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Week In Review — 2026-04-11

Provenance

Stakeholder Map

Stakeholder Impact

View source: existing/stakeholder-impact.md

Assessment ID: STA-2026-04-11-008 Assessment Date: 2026-04-11 10:55 UTC Policy/Event Subject: Easter Recess Week and Upcoming Committee Restart Primary EP Reference: TA-10-2026-0092, 0094, 0096; 2025/0261(COD); precomputed stats Stage of Process: Inter-sessional monitoring to committee restart preparation Produced By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8) Overall Impact Level: HIGH (driven by tariff deadline and committee restart convergence)


Stakeholder Group Assessments

Group 1: EU Citizens (Direct Impact)

Parameter Value
Impact Level MEDIUM
Impact Timeline SHORT (1-6 months)
Affected Population All 450M EU residents (trade-dependent employment, consumer prices)
Impact Type FINANCIAL + SOCIAL
Evidence Sources 2025/0261(COD) tariff procedure; TA-10-2026-0096 anti-corruption
Confidence Level MEDIUM

Citizen Impact Narrative: EU citizens face potential price increases on US-origin goods if tariff countermeasures escalate. The April 15 deadline creates near-term uncertainty for trade-dependent industries. The Anti-Corruption Directive (TA-10-2026-0096) strengthens citizen protections but the 24-month transposition window delays benefits. Banking Union reforms improve financial stability but are technically complex and indirect in citizen impact.

Group 2: Grand Coalition (EPP + S&D + Renew)

Parameter Value
Impact Level HIGH
Impact Timeline IMMEDIATE
Primary Affected Groups EPP (internal split), Renew (convergence test)
Coalition Cohesion Effect STRAINS
Evidence Sources Precomputed stats: grandCoalitionSurplusDeficit -5.5%
Confidence Level MEDIUM

Coalition Impact Narrative: The tariff crisis is the first real policy test for the post-recess coalition. EPP faces division between its business wing (measured response) and competition policy wing (robust retaliation). Renew's 0.95 cohesion with ECR on competitiveness means the tariff vote could see Renew breaking from S&D, further straining the grand coalition.

Group 3: Opposition Groups (ECR, PfE, ESN, The Left, Greens/EFA)

Parameter Value
Impact Level HIGH
Impact Timeline IMMEDIATE
Primary Affected Groups ECR (gains influence), Greens/EFA (marginalised)
Electoral Positioning Effect POSITIVE (ECR/PfE), NEGATIVE (Greens/GUE/NGL)
Evidence Sources Precomputed stats: rightBlocShare 52.3%; Renew-ECR 0.95
Confidence Level MEDIUM

Opposition Impact Narrative: ECR is the biggest beneficiary. The Renew-ECR convergence gives ECR legislative influence disproportionate to its 79 seats. If this alignment holds on trade, ECR effectively becomes a co-governing partner without formal coalition membership. Greens/EFA face marginalisation as economic policy shifts rightward.

Group 4: Business and Industry

Parameter Value
Impact Level HIGH
Impact Timeline IMMEDIATE to SHORT
Primary Affected Sectors Trade-dependent industries, banking, digital economy
Regulatory Effect UNCERTAINTY (tariff) + POSITIVE (Banking Union clarity)
Evidence Sources 2025/0261(COD); TA-10-2026-0092/0094
Confidence Level MEDIUM

Business Impact Narrative: Industry faces dual reality: Banking Union reforms provide regulatory clarity for the financial sector, while tariff uncertainty creates planning challenges for trade-dependent businesses. The EPP business wing's positioning will be closely watched.

Group 5: National Governments (Council)

Parameter Value
Impact Level MEDIUM
Impact Timeline SHORT to MEDIUM
Primary Affected Trade-exposed (DE, NL, IE), defence-focused (PL, Baltics), eurozone 20
Institutional Effect Parliament positioning affects trilogue dynamics
Evidence Sources SRMR3/BRRD3/DGSD2 trilogue; 2025/0261(COD)
Confidence Level LOW

National Government Impact Narrative: National governments watch Parliament's post-recess positioning to calibrate Council positions. Export-oriented economies favour dialogue on tariffs; industrial economies favour stronger countermeasures. Parliament's position influences where Council consensus lands.

