All Contributions (165)
European Citizens’ Initiative ‘My voice, my choice: for safe and accessible abortion’ (debate)
Date: N/A | Language: ROI will vote against the European Citizens' Initiative "My Voice, My Choice: for safe and accessible abortions’, as it seeks to redefine abortion as a fundamental human right, an approach that raises serious legal, moral and human rights issues. Provoked abortion is a deliberate act that puts an end to the life of an unborn human being whose right to life is protected by existing international human rights instruments. The right to life has long been recognised as the foundation of all other rights: Without life, no other right can exist. Declaring abortion a fundamental right is in fact a paradigm shift and a principle: the right of a third person to end the life of an unborn person is superior to that person's fundamental right to life. Once accepted, this paradigm shift will also apply to living people. Such a redefinition does not strengthen the protection of women or human dignity. On the contrary, it risks undermining the principle that every human life deserves protection. The European Union should defend the right to life and promote policies that genuinely support women, families and human dignity, not regulate and normalise the end of life at any stage.
Motion of censure on the Commission (B10-0063/2026)
Date:
22.01.2026 14:29
| Language: RO
Madam President, I voted in favour of the motion of censure against Ursula von der Leyen for her non-transparent and irresponsible handling of the EU‐Mercosur Agreement. Its negotiation and signature raised serious substantive and procedural issues and the European Parliament was bypassed in this negotiation. Firstly, the agreement opens up the European market for agricultural and food products from countries with much lower standards than the European Union, which creates real health risks for European consumers. It is aberrant to ban substances in European agriculture because they are not healthy for people, but to allow free access to agricultural products from countries where those substances are allowed. Secondly, this agreement creates a deeply loyal competition for European farmers. While Mercosur producers operate with more lenient rules, European farmers are burdened by excessive bureaucracy and huge policy costs. Green Deal. To impose harsh standards at home, but to import cheaper products from far more permissive countries is simply unfair and hypocritical. While trade benefits such as access for the European automotive industry also exist in the agreement, public health and food security must take precedence.
Drones and new systems of warfare – the EU’s need to adapt to be fit for today’s security challenges (debate)
Date:
22.01.2026 08:56
| Language: EN
Mr President, dear colleagues, the European Parliament's report on drones and new systems of warfare rightfully points out that unmanned systems have fundamentally changed modern combat. Drones are now decisive force multipliers, providing reconnaissance, precision strikes, logistics and electronic warfare, as demonstrated everyday in Ukraine. Europe must lead in this critical field. Therefore, first, we must invest strategically in drone technology and build strong industrial and operational capacities within the European Union. This includes reducing dependence on external suppliers for key components, as well as removing unnecessary bureaucracy that slows innovation, procurement, production and deployment. Second, we must deepen our cooperation with Ukraine. Ukrainian engineers, manufacturers and operators have gained unmatched experience in developing, deploying and scaling drone systems under real combat conditions. Third, drones must be fully integrated in our defence structures alongside effective counter-drone systems. To achieve this, we must prioritise funding, streamline production and scale production. Europe must build not only the best drones, but also be able to produce them quickly and in large numbers to ensure our security and deter any aggressor.
Human rights and democracy in the world and the European Union’s policy on the matter – annual report 2025 (A10-0262/2025 - Francisco Assis)
Date:
21.01.2026 20:30
| Language: RO
Madam President, fundamental human rights are not a recent philosophical invention or a product of political majorities. Human rights have their source in the Judeo-Christian heritage of Europe, which affirms that every human being has an intrinsic dignity, because he is created in the image and likeness of God. From this revealed faith came later philosophical and legal notions such as equality before the law, freedom of conscience and respect for the person, values that were the basis of European civilization. The report rightly recognises that human rights and democracy are under increasing pressure globally, authoritarian regimes continue to suppress freedom of expression, persecute religious communities and undermine democratic institutions. These realities call for a strong and united response from the European Union. I abstained, however, because, even though the report was improved by amendments, they mix the defence of fundamental rights with pseudo rights, such as gender ideology, which do not derive from the universal tradition of human rights, but from neo-Marxist political activism. To be strong again, Europe needs to rediscover its own roots and stop relativising fundamental rights.
