The Guardian (USA)

The Uber files: how the leak prompted outrage across the world

- Rob Davies

The release of the Uber files has prompted a frenzy of reaction around the world, piling pressure on senior politician­s, fuelling calls for a crackdown on corporate lobbying and drawing outrage from groups including traditiona­l taxi drivers.

The fuse was lit with the publicatio­n of revelation­s from a trove of more than 124,000 documents about Uber spanning from 2013 to 2017, leaked to the Guardian and shared with the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ) and internatio­nal media.

The files, leaked by whistleblo­wer Mark MacGann, laid bare how Uber flouted laws, duped police, exploited violence against drivers, and secretly lobbied government­s during its aggressive global expansion.

Uber has said that it “has not and will not make excuses for past behaviour that is clearly not in line with our present values”, distancing the modernday company from its past deeds.

But the political, regulatory and public response to the Uber files is still unfolding and Uber – not to mention the people who helped its growth – are coming under intense scrutiny in some of the world’s largest economies and Uber’s most important markets.

France

Details of how President Emmanuel

Macron leapt to the aid of Uber, as it lobbied for a way into France’s taxi sector, have led to calls from across the political spectrum for a parliament­ary inquiry.

Opposition politician­s and the leftwing CGT trade union seized on reports of secret undeclared meetings and the promise of a “deal” brokered by Macron inside the government to help Uber.

One parliament­arian described the revelation­s as a “state scandal”, amid calls from the hard left and the far right for Macron, who is already under intense pressure, to face an official inquiry from a parliament­ary committee.

Macron has been defiant, saying he would “do it again tomorrow and the day after tomorrow”.

The newly appointed French minister of digital affairs, Jean-Noël Barrot, is expected to recuse himself from Uberrelate­d matters , multiple sources reported, because his sister Hélène Barrot is Uber’s European communicat­ions director.

Belgium

“Investigat­ions by private detectives into Brussels ministers, repeated violations of the sector’s regulation­s, destructio­n of data, obstructio­n of jus

tice, possible tax fraud, screen companies to circumvent Brussels legislatio­n […] are all an attack on our rule of law and our democracy. ”

Those were the words of Ridouane Chahid, leader of Belgium’s Socialist party PS, which has proposed a parliament­ary inquiry.

Italy

Cab drivers were already protesting about plans for Uber-friendly deregulati­on before the leak emerged. In recent demonstrat­ions in Naples, Milan and Rome, drivers carried banners that read “Fuck you Uber” and set off fireworks.

The Netherland­s

Dutch deputy minister of finance, Marnix van Rij, has said he wants to investigat­e whether the Dutch tax authoritie­s violated internatio­nal agreements when dealing with Uber.

A spokespers­on for the European Commission has said the EC will write to Neelie Kroes, its former vice-president, after two dozen European politician­s called for an inquiry into suggestion­s she secretly helped Uber lobby the Netherland­s prime minister, Mark Rutte, and a string of other national Dutch politician­s.

Ireland

Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said there should be greater transparen­cy around corporate lobbying, after the Uber files revealed that the company tried, unsuccessf­ully, to convince the Fine Gael-led coalition in 2015 and 2016 to loosen taxi regulation­s.

Spain

Barcelona’s leftwing mayor, Ada Colau, welcomed the revelation­s contained in the Uber files, saying they had served to “unmask” the company.

She told El País that the company had tried to “disguise themselves as innovators and small freelancer­s” when they had actually been “crooks”. Yolanda Díaz, Spain’s second deputy prime minister and labour minister, said the leak was a matter of “utmost seriousnes­s”.

Finland

In Finland, the Uber files have created a political scandal after it emerged that former Finnish prime minister Alexander Stubb met Uber executives several times while serving as PM and finance minister. The company was lobbying to change Finland’s longstandi­ng taxi regulation­s. In the end, Stubb resigned as prime minister in 2015 after losing his position as chairman of the Coalition party. There is no suggestion that Uber’s lobbying was successful.

Europe-wide

German MEP Daniel Freund wrote to the European parliament president, Roberta Metsola, asking him to investigat­e Uber’s lobbying practices of in Brussels.

European parliament politician­s had already been working on a proposal that would reclassify millions of gig economy workers as employees, rather than independen­t contractor­s, conferring rights such as minimum pay. Amid debate about how the final proposals should look, the Uber files have given renewed impetus to leftwing factions pushing for stronger labour laws, according to a report in Politico.

India

In India, one of the locations where Uber used a “kill switch” to cut access to company data during raids by the authoritie­s, the law could change in response to revelation­s about Uber. The Indian Express reported that the government is considerin­g new rules.

“It has been fairly obvious to most people that big tech platforms have been using technology to game the system and consumers both, and have evaded scrutiny by constantly covering themselves with innovation­s,” said Rajeev Chandrasek­har, the minister for electronic­s and IT.

Trade unions have also demanded action. The Indian Federation of App-Based Transport Workers (IFAT) filed a “public interest litigation” in the supreme court, calling for new laws to protect gig economy workers.

UK

The majority of questionab­le behaviour revealed by the Uber files took place outside the UK but Transport for London has said it is investigat­ing claims that MacGann notified it of concerns about Uber in 2020 but was ignored.

US

Most of the revelation­s in the Uber files relate to Europe but they have caught the attention of American organisati­ons lobbying for the rights of gig workers. Referring to concerns about driver safety, Gig Workers Rising wrote: “The story these documents reveal is horrific: Uber appears to have encouraged drivers to put themselves in dangerous situations when it benefited their bottom line.”

 ?? Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/Alamy ?? Uber has said that it ‘has not and will not make excuses for past behaviour that is clearly notin line with our present values’, distancing the modern-day company from its past deeds.
Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/Alamy Uber has said that it ‘has not and will not make excuses for past behaviour that is clearly notin line with our present values’, distancing the modern-day company from its past deeds.

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