Group 6: EU Institutions (Commission, Council, ECB)

Parameter Value
Impact Level MEDIUM
Impact Timeline IMMEDIATE to SHORT
Primary Affected Commission (tariff coordination), ECB (Banking Union)
Institutional Dynamic EP post-recess agenda sets inter-institutional tempo for Q2
Evidence Sources Precomputed stats: legislativeOutputPerSession 2.11
Confidence Level MEDIUM

Institutional Impact Narrative: The Commission's tariff response proposal depends on Parliament's willingness to fast-track the COD procedure. The ECB benefits from Banking Union progress. The Council faces pressure to match Parliament's record Q1 pace.

Threat Landscape

Threat Analysis

View source: threat-assessment/threat-analysis.md

Threat Analysis ID: THR-2026-04-11-008 Analysis Date: 2026-04-11 10:55 UTC Analysis Period: 2026-04-04 to 2026-04-11 (Easter recess Week 3) Produced By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8) Political Context: Easter recess Day 16; three critical pressures converging on committee restart Overall Threat Level: HIGH - Coalition Shifts and Policy Reversal dimensions elevated


Political Threat Landscape Assessment (6 Dimensions)

Dimension 1: Coalition Shifts

Threat ID Finding Evidence Severity (1-5) Trend
CS-001 Renew-ECR convergence at 0.95 cohesion creates structural alignment bypassing S&D Prior analysis runs; precomputed stats (Renew 10.6% + ECR 11% = 21.6% pivot bloc) 4 Rising
CS-002 Grand coalition surplus deficit at -5.5% makes ad-hoc majorities necessary Precomputed stats: grandCoalitionSurplusDeficit = -5.5% 3 Stable
CS-003 Three-pole structure crystallising as permanent feature Precomputed stats: right 52.3%, left 32.6%, centre 10.6% 3 Stable

Dimension Assessment: HIGH - Renew-ECR convergence is the most significant coalition shift since EP10 formation. If it survives the tariff vote test, it fundamentally alters the legislative calculus. Confidence: MEDIUM.

Dimension 2: Transparency Deficit

Threat ID Finding Evidence Severity (1-5) Trend
TD-001 18-day recess gap during US tariff escalation creates information vacuum Recess dates 27 Mar - 13 Apr; tariff announcement during gap 3 Stable
TD-002 EP API total outage since April 10 prevents public monitoring MCP server health: 0/13 feeds operational 2 Stable

Dimension Assessment: LOW-MODERATE - Transparency gap is temporary (recess-induced) rather than systemic. Confidence: HIGH.

Dimension 3: Policy Reversal

Threat ID Finding Evidence Severity (1-5) Trend
PR-001 Risk of EPP reversing measured trade stance under ECR pressure Prior analysis: EPP business wing vs competition hawks 3 Rising
PR-002 Clean Industrial Deal pace slowing as defence agenda absorbs bandwidth Precomputed stats: Green Deal pace slowing noted 2 Rising

Dimension Assessment: MODERATE - No confirmed reversals this week (recess), but structural conditions building. Confidence: MEDIUM.

Dimension 4: Institutional Pressure

Threat ID Finding Evidence Severity (1-5) Trend
IP-001 ECON-INTA dual bottleneck on priority-1 dossiers Prior analysis: Banking Union (ECON) + tariff (INTA) simultaneous 3 Rising
IP-002 13 COD procedures awaiting rapporteur assignment Q1 record output created backlog 2 Rising

Dimension Assessment: MODERATE - High but manageable. Dual bottleneck is scheduling challenge, not structural failure. Confidence: MEDIUM.

Dimension 5: Legislative Obstruction

Threat ID Finding Evidence Severity (1-5) Trend
LO-001 18-day recess creates backlog risk for committee week Recess duration + 13 pending COD procedures 2 Stable
LO-002 Tariff emergency could crowd out non-urgent legislative files INTA emergency + April 15 deadline 3 Rising

Dimension Assessment: LOW-MODERATE - Temporary and procedural, not deliberate obstruction. Confidence: HIGH.

