MEPs Take Manhattan (and Talk Disability Rights)
A squad of European Parliament members jetted off to New York this week for what might be the most acronym-heavy conference of the year: the 19th Conference of States Parties (COSP19) to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN CRPD). Try saying that three times fast.
Led by Li Andersson from Finland’s The Left party, the delegation spent June 9-11 doing what politicians do best—attending meetings, hosting side events, and making sure everyone knows they were there. The gang included MEPs from various committees with equally impressive acronyms: EMPL, LIBE, and PETI. (We promise these are real.)
The main event? Celebrating the UN CRPD’s 20th birthday. Nothing says “happy birthday” quite like bilateral meetings and panel discussions about strengthening care systems and political participation for persons with disabilities.
In a particularly ambitious move, the European Parliament teamed up with UNICEF, the International Labour Organisation, and the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights to chat about getting the private sector on board with inclusive care. Because if there’s one thing corporations love, it’s being voluntold to do the right thing.
Andersson wrapped things up with a diplomatic reality check: “There is still a lot of work to be done to translate the core principles of the convention into practical action.” Translation: Twenty years in, and we’re still figuring this out, folks.
The delegation also reminded everyone that the EU needs to put its money where its multilateral mouth is—particularly when it comes to actually funding disability rights initiatives. Radical concept, we know.









