EU
#TiSA MEPs vote on recommendations for services agreement
MEPs will vote on their recommendations for the ongoing talks on the Trade in Service Agreement (TiSA) on Wednesday 13 February. The agreement is being negotiated by 23 World Trade Organization members, including the EU, who want to further liberalize the trade in services between each other. Follow the live online and check out our infographic for more facts.
MEPs have stressed in their recommendations that TiSA should deliver more opportunities for European firms to supply services such as transport and telecoms to countries outside the EU, but want to make sure that the deal would not prevent European countries from creating laws in the public interest, for example on issues such as labor and data protection.
Report author Viviane Reding, a Luxembourg member of the EPP group, said in an interview: "We certainly do not want TiSA to undermine our public services, culture, labor, laws, environmental standards, consumer protection, data protection - in other words the way we live in Europe." She also warned Parliament would not approve the agreement at any cost, "Our standards cannot be changed by any trade agreement. Otherwise the Parliament will say no in the end."
Parliament's role
Although the European Commission negotiates on behalf of the EU, guided by the member states, the final deal must be approved by both member states and the European Parliament. Without this approval, the agreement cannot enter into force. This is why MEPs are following the talks very closely.
Parliament provides the negotiators with its recommendation on the issues raise so that it can influence the talks before a final text has been agreed. Once the text has been finalized, Parliament can either approve or reject it, but MEPs will not have the possibility to amend it.
Share this article:
EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.
-
Sport2 days agoWho will win the 2026 World Cup? Data points to Spain
-
Russia4 days agoWestern investors eye Russian assets again as sanctions discounts persist
-
Economy5 days agoDebt, AI and Algorithms: How the bond market is being reshaped
-
Artificial intelligence5 days agoCommission imposes interim measures on Meta to preserve free access to WhatsApp for rival AI assistants