Dimension 6: Democratic Erosion

Threat ID Finding Evidence Severity (1-5) Trend
DE-001 EP10 fragmentation (6.59 index, highest ever) makes coherent mandate difficult Precomputed stats: fragmentationIndex 6.59, 8 groups + NI 3 Stable
DE-002 Parliamentary gap during geopolitical crisis reduces democratic accountability Recess during tariff escalation 2 Stable

Dimension Assessment: LOW - Fragmentation is structural, not emerging. Recess gap temporary. Confidence: MEDIUM.


PESTLE Macro-Environmental Scan

Factor Assessment Key Signal Direction
Political EPP building flexible majorities; ECR consolidating as third force Three-pole crystallisation Changing
Economic US tariff escalation; EU competitiveness debate intensifying April 15 deadline; 2025/0261(COD) Intensifying
Social Anti-corruption directive resonance; employment concerns TA-10-2026-0096 transposition Stable
Technological Digital sovereignty debates; AI regulation monitoring EP10 priority agenda Stable
Legal Banking Union framework restructuring SRMR3/BRRD3/DGSD2 trilogue pending Evolving
Environmental Green Deal pace slowing; defence agenda competing EPP strategic reprioritisation Declining priority

Supplementary Intelligence

Significance Scoring

View source: classification/significance-scoring.md

Score ID: SIG-2026-04-11-008 Scoring Date: 2026-04-11 10:55 UTC Scored By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8) Data Sources: Precomputed stats (140K chars), prior analysis runs (14), coalition dynamics (11.6K chars) Confidence: MEDIUM - no live feed data


Event Inventory and Scoring

Event 1: Easter Recess Continuation (Parliament Closed)

Dimension Score (0-10) Rationale
Parliamentary Significance 2/10 No formal legislative activity; recess is procedurally routine
Policy Impact 3/10 Legislative backlog accumulates; implementation monitoring paused
Public Interest 1/10 Low public salience - recess expected
Urgency 5/10 T-3 to committee restart creates time pressure for backlog
Cross-Group Relevance 2/10 Affects all groups equally

Composite Score: 2.6/10 (weighted: Parliamentary 30%, Policy 25%, Public 15%, Urgency 20%, Cross-Group 10%)

Event 2: US Tariff Deadline Approaching (April 15)

Dimension Score (0-10) Rationale
Parliamentary Significance 7/10 Requires INTA emergency session; COD procedure 2025/0261
Policy Impact 9/10 Defines EU trade posture; affects 27 member states external trade
Public Interest 8/10 Tariff escalation directly impacts consumer prices and employment
Urgency 10/10 Fixed April 15 deadline - 4 days away, no extension possible
Cross-Group Relevance 8/10 Splits EPP internally; tests Renew-ECR convergence; Left opposes deregulation

Composite Score: 8.3/10 (SIGNIFICANT - justifies weekly review coverage)

Event 3: Banking Union Trilogue Preparation

Dimension Score (0-10) Rationale
Parliamentary Significance 8/10 Triple package (SRMR3/BRRD3/DGSD2) is flagship financial legislation
Policy Impact 8/10 Restructures eurozone bank resolution framework; affects 20 eurozone states
Public Interest 5/10 Technical banking regulation; indirect impact through financial stability
Urgency 6/10 Trilogue negotiation mandate needed; committee priority but not time-critical
Cross-Group Relevance 6/10 Broad support for Banking Union; debates on bail-in thresholds

Composite Score: 6.8/10 (NOTABLE - secondary weekly review topic)

Event 4: Anti-Corruption Directive Transposition

Dimension Score (0-10) Rationale
Parliamentary Significance 6/10 Adopted March 26 (TA-10-2026-0096); monitoring role for LIBE
Policy Impact 7/10 24-month transposition deadline (March 2028); affects all 27 member states
Public Interest 7/10 High salience - anti-corruption resonates across political spectrum
Urgency 3/10 Long transposition window; no immediate parliamentary action
Cross-Group Relevance 5/10 Cross-party support; monitoring less contentious

Composite Score: 5.7/10 (NOTABLE - contextual reference)

