motions

Votaciones y Resoluciones Plenarias: 2026-04-13

Votaciones plenarias recientes, textos adoptados, análisis de cohesión de grupos políticos y anomalías de votación detectadas en el Parlamento Europeo

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Motions — 2026-04-13

Provenance

Reader Intelligence Guide

Use this guide to read the article as a political-intelligence product rather than a raw artifact dump. High-value reader lenses appear first; technical provenance remains available in the audit appendices.

Reader needWhat you'll getSource artifact
Significance scoringwhy this story outranks or trails other same-day European Parliament signalsclassification/significance-classification.md
Risk assessmentpolicy, institutional, coalition, communications, and implementation risk registerrisk-scoring/risk-matrix.md

Significance

Significance Classification

View source: classification/significance-classification.md

Classification Context

FieldValue
Data StatusEP API OUTAGE — classification based on precomputed stats + 5 prior analysis runs
Live Feed DataNone available (12+ consecutive MCP timeouts)
Classification BasisPrior motions analysis (Apr 10), today's cross-session intelligence
ConfidenceMEDIUM — no new feed data to validate

Active Motions Items — Updated Classification (T-1 Tariff Deadline)

Tier 1: CRITICAL Significance (Score 8.0+)

RankEP ReferenceTitleScoreStatusUpdate from Run 39
1TA-10-2026-0096EU Countermeasures to US Tariffs9.2/10Adopted Mar 26 — implementation T-1Score RAISED from 8.4 to 9.2: deadline proximity now T-1 vs T-4 at time of Apr 10 scoring

Scoring justification: Maximum urgency (T-1 day). Parliament returns April 14 with zero buffer before April 15 implementation. Commission has operated 18 days without parliamentary oversight. First post-recess motions will define EU trade posture for remainder of 2026.

Tier 2: HIGH Significance (Score 6.5-7.9)

RankEP ReferenceTitleScoreStatusNotes
2TA-10-2026-0092Banking Resolution SRMR37.1/10Adopted Mar 26 — Council trilogueUnchanged — trