The rise
and sudden fall of Brussels’ top Green politician
Confusion
and tears — but no goodbyes or thank yous — marked the end of Bas Eickhout’s
career in the European Parliament, after he broke party rules on relationship
disclosure.
May 21,
2026 10:21 pm CET
By Max
Griera
https://www.politico.eu/article/rise-fall-greens-chief-bas-eickhout-mep/
STRASBOURG
— When Green lawmakers and staff gathered for a regular meeting in the European
Parliament on Wednesday, only a small handful knew a bombshell was about to be
dropped.
Bas
Eickhout, the face of the Greens in the Parliament and one of the best-known
MEPs in Brussels and his native Netherlands, quit as a lawmaker and co-chair of
the group after breaking internal party rules on relationship disclosure.
According
to two people with knowledge of what happened in the room, Eickhout made a
statement, which he later posted on social media, saying: “In the past, I did
not always do the right thing. I have had relationships that were not
appropriate for my role. I should not have done that, and I take responsibility
for it.”
The room
went silent. Eickhout, who became visibly emotional as he spoke, then walked
out. Many were confused, and some tears were shed. But there were no goodbyes,
no thank yous, and no applause for his 17 years of service to a political
family that has more than 50 MEPs. A meeting was called on Thursday morning
between the leadership and party staff to discuss the matter further.
The group
secretariat was notified early this week of a previously undisclosed workplace
relationship involving a staff member. Relationships between MEPs and staffers
are allowed as long as they are disclosed, according to the Greens' code of
conduct.
After
that came to light, Eickhout decided to resign, two more people aware of the
situation told POLITICO. They were granted anonymity to speak about the
delicate situation.
POLITICO’s
Brussels Playbook last week reported that Eickhout, 49, had revealed to party
colleagues that he was in a relationship with Lena Schilling, 25, the youngest
member of the Parliament. The resignation “has nothing to do with the
relationship with Lena,” Eickhout told POLITICO via a spokesperson. He did not
respond to further requests for comment.
Progressive
Netherlands (known as PRO), the party into which Eickhout's Green-Left party is
in the final stages of merging, issued a statement indicating there had been
more cases. "He made this decision in part because he did not report past
workplace relationships."
The
reason Eickhout resigned is that he broke internal party rules by failing to
disclose his relationship with a staff member, said the second two people
familiar with the matter. Those rules were introduced in the wake of sexual
harassment allegations against German lawmaker Malte Gallée in March 2024.
Gallée denied the allegations but resigned his post.
“With his
[Eickhout's] departure, our group is losing an important member who has made a
significant contribution to the development of the European Green Deal,” said
European Green Party co-chair Vula Tsetsi, speaking about the EU's growth and
climate strategy. “We will continue these efforts with determination and
renewed energy.”
Rising
through the ranks
Eickhout
was first elected as an MEP in 2009 but rose to prominence in the 2019-2024
term, spearheading the Greens' work on the Green Deal legislative package,
notably pushing for stricter car emissions rules and a ban on the sale of new
combustion-engine cars by 2035. He also represented the group at COP climate
conferences on several occasions.
When it
came time to select a lead candidate for the 2024 EU election, the Greens
plumped for Eickhout, putting him face-to-face with Ursula von der Leyen in
televised debates.
However,
the Greens had a disastrous election, losing a quarter of their MEPs and seeing
their influence drastically reduced as right-wing forces gained a greater
foothold in the Parliament.
Appointed
as group co-chair after the election, Eickhout was tasked with reuniting a
fractured political family and confronting a new political landscape dominated
by the right. Many flagship green laws from the previous mandate — including
Eickhout’s own combustion engine ban — are now set to be reopened and gutted.
One after
the other, Eickhout and the Greens have seen their ideas watered down or
scrapped. “I no longer have the energy for it,” he said in his statement.
Meanwhile,
in The Hague, the merger of the Green-Left party with the Social Democrats to
form PRO could see a move away from the green movement. At a congress in
mid-June, PRO will begin the process of deciding whether to join the European
Socialists or the European Greens.
“With the
creation of PRO, a new era is beginning. That party deserves representatives
who can dedicate themselves to it with full energy,” Eickhout said in his
farewell statement.
“During
PRO’s Europa Festival on May 9, I saw how much energy, optimism, and fighting
spirit there is within the party. I saw a movement looking ahead and bursting
with ambition for the future. At the same time, I realized that after 17 years,
I can no longer bring that same energy in the same way,” he said.


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