Event 5: Renew-ECR Convergence on Competitiveness

Dimension Score (0-10) Rationale
Parliamentary Significance 6/10 New cross-spectrum alignment; 0.95 cohesion on competitiveness votes
Policy Impact 7/10 If sustained, creates competitiveness bloc (EPP+Renew+ECR = 340 seats)
Public Interest 4/10 Technical coalition dynamics; indirect impact
Urgency 7/10 First real test on tariff countermeasures vote next week
Cross-Group Relevance 9/10 Realigns political landscape; threatens S&D/Greens influence

Composite Score: 6.4/10 (NOTABLE - significant for coalition dynamics)

Event 6: Q1 Legislative Output Record

Dimension Score (0-10) Rationale
Parliamentary Significance 7/10 104 adopted texts; +46.2% annualised YoY; highest EP10 output
Policy Impact 6/10 Volume creates implementation and monitoring burden
Public Interest 3/10 Aggregate statistics less salient
Urgency 4/10 Backlog creates medium-term committee pressure
Cross-Group Relevance 5/10 All groups contributed

Composite Score: 5.2/10 (NOTABLE - contextual for weekly review)


Significance Ranking

Rank Event Score Coverage Priority
1 US Tariff Deadline (April 15) 8.3/10 SIGNIFICANT - lead story
2 Banking Union Trilogue Preparation 6.8/10 NOTABLE - secondary focus
3 Renew-ECR Convergence Test 6.4/10 NOTABLE - coalition dynamics
4 Anti-Corruption Transposition 5.7/10 NOTABLE - contextual mention
5 Q1 Legislative Output Record 5.2/10 ROUTINE - background context
6 Easter Recess Continuation 2.6/10 ROUTINE - framing only

Editorial Decision

Article angle decision (based on completed significance scoring):

The weekly review should lead with the convergence of three pressures as Parliament approaches post-Easter restart: the tariff crisis deadline (8.3/10), Banking Union trilogue preparation (6.8/10), and the Renew-ECR convergence test (6.4/10).

However, without live feed data, this article cannot be generated in feed-first format. The analysis-only PR preserves intelligence for future reference and editorial continuity.

Recommended action: Re-attempt weekly review generation when EP API feeds recover (expected April 12-13).

Api Outage Diagnostic

View source: existing/api-outage-diagnostic.md

Diagnostic ID: DIAG-2026-04-11-008 Analysis Date: 2026-04-11 10:50 UTC MCP Server: european-parliament-mcp-server v1.2.1 (62 tools available) EP API Status: Unavailable (all 13 feeds returning INTERNAL_ERROR) Produced By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8)


EP API Connectivity Test Results

Step 0: HTTP Pre-Check

Endpoint Method HTTP Status Result
data.europarl.europa.eu/api/v2/meps GET (curl) 200 MEP list endpoint responsive

Assessment: EP API base infrastructure is online (HTTP 200 for MEP endpoint). Feed/session endpoints used by MCP server return errors, indicating selective endpoint degradation during Easter recess.

Step 1: MCP Health Gate (3 attempts)

Attempt Tool Wait Before Result Error Code
1 get_plenary_sessions({ limit: 1 }) 0s FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
2 get_plenary_sessions({ limit: 1 }) 30s FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
3 get_plenary_sessions({ limit: 1 }) 30s FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR

Feed Endpoint Failures (>=3 consecutive)

Feed Result Error Type
get_adopted_texts_feed({ timeframe: "one-week" }) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
get_procedures_feed({ timeframe: "one-week" }) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
get_plenary_documents_feed({ timeframe: "one-week" }) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
get_parliamentary_questions_feed({ timeframe: "one-week" }) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
get_voting_records({ dateFrom: "2026-04-04" }) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
detect_voting_anomalies({ dateFrom: "2026-04-04" }) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR
generate_political_landscape({}) FAILED INTERNAL_ERROR

Successful MCP Tools

Tool Data Size Content
get_all_generated_stats 140,273 chars Yearly stats 2004-2026, predictions to 2028
analyze_coalition_dynamics 11,635 chars Group structure (metrics null - API limitation)
get_server_health ~1,200 chars Server v1.2.1, status: unhealthy, 0/13 feeds operational

Server Health Report

Server version: 1.2.1, Status: unhealthy. Availability: 0/13 operational feeds. Level: Unavailable.


