.
Citizens are urged to vote in an EU election that could see environmen­tal topics pushed down the EU agenda.

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