Combating corruption
A legislative dossier on combating corruption. The amendments define corruption-related offences such as bribery and misappropriation by public officials, conflicts of interest and high-level officials, and set preventive measures including asset and interest declarations, transparency in public procurement, anti-corruption training, whistle-blower protection and exchange of information between competent authorities.
Procedure timeline
- Committee amendments tabled16 Oct 2023 – 18 Oct 2023
- Plenary vote — Adopted26 Mar 2026 · On the provisional agreement negotiated with the Council (the trilogue deal) — amendment 221
- Procedure completed
Plenary votes
2 roll-call votesIn plenary, Parliament usually votes in steps: first on amendments to the text (sometimes split into parts, so Members can accept one half of a sentence and reject the other), then on the text as a whole. The “main vote” is the one that adopts or rejects the text itself. Each vote below shows exactly which step it was. How voting works →
- 26 Mar 2026RejectedOn a procedural request to put the amendments to a voteOfficial label: Demande de procéder au vote sur les amendements · what was voted ↗179 for446 against16 abstentions77 did not voteForAgainstAbst.
Click a group to see each Member’s position.
- 26 Mar 2026Main voteAdoptedOn the provisional agreement negotiated with the Council (the trilogue deal) — amendment 221Official label: Accord provisoire - Am 221 · what was voted ↗581 for21 against42 abstentions74 did not voteForAgainstAbst.
Click a group to see each Member’s position.
Vote data: HowTheyVote.eu (ODbL, attribution) / European Parliament · roll-call votes only
Official amendment documents
Connections
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Explore the graphMembers who amended this procedure
35 Members · by amendment countThe amendments, in full text
415 amendmentsEvery amendment as tabled — original text, proposed change and justification, with a link to the official PDF.