Plenary Votes & Resolutions: 2026-03-19

Recent plenary votes, adopted texts, party cohesion analysis, and detected voting anomalies in the European Parliament

Recent parliamentary activities reveal key voting patterns, party cohesion trends, and notable political dynamics in the European Parliament. According to European Parliament data, analysis of voting records from 2026-02-17 to 2026-03-19 provides insights into legislative decision-making and party discipline.

Why This Matters

Key Finding: Voting records and party cohesion data reveal political alignment across the European Parliament, helping citizens understand how their elected representatives make legislative decisions.

Recently Adopted Texts

18 texts adopted in recent plenary sessions:

  • Case of Elene Khoshtaria and political prisoners under the Georgian Dream regime TA-10-2026-0083 2026-03-12
  • Calculation of emission credits for heavy-duty vehicles for the reporting periods of the years 2025 to 2029 TA-10-2026-0084 2026-03-12
  • Multilateral negotiations in view of the WTO 14th Ministerial Conference in Yaounde 26 to 29 March 2026 TA-10-2026-0086 2026-03-12
  • EU-Ecuador Agreement: cooperation between Europol and the Ecuadorian authorities competent for combatting serious crime and terrorism TA-10-2026-0072 2026-03-11
  • Mobilisation of the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund for Displaced Workers: application EGF/2025/004 BE/Tupperware - Belgium TA-10-2026-0073 2026-03-11
  • Recommendation on enhanced EU-Canada cooperation in the current geopolitical context, including the threats to Canada's economic stability and sovereignty TA-10-2026-0078 2026-03-11
  • Appointment of the Vice-President of the European Central Bank TA-10-2026-0060 2026-03-10
  • European Union regulatory fitness and subsidiarity and proportionality โ€“ report on Better Law-Making covering 2023 and 2024 TA-10-2026-0063 2026-03-10
  • Housing crisis in the European Union with the aim of proposing solutions for decent, sustainable and affordable housing TA-10-2026-0064 2026-03-10
  • Copyright and generative artificial intelligence โ€“ opportunities and challenges TA-10-2026-0066 2026-03-10
  • Addressing subcontracting chains and the role of intermediaries in order to protect workers rights TA-10-2026-0050 2026-02-17
  • Recommendation to the Council on EU priorities for the 70th session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women TA-10-2026-0051 2026-02-17
  • Systemic oppression inhumane conditions and arbitrary detentions by the regime in Iran TA-10-2026-0046 2026-02-17
  • Post-election situation in Uganda and threats against opposition leader Bobi Wine TA-10-2026-0045 2026-02-17
  • Situation in Northeast Syria the violence against civilians and the need to maintain a sustainable ceasefire TA-10-2026-0053 2026-02-17
  • European Central Bank annual report 2025 TA-10-2026-0034 2026-02-17
  • Bilateral safeguard clause of the EU-Mercosur Partnership Agreement and the EU-Mercosur Interim Trade Agreement for agricultural products TA-10-2026-0030 2026-02-17
  • Application of the safe third country concept TA-10-2026-0026 2026-02-17

Deep Political Analysis

What Happened

Parliamentary activity from 2026-02-17 to 2026-03-19. Detailed roll-call data unavailable for this period.

Timeline

  1. Period: 2026-02-17 to 2026-03-19

Why It Matters โ€” Root Causes

Voting patterns in this period reflect ongoing legislative negotiations and inter-institutional bargaining positions.

Impact Assessment

Political

Legislative outcomes in this period will shape EU policy priorities and inter-institutional dynamics.

Economic

The legislative outcomes in this period carry potential economic implications for EU businesses and citizens.

Social

Parliamentary questions in this period reflect citizensโ€™ concerns and MEPsโ€™ oversight role.

Geopolitical

Voting patterns reflect evolving EU positions on international affairs, trade relationships, and global governance commitments.

Strategic Outlook

The legislative trajectory suggests continued consensus-building with potential pressure points in the weeks ahead.

Multi-Stakeholder Perspectives

Political GroupsNeutralMedium

Impact on this stakeholder group: medium significance based on "voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19".

  • voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19
Civil SocietyNeutralMedium

Impact on this stakeholder group: medium significance based on "voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19".

  • voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19
IndustryNeutralMedium

Impact on this stakeholder group: medium significance based on "voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19".

  • voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19
National GovernmentsPositiveHigh

Impact on this stakeholder group: high significance based on "voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19".

  • voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19
CitizensNegativeLow

Impact on this stakeholder group: low significance based on "voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19".

  • voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19
EU InstitutionsPositiveHigh

Impact on this stakeholder group: high significance based on "voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19".

  • voting period 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19

Stakeholder Outcome Matrix

Action Confidence Political GroupsCivil SocietyIndustryNational GovernmentsCitizensEU Institutions
Voting outcomes 2026-02-17โ€“2026-03-19LowNeutralNeutralNeutralWinnerLoserWinner

SWOT Analysis

Internal External

Strengths

Internal positive factors

  • โ€”

Opportunities

External positive factors

  • Cross-party alliances on specific legislation can build broader consensus

Weaknesses

Internal negative factors

  • โ€”

Threats

External negative factors

  • Shifting alliances may delay legislative progress on key files