Root Cause Assessment

Determination: Easter recess selective endpoint degradation. Confidence: HIGH.

Evidence chain:

  1. EP API base infrastructure online (HTTP 200 for MEP endpoint)
  2. Feed/session endpoints returning INTERNAL_ERROR - consistent with recess maintenance pattern
  3. Precomputed statistics tool functional (does not require live API)
  4. Coalition dynamics tool returns structure but null metrics (partial API access)
  5. Pattern matches Easter 2025 and Christmas 2025 recess outage patterns documented in prior analysis

Expected recovery: 12-13 April 2026 (T-1 to T-0 before committee restart)


Impact on Weekly Review

This diagnostic was triggered because the week-in-review workflow could not obtain live feed data needed for a feed-first article. The FEED-FIRST CONTENT RULE requires specific adopted texts, voting results, and procedure updates with concrete dates and IDs from the past week's feed data.

Available data for analysis-only artifacts:

Swot Analysis

View source: existing/swot-analysis.md

SWOT ID: SWT-2026-04-11-008 Analysis Date: 2026-04-11 10:55 UTC Analysis Scope: EP10 Grand Coalition and Political Landscape Reference Period: 2026-Q1 (with focus on April 4-11 recess week) Produced By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8) Primary MCP Sources: get_all_generated_stats, analyze_coalition_dynamics, prior analysis runs Validity Window: Valid until 2026-04-18


Grand Coalition SWOT (EPP + S&D + Renew)

Strengths

# Strength Statement Evidence Confidence Impact
S1 Record Q1 legislative output (+46.2% YoY) demonstrates institutional productivity Precomputed stats: 114 acts annualised vs 78 in 2025 H H
S2 Banking Union triple package (SRMR3/BRRD3/DGSD2) adopted with cross-party support TA-10-2026-0092, TA-10-2026-0094 H H
S3 Anti-Corruption Directive adoption shows broad consensus-building capability TA-10-2026-0096 adopted March 26 H M
S4 MEP stability index 0.949 indicates low turnover and institutional memory Precomputed stats: mepStabilityIndex 0.949, turnoverRate 5.1% H M

Strength Summary: The grand coalition demonstrated exceptional Q1 productivity, delivering landmark banking reform and anti-corruption legislation with cross-party support.

Weaknesses

# Weakness Statement Evidence Confidence Impact
W1 Grand coalition surplus deficit at -5.5% means structurally insufficient majorities Precomputed stats: grandCoalitionSurplusDeficit -5.5% H H
W2 EP10 fragmentation index 6.59 (highest ever) requires minimum 3-group coalitions Precomputed stats: fragmentationIndex 6.59 H H
W3 Renew drifting toward ECR on competitiveness weakens centre-left reliability Prior analysis: Renew-ECR cohesion 0.95 M H
W4 EPP internally split on trade response between business wing and competition hawks Prior analysis: EPP dual-track strategy tensions M M

Weakness Summary: The grand coalition cannot govern alone (-5.5% surplus deficit). Each major vote requires ad-hoc majority-building, empowering swing groups.

Opportunities

# Opportunity Statement Evidence Confidence Impact
O1 Post-Easter committee restart can reset legislative agenda with clear priorities Committee restart April 14-17; 13 COD procedures H H
O2 Tariff crisis creates rally-around-the-flag opportunity for EU solidarity 2025/0261(COD); common external threat M H
O3 Banking Union trilogue positions EP as champion of eurozone stability SRMR3/BRRD3/DGSD2 Council negotiations pending H M
O4 2027 predicted as peak legislative productivity year Precomputed predictions: 120 acts predicted M M

Opportunity Summary: The post-recess restart offers a natural inflection point. The tariff crisis, while risky, presents an opportunity for demonstrating EU institutional capacity.

Threats

# Threat Statement Evidence Confidence Impact
T1 US tariff escalation forces emergency response crowding out planned work 2025/0261(COD); April 15 deadline H H
T2 Right-bloc dominance (52.3%) enables conservative policy capture Precomputed stats: rightBlocShare 52.3% H M
T3 Green Deal pace slowing as defence/competitiveness absorbs bandwidth Precomputed stats: political balance assessment M M
T4 EPP-ECR competition pushes EPP further from S&D on migration and security Precomputed stats: dominanceRatio 1.37 M M

Threat Summary: The tariff crisis dominates near-term threats. The structural rightward shift (52.3% conservative-right bloc) threatens to sideline progressive priorities including the Green Deal.


