Political Group Memberships
Voting Statistics
Group Alignment
How often this MEP votes with their political group majority.
Rebel Subjects
Topics where this MEP most often breaks with their political group.
Procedures
186 votesAccess to finance for SMEs and scale-ups
Simplify regulations to reduce burdens on SMEs and improve their access to finance, especially for scale-ups.
Protection of minors online
Regulate online platforms to protect minors from addictive designs, harmful content, and commercial exploitation, including strict age verification and parental controls.
EU’s diplomatic strategy and geopolitical cooperation in the Arctic
Strengthen Arctic underwater infrastructure protection against geopolitical disruptions and counter Sino-Russian cooperation undermining international law.
2024 budget – assessing the implementation of the gender mainstreaming methodology in the EU budget
Require the Commission to develop a comprehensive methodology for gender budgeting, fully operational by the next programming period.
Impact of artificial intelligence on the financial sector
Require human oversight of fully autonomous AI systems used in the financial sector.
Written Explanations
Written explanations of vote submitted after plenary sessions.
Resolution on social and employment aspects of restructuring processes: the need to protect jobs and workers’ rights
As AI becomes more widespread, legislators should implement measures to protect workers from potential abuses. Although Parliament did not support the call for a directive, I am confident that we will be back to the this topic very soon. Unfortunately, valuable time will be lost in the meantime (paragraph 7, part 2). It is unfortunate that the proposal for an EU regulatory framework for the housing sector failed to gain majority support, especially since addressing the housing crisis is a key promise made by the Commission and Parliament to Europeans. Without a clear regulatory framework for the housing sector, it will be extremely meaningful difficult to achieve a progress (paragraph 13, original text, part 2). As the rapporteur for the INI report on the right to disconnect, I welcome the initiative for a repetition of the call of the directive. However, it is disappointing that Parliament must once again reiterate its position to the Commission, especially given that, despite its promises in the 2025 work programme, the Commission itself lacks a 'right to disconnect' (paragraph 31, part 4).
No written explanations available.