Brussels Gets Busy: EU Parliament’s Week of Votes, Visits, and Very Important Meetings
Hold onto your briefcases, folks—the European Parliament is gearing up for another action-packed week, and this time they’re tackling everything from AI and media pluralism to conversion therapy bans. Spoiler alert: there’s also a lot of discharge voting happening. (No, not that kind of discharge—we’re talking budgets here.)
Monday kicks off with the Committee on Civil Liberties diving into a public hearing on banning conversion practices across the EU. Because apparently, some people still need reminding that trying to “convert” someone’s identity is about as useful as a chocolate teapot. They’ll also debate how artificial intelligence is messing with media pluralism—because what could possibly go wrong when algorithms start picking our news?
Meanwhile, the Budgetary Control Committee is having what can only be described as a “discharge party.” They’re voting on approximately eleven different budget discharge reports, covering everyone from the European Parliament itself to the Court of Auditors. It’s like spring cleaning, but with more paperwork and fewer dust bunnies.
Tuesday sees President Metsola playing host to everyone from the European American Chamber of Commerce to the Dutch Prime Minister. It’s basically speed-dating, but for international diplomacy.
Wednesday brings drama with a press conference titled “The Urgent situation in occupied Palestinian territories and lack of debate in European Parliament.” Nothing says “we need to talk” quite like scheduling a press conference about not talking enough. President Metsola, meanwhile, will be juggling meetings with SAP’s CEO and Mercedes-Benz’s top brass—presumably discussing whether the EU’s future runs on software or horsepower.
Thursday gets personal as President Metsola heads home to Malta, visiting students, a manufacturing plant, and a hospice. It’s a reminder that even EU presidents need to check in with the folks back home. The Environment Committee will also debate emissions trading transparency, because someone needs to follow the money trail on all that carbon.
Friday wraps up with more Malta visits and—wait for it—International Women’s Day events focusing on digital violence against women. There’s even a journalist seminar on the topic, because if there’s one thing the EU loves, it’s a well-organized seminar.
The week concludes with the traditional pre-session briefing, where journalists gather to find out what’s really going on before the official version hits the airwaves.
In short: democracy is messy, bureaucracy is real, and somewhere in Brussels, someone is definitely arguing about the wording of a subclause right now.