Implementation of the common foreign and security policy – annual report 2025 (A10-0253/2025 - David McAllister)
Date:
21.01.2026 20:27
| Language: RO
No text available
Human rights and democracy in the world and the European Union’s policy on the matter – annual report 2025 (debate)
Date:
20.01.2026 20:15
| Language: EN
Madam President, dear colleagues, the notion of human rights is rooted in the Judeo-Christian belief that every human being is created in the image of God with inherent dignity and worth. While other cultures have recognised duties and hierarchies, the idea of equal, universal and inalienable individual rights grew from this Judeo-Christian moral foundation. Human rights, therefore, are not privileges granted by the state, nor can they be withdrawn at the impulse of those in power. When states forget this truth, rights are seen as privileges vulnerable to ideologies and abuse. This report rightly warns that human rights and democracies are under increased pressure worldwide. Authoritarian regimes deny freedom of conscience and religion, repress speech, persecute believers and devalue human life. Europe cannot respond to these challenges by weakening the moral foundation on which human rights were built, nor by denying biological realities – claiming, for example, that a man can give birth. We must defend human rights, not as a political intervention, but as a sacred obligation to uphold the dignity and worth of every human being.
CFSP and CSDP (Article 36 TEU) (joint debate)
Date:
20.01.2026 18:50
| Language: EN
Mr President, dear colleagues, Russia represents the greatest threat to Europe today, as the common security and defence policy report states in its first paragraph. Russia's illegal war of aggression against Ukraine is not an isolated or local conflict: it is Russia's deliberate attempt to undermine international law, redraw borders by force and weaken Europe – an effort that began in 2008 with the war against Georgia. Cyber-attacks, disinformation campaigns, sabotage of critical infrastructure across Europe and the instrumentalisation of religion demonstrate that Russia's hostile actions go far beyond the military battleground. Europe is no longer living in a time of peace by default. Deterrence, preparedness, and resilience must now guide our actions. This requires serious and sustained investment in defence – not to wage war, but to prevent it. We must strengthen our military capabilities, reinforce Europe's defence industry, improve cooperation among Member States, and ensure that Europe will act fast and tough when its security is at stake. Investing in defence is investing in peace, freedom and the protection of our citizens. Our security, sovereignty and future depend on how united, committed and strong we are.
One-minute speeches on matters of political importance
Date:
19.01.2026 20:36
| Language: EN
Mr President, 40 years ago, on 8 May 1985, speaking in this plenary in Strasbourg, President Ronald Reagan reminded Europe and the United States that their partnership was not built merely on treaties or convenience, but on shared Judeo-Christian values, a common culture and history, and a deep commitment to life, liberty, prosperity and the pursuit of happiness. Those words remain profoundly relevant today. The relationship between the United States and the European Union is not only strategic, it is moral. It is rooted in shared beliefs that make the governments accountable to their people and place the dignity and freedom of the individual at the centre of public life. When the US and Europe work together, our economies flourish, our societies grow more secure and freedom prevails. In times of uncertainty, the wisest response is to learn not only from mistakes but from successes as well. NATO and the Strategic Partnership, the Transatlantic Partnership are proven successes that need renewing today. I therefore call on the European and American leaders to rediscover the words spoken by President Reagan in this plenary forty years ago.
European Democracy Shield – very large online platform algorithms, foreign interference and the spread of disinformation (debate)
Date:
18.12.2025 09:20
| Language: EN
Mr President, dear colleagues, there are only two ways of approaching truth. First, through revelation from top down. This requires faith and belongs to religion. Second, through reason from the bottom up. This requires doubt, debate and confrontation of ideas. This is the task of science and the very foundation of a pluralistic democratic society. In the 17th century, Descartes expressed this shift with cogito ergo sum. By placing doubt and individual reason at the centre of knowledge, he laid the philosophical foundations of modern Western democracy: open debate, free inquiry and access to information. Today, we hear repeated claims that online debates and elections are threatened by controversial speeches on large platform, claims that are currently used to justify tighter control under the Digital Services Act. This is an undemocratic and profoundly un‑European approach. Democracy is not endangered by too much debate, but by censorship. The European Commission must not become an inquisition policing thoughts. Its role is to keep the EU an area of freedom, not to decide what citizens are allowed to think, hear or say. Merry Christmas.
