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The EU wants smarter, tech-forward lawmaking. Experts say it’s not enough

The EU wants smarter, tech-forward lawmaking. Experts say it’s not enough

ABONE OL
15 Temmuz 2026 11:28
The EU wants smarter, tech-forward lawmaking. Experts say it’s not enough
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ABONE OL
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Brussels wants simpler rules and smarter tools. But with vague timelines, broad urgency loopholes and understaffed capitals, the overhaul may not deliver.

In late April, the Commission presented a communication — “A Simpler, Clearer and Better Enforced EU Rulebook” — a concise document on how to improve the quality of the EU’s lawmaking, enhance transparency, enhance stakeholder involvement, deep clean the EU’s laws, and manage potential gold plating or even avoid transposing the EU rules on a Member State level.

While the document captures some of the necessary changes to the EU’s lawmaking, the list of actions could be more ambitious and future-oriented. Especially now, when the Commission is undergoing broad internal discussions on efficiency, institutional AI-readiness, and more.

Consumer Choice Center Europe’s latest paper, “Wiser regulation — How the EU and individual Member States must transform lawmaking to keep the European economy competitive,” evaluates the very same Communication, identifies structural flaws in current legislative and consultative processes, and offers actionable, tech-forward recommendations for both EU institutions and Member State governments.

The positives: Tech solutions

A welcome change — the Commission committed to transparently record and report any procedural derogations in the explanatory memoranda.

Hopefully, that means both lawmakers and citizens will be informed about how often and why procedural derogations occur (such as failing to follow all the steps in the Better Regulation Guidelines).

The document also promises to notify stakeholders directly when consultation summaries are published on the “Have Your Say” portal — a seemingly simple thing, but it hasn’t been practiced so far.

Lastly, the Commission proposes to leverage technological progress and promises to introduce a new IT tool to manage EU laws, track implementing rules, and identify regulatory overlaps and complexities.

This objective must be elevated to one of the primary goals, as it can help address many deep-rooted problems stemming from the complexity of the EU’s institutional framework and divergent interests.

Issues that remain unaddressed

The Commission’s previous Call for Evidence on better regulation drew broad criticism for its stakeholder engagement procedures. Various stakeholders requested more neutral public consultation designs, realistic timelines for participation, among other things.

Nevertheless, the follow-up document did not address the design of public consultations and vaguely promised to avoid counting in holiday periods “whenever possible,” while retaining the right to reduce the standard 12-week window to just six weeks.

How the EU and individual Member States must transform lawmaking to keep the European economy competitive (c) Consumer Choice Center Europe, Courtesy of EU Tech Loop

The Commission’s self-evaluation of its own work and more concrete suggestions for improvement are limited.

Historical evidence of non-adherence to the Better Regulation Principles demonstrates that it is not enough to simply define principles; one must also closely monitor and enforce their application across institutions and, effectively, change institutional culture.

 

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