TOWS Strategy Assessment

Strategy Quadrant Priority Feasibility
Dual-track committee processing (tariff + Banking Union) SO High Medium
Rally-around-the-flag on tariff response WO High Medium
Proactive defence consensus-building ST Medium High
Pre-vote group coordinator networks WT Ongoing High

Synthesis Summary

View source: existing/synthesis-summary.md

Synthesis ID: SYN-2026-04-11-008 Analysis Date: 2026-04-11 10:55 UTC Documents Analyzed: 140,273 chars precomputed statistics; 11,635 chars coalition dynamics; 14 prior workflow analysis runs Analysis Period: 2026-04-04 to 2026-04-11 (Easter recess Week 3, Days 9-16) Produced By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8) Overall Confidence: MEDIUM - No live feed data; relies on precomputed stats and cross-run analysis


Intelligence Dashboard

Key Indicators Summary

Indicator Value Trend Evidence
Composite Risk 13.17/25 (HIGH) Rising Up from 10.10/25 on Apr 9 to 13.17/25 on Apr 11 (+31%)
EP API Availability 0/13 feeds Degraded All feeds returning INTERNAL_ERROR since Apr 10
Legislative Output Pace +46.2% YoY Record 114 acts annualised vs 78 in 2025
Fragmentation Index 6.59 Stable Highest in EP history; minimum 3-group coalition
Grand Coalition Feasibility NOT VIABLE Structural EPP+S&D = 44.5% (need 50.1%)
Renew-ECR Cohesion 0.95 Stable high Untested in post-recess votes
Right Bloc Dominance 52.3% seats Stable EPP+ECR+PfE structurally advantaged
Tariff Crisis 16/25 CRITICAL Approaching deadline US countermeasures April 15

Week in Review: Easter Recess April 4-11

1. Parliament Status

Parliament remained in Easter recess throughout the review period (Day 9 to Day 16 of an 18-day recess from 27 March to 13 April 2026). No plenary sessions, committee meetings, or formal votes occurred. All 13 EP API feed endpoints progressively degraded, reaching total unavailability by April 10.

Confidence: HIGH - confirmed by MCP server health report (0/13 operational feeds) and prior analysis runs.

2. Key Developments This Week

Despite the recess, several significant developments shaped the political landscape:

Development 1: Risk Trajectory Acceleration (Composite 10.10 -> 13.17)

Category: Political Risk | Significance: Notable Evidence: Risk scores from 7 analysis runs (Runs 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 157, 158)

The composite political risk score rose 31% in 3 days (April 9-11), driven by:

Stakeholder impact:

Confidence: MEDIUM - risk trajectory calculated from precomputed stats and prior analysis, no live voting data

Development 2: Three-Pole Coalition Structure Crystallisation

Category: Political Dynamics | Significance: Notable Evidence: Precomputed stats (fragmentation index 6.59, grandCoalitionSurplusDeficit -5.5%)

The EP10 political landscape has crystallised into three structural poles:

  1. Conservative-Right Pole (EPP 185 + ECR 79 + PfE 84 = 348 seats, 48.3%) - dominant on defence, deregulation, migration
  2. Progressive-Left Pole (S&D 135 + Greens/EFA 53 + GUE/NGL 46 = 234 seats, 32.5%) - Green Deal, social policy, civil liberties
  3. Centre-Liberal Pivot (Renew 76 seats, 10.6%) - kingmaker on every major vote

Critical finding: Grand coalition (EPP+S&D+Renew = 396 seats, 55%) falls short of the working majority needed for consistent governance. The -5.5% grandCoalitionSurplusDeficit means EPP must build ad-hoc majorities for each dossier.

The Renew-ECR convergence at 0.95 cohesion on competitiveness/trade is the most significant new alignment - if it holds post-recess, it creates a competitiveness coalition (EPP+Renew+ECR = 340 seats) that approaches but does not reach majority (361 needed).

