EU Parliament Takes Aim at Outdated Rape Laws: “No Means No” Gets Official Upgrade
In a move that shouldn’t be revolutionary but somehow still is, the European Parliament is gearing up to make “absence of consent” the star of the show in rape legislation across the EU. Because apparently, we still need to clarify this in 2026.
Two rapporteurs with names longer than some countries’ legal codes—Evin Incir from Sweden and Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus from Poland—are leading the charge. They’re hosting a press conference on Tuesday to explain why consent should be, you know, the actual thing that matters in rape cases. Wild concept, right?
The report builds on a 2024 EU directive (because nothing says “urgent” like a two-year follow-up) and wants to align member states with international standards. Translation: some countries are still operating like it’s 1950, and Brussels has had enough.
The proposal doesn’t stop at consent. It’s throwing in the whole package: better victim support, access to justice, specialized healthcare, and—plot twist—addressing digital violence and harmful stereotypes. They’re also pushing to officially add gender-based violence to the EU’s crime list, which you’d think would already be there, but here we are.
The press conference goes down Tuesday at 5 PM CEST in the Daphne Caruana Galizia press room (named after a journalist who was murdered for doing her job—no pressure, attendees). Journalists can join remotely via something called “Interactio,” which sounds like a rejected dating app but is actually a streaming platform.
The debate hits the plenary floor Monday, with voting Tuesday. So if you’ve been waiting for European bureaucracy to catch up with basic human decency, mark your calendars. It only took a few decades.









