EU seeks clarification from former EC
vice-president over Uber revelations
EU executive responds following claims Neelie Kroes
lobbied Dutch PM and others
Kroes has denied any wrongdoing and said she did ‘not
have any formal or informal role at Uber before that particular date of May
2016’.
Jennifer
Rankin in Brussels, Angela Giuffrida in Rome and Lisa O'Carroll
Mon 11 Jul
2022 17.14 BST
The EU
executive has announced it will write to its former vice-president Neelie Kroes
“for clarification” following revelations that she secretly helped Uber lobby
the Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, and a string of other national politicians.
The
European Commission has been facing calls to open an immediate inquiry and
“defend the EU’s integrity” in the wake of the reports, which showed that Kroes
called Dutch government authorities about Uber less than six months after
leaving her post as the EU’s top official on internet policy.
The calls
for an investigation were part of the growing fallout from the Uber files, a
trove of 124,000 documents exposing the ethically questionable practices that
allowed the cab-hailing company to barge into new markets around the world.
In France,
opposition parties have attacked the president, Emmanuel Macron, over his past
help for the company, while in Italy, former prime minister Matteo Renzi came
under pressure to clarify his alleged involvement.
The leak
shines a light on Kroes, a veteran Dutch politician, who promised to do “my
utmost” to help the company arrange a meeting with a senior European Commission
official, despite a ban on lobbying her former colleagues at the time.
Kroes has
denied any wrongdoing and said she did “not have any formal nor informal role
at Uber before that particular date of May 2016,” when it was announced she was
starting as chair of the company’s public policy advisory board.
The
commission said on Monday it had “decided to send a letter to the former
vice-president Kroes for a clarification on the information presented in the
media” while declining to go into details about that “bilateral” communication.
The commission is “not the type of institution that jumps [to] conclusions
quickly”, the spokesperson added.
The EU’s
transparency watchdog sounded a more urgent note, describing the revelations as
“concerning” but not surprising. “Brussels is the second lobbying capital of
the world, and these types of tactics are widely used by large companies in
Europe,” EU ombudsman Emily O’Reilly said in a statement to the Guardian.
She called
for “proper enforcement” and improvement to existing rules. “There is
increasing public awareness, thanks also to investigative reporting on the
matter, of the damage caused to the EU administration if ex-commissioners use
their networks and profile to advantage the private sector and at times in
clear conflict of interest situations.”
Paul Tang,
a Dutch Social Democrat MEP, who chairs the European parliament’s tax
committee, said he would file a complaint to the European Commission president,
Ursula von der Leyen. “The EU Commission must come into action and defend the
EU’s integrity,” he tweeted.
Von der
Leyen herself was accused of slow progress in setting up an independent EU
ethics body to eliminate conflicts of interests for all former officials and
politicians moving on to other jobs.
“They
[commission officials] are dragging their feet as much as they can,” said Vitor
Teixeira at Transparency International’s Brussels office. “There is a lot of
room for improvement in the [current EU ethics] rules, so it was never a
question of if, but when the next scandal would happen.”
He added:
“We would definitely call for an independent investigation to see whether Ms
Kroes has broken any rules and if she should be sanctioned.”
Under
current EU rules, former commissioners are banned from lobbying serving
commissioners and their top aides for two years after stepping down, but there
is no ban on contacting national politicians on behalf of a private company.
When Kroes left the commission in 2014, the cooling-off period was 18 months.
She, like current commissioners, has a lifelong obligation to act with
“integrity and discretion” on leaving the EU executive.
Any former
commissioner found in breach of the rules can be deprived of their EU pension.
As the
fallout rippled across Europe, Renzi faced questions about his alleged involvement
in the scandal after his name emerged as someone the company had allegedly
sought to gain access to.
“The
journalistic investigation into the systematic violation of laws by Uber is an
international scandal to which we must react strongly,” Mario Furore and
Sabrina Pignedoli, MEPs with the Five Star Movement, said in a statement.
The leak
suggests Renzi had been “briefed in detail” by an Uber adviser on Italy’s
proposed legislation and Uber’s own preferred amendments to it.
A
spokesperson for Renzi’s office said the former prime minister did not believe
he ever spoke to the Uber adviser, and that if the company had even been
“touched upon in a conversation”, it happened “as a side topic”.
In Ireland,
the leaks will raise fresh questions over a recent pledge by the deputy prime
minister, Leo Varadkar, who said he would like to “look again” at opening the
market to Uber.
The files
show how the cab-hailing company tried, but ultimately failed, to win leverage
with Varadkar’s predecessor, Enda Kenny, and former finance minister Michael
Noonan.
At one
point, one of its public affairs advisers suggested persuading former US
president Bill Clinton or someone from the Irish-linked Kennedy dynasty to
endorse their services by offering a free Uber service when they were on one of
their visits to Ireland.
In Hungary,
also, Uber’s lobbying efforts ran into the sand. The company hired a lobbyist
with extensive government connections, believed to be close to Viktor Orbán’s
son-in-law, István Tiborcz. As the independent website Direkt36 has reported, a
government transport official cancelled a meeting with Uber at the last minute
and then refused to answer the lobbyist’s calls, despite having previously
being said they were available.
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