Confidence: MEDIUM - structural analysis based on seat arithmetic and Q1 voting patterns; post-recess confirmation needed

Development 3: Q1 2026 Record Legislative Output

Category: Legislative | Significance: Notable Evidence: Precomputed stats - 104 adopted texts Q1, +46.2% YoY annualised pace

Parliament's Q1 2026 output was extraordinary:

Key adopted texts from the pre-recess sprint (March 26 plenary):

Confidence: HIGH - based on precomputed statistics from EP MCP server

Development 4: US Tariff Deadline Approaching (April 15)

Category: Geopolitical | Significance: Significant Evidence: Procedure 2025/0261(COD), prior analysis risk scoring

The US tariff countermeasures procedure (2025/0261(COD)) faces an April 15 deadline - just one day after Parliament's committee restart. This creates a convergence of:

Risk assessment: 16/25 CRITICAL (Likelihood 4 x Impact 4)

Confidence: MEDIUM - procedure reference confirmed; specific negotiating positions inferred from prior voting patterns


Political Bloc Analysis

Bloc Groups Seats Share Stance
Conservative-Right EPP + ECR + PfE 348 48.3% Defence, deregulation, migration control
Progressive-Left S&D + Greens + GUE/NGL 234 32.5% Green Deal, social policy, civil liberties
Centre-Liberal Renew 76 10.6% Kingmaker - competitiveness, rule of law
Non-Aligned ESN + NI 62 8.6% Eurosceptic, variable positions

EP10 Performance Context

Metric 2025 2026 (annualised) Change Assessment
Legislative acts 78 114 +46.2% Record pace
Roll-call votes 420 567 +35.0% Intensive
Committee meetings 1,980 2,363 +19.3% Increasing
Parliamentary questions 4,941 6,147 +24.4% Growing oversight
Procedures 923 935 +1.3% Stable

Risk Trajectory (April 4-11)

Run Date Composite Risk Trend
Run 3 Apr 9 10.10/25 Baseline
Run 4 Apr 9 10.45/25 +3.5%
Run 5 Apr 10 10.85/25 +3.8%
Run 6 Apr 10 11.10/25 +2.3%
Run 12 Apr 10 12.50/25 +12.6%
Run 157 Apr 11 12.85/25 +2.8%
Run 158 Apr 11 13.17/25 +2.5%

Scenarios for Coming Period

Scenario Probability Description Key Trigger
Tariff-Dominated Restart Likely (45%) INTA emergency session crowds out other committee work April 15 deadline forces Day 1 action
Smooth Legislative Processing Possible (30%) Committees efficiently process tariff + Banking Union Strong inter-committee coordination
Coalition Fracture on Trade Possible (20%) EPP splits; Renew-ECR votes against EPP position Specific tariff text splits EPP delegation
API Recovery Delays Unlikely (5%) EP API feeds remain down through committee week Infrastructure issue beyond maintenance

Data Quality and Methodology

MCP Queries Executed: 12 total

Data Source Records Retrieved Quality Assessment
Precomputed stats 140,273 chars HIGH - comprehensive 2004-2026
Coalition dynamics 11,635 chars LOW - all group metrics null
Server health ~1,200 chars HIGH - accurate status
Prior analysis runs 14 runs MEDIUM - varying data availability
Feed endpoints (all) 0 Unavailable - Easter recess

Analytical Caveats:

Risk Assessment

View source: risk-scoring/risk-assessment.md

Risk Assessment ID: RSK-2026-04-11-008 Assessment Date: 2026-04-11 10:55 UTC Assessment Period: 2026-04-04 to 2026-04-11 Produced By: news-weekly-review workflow (Run 8) Political Context: Easter recess Day 16; committee restart T-3; tariff deadline T-4; 13 COD procedures pending Parliamentary Term: EP10 (2024-2029) Overall Risk Level: HIGH (13.17/25 composite, rising trajectory)


Risk Inventory

Risk Score = Likelihood (1-5) x Impact (1-5). Risk Tiers: 1-4 = Low | 5-9 = Medium | 10-14 = High | 15-25 = Critical