European Citizens’ Initiative ‘My voice, my choice: for safe and accessible abortion’ (B10-0557/2025, B10-0558/2025)
Date:
17.12.2025 20:27
| Language: EN
Madam President, I voted against the European citizens' initiative 'My voice, my choice: for safe and accessible abortion' because it pushes to define abortion as a fundamental human right, an approach that raises profound legal, moral and human rights concerns. Induced abortion is a deliberate action to end the life of an unborn human being. That unborn child is a human person whose fundamental right to life is protected by existing international human rights instruments. The Western legal system has long recognised the right to life as a foundation upon which all the other rights depend. Without life, no other rights can exist. To declare abortion a fundamental right means, in effect, to claim that the right to take the life of an unborn child supersedes the child's right to life. Such a legal redefinition does not strengthen the protection of women or humankind. Once such a premise is accepted, the life of no human being can be considered fully safe or guaranteed. Women need meaningful support, solidarity and protection. The European Union should uphold the protection of life and ...
Military mobility (A10-0242/2025 - Petras Auštrevičius, Roberts Zīle)
Date:
17.12.2025 20:23
| Language: RO
Madam President, I voted for the report on military mobility, because the security of the European Union can no longer be treated as a theoretical exercise, but as a real political responsibility manifested through concrete actions. In a context marked by Russia’s aggression against its neighbours and instability at the EU’s borders, the ability to swiftly deploy military forces and equipment on European soil is essential, both for deterring any attack and for effective defence. The report calls for the removal of bureaucratic barriers that slow down our response and concrete investments in infrastructure. dual-use. With the amendments tabled, we have shown why the EU must also invest in infrastructure in Romania, in order to facilitate military mobility. Developing a genuine the Schengen Military it is not a slogan, but a strategic necessity for Europe to be able to act quickly and credibly to deter any possible military aggression. At the same time, the report strengthens cooperation with NATO and reaffirms the role of the EU as a security actor. My vote for this report is a clear political message: EU countries must be united, determined and able to defend their citizens, territory and borders, without ambiguity or delay.
The deepening democratic crisis in Georgia (debate)
Date:
17.12.2025 16:57
| Language: EN
Mr President, colleagues, the European Union must stop treating partnering countries, including Georgia, as instruments of political convenience or as arenas for exporting internal EU policy disputes. Every pioneering country deserves respect and good faith engagement, aimed at resolving challenges – not disengagement when the government does not comply with the absurd EU policies. Georgia was the first country attacked by Russia in the 21st century and still has parts of its territory illegally occupied by Russia to this day. At the NATO summit in Bucharest in 2008, Georgia clearly expressed its ambition to join the alliance, yet key NATO and EU Member States blocked that path. Despite this, Georgia has continued to engage constructively with the European Union. This year, though, in 2025, it accepted the EU Human Rights Dialogue in good faith, only to see it abruptly and unjustifiably postponed by the EU. Abandoning Georgia now would be unjust, strategically shortsighted and a moral failure for the European Union. Dear Commissioner, if you really care about the Georgian people, start a dialogue with Georgia now.
Incentivising defence-related investments in the EU budget to implement the ReArm Europe Plan (A10-0172/2025 - Rihards Kols)
Date:
16.12.2025 22:37
| Language: RO
No text available
EU position on the proposed plan and EU engagement towards a just and lasting peace for Ukraine (RC-B10-0545/2025)
Date:
27.11.2025 14:38
| Language: RO
Madam President, dear colleagues, in Ukraine there is not only a conflict between an aggressor and an aggressor country, but also a confrontation between the current world order, built after the Second World War, based on the UN Charter, and the imposition of a new world order desired by Russia and other authoritarian regimes, an order based on spheres of influence and disregard for the sovereignty of states. According to the UN Charter, the borders of a state cannot be altered by military force. Ukraine therefore defends its sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity, as recognised and should be guaranteed by international law. Russia, however, contests this order, citing neo-imperial claims, similar to those once used by Hitler and others who devastated the European continent. A so-called peace traded for Ukrainian territories would dangerously undermine the current world order and set the precedent for future conflicts that will devastate the world. I voted in favour of the resolution in support of Ukraine, not only because I was a consort on the part of the conservative group, but also because Ukraine must be supported, both for its just cause and to protect the current international order, which has guaranteed peace and stability for decades.