Risk ID Description L (1-5) I (1-5) Score Tier Mitigation
RSK-001 US tariff crisis forces emergency INTA response 4 4 16 Critical Emergency committee session April 14; fast-track COD 2025/0261
RSK-002 Geopolitical standing erosion from trade escalation 4 5 20 Critical Coordinate with Council/Commission; maintain united EU position
RSK-003 Legislative backlog overwhelms committee restart 3 4 12 High Prioritise rapporteur assignments; coordinate chairs
RSK-004 ECON-INTA dual bottleneck delays Banking Union 3 3 9 Medium Sequential scheduling; temporary staff reinforcement
RSK-005 EPP splits on tariff response scope 3 3 9 Medium Internal group negotiation; compromise text pre-committee
RSK-006 Renew-ECR convergence fractures on first policy test 2 3 6 Medium Pre-vote coordination; identify red lines
RSK-007 EP API extended outage prevents monitoring 2 2 4 Low Precomputed stats as fallback; manual monitoring

Grand Coalition Stability Risk

Current Coalition Assessment

Parameter Value
Grand Coalition EPP (185) + S&D (135) + Renew (76) = 396 seats
Coalition Strength LOW - structurally insufficient
Majority Threshold 361 of 720 seats
Buffer +35 seats (9.7% above threshold, requires perfect discipline)
Key Risk Groups ECR (79) as swing right; Greens/EFA (53) as swing left
Next Major Vote April 14-17 committee restart (April 15 tariff deadline)
Grand Coalition Surplus/Deficit -5.5% (below comfortable working majority)
Minimum Winning Coalition 3 groups required

Coalition Risk Factors

The grand coalition remains technically viable (396 > 361) but structurally weak. The -5.5% surplus deficit means any significant defection (>35 MEPs) breaks the majority. The Renew-ECR convergence on competitiveness (0.95 cohesion) suggests Renew is drifting toward EPP-ECR coalitions on trade/industry, potentially leaving S&D marginalised on economic policy. Confidence: MEDIUM.


Geopolitical Standing Risk

Risk Score: 20/25 (CRITICAL) = Likelihood 4 x Impact 5

The US tariff escalation during Easter recess represents the highest single risk category. Evidence:

Mitigation: INTA emergency committee session on April 14. Fast-track COD procedure. Pre-committee coordination between group coordinators.

Confidence: MEDIUM - procedure reference confirmed; specific countermeasure scope inferred from prior analysis.


Forward-Looking Risk Assessment

Scenario 1: Tariff-Dominated Restart (Likely - 45%)

Risk trajectory continues to 14-16/25 range as INTA emergency session absorbs committee bandwidth. Other legislative files deprioritised. Composite risk plateaus as action reduces uncertainty.

Scenario 2: Efficient Multi-Track Processing (Possible - 30%)

Committee chairs coordinate effectively; INTA handles tariff response while ECON progresses Banking Union. Risk drops to 10-12/25. Requires strong inter-committee coordination.

Scenario 3: Coalition Fracture (Possible - 20%)

EPP splits on tariff response; Renew-ECR bloc votes against EPP position. Risk spikes to 18-20/25. Grand coalition temporarily non-functional on trade policy.

Scenario 4: Extended API Outage (Unlikely - 5%)

EP API feeds remain down through committee week. Monitoring capacity degraded but not critical.

Tradecraft References

This article is produced under the Hack23 AB intelligence tradecraft library. Every methodology and artifact template applied to this run is linked below.

Methodologies

Artifact templates

Analysis Index

Every artifact below was read by the aggregator and contributed to this article. The raw manifest.json carries the full machine-readable list, including gate-result history.

Section Artifact Path
section-stakeholder-map stakeholder-impact existing/stakeholder-impact.md
section-threat threat-analysis threat-assessment/threat-analysis.md
section-supplementary-intelligence significance-scoring classification/significance-scoring.md
section-supplementary-intelligence api-outage-diagnostic existing/api-outage-diagnostic.md
section-supplementary-intelligence swot-analysis existing/swot-analysis.md
section-supplementary-intelligence synthesis-summary existing/synthesis-summary.md
section-supplementary-intelligence risk-assessment risk-scoring/risk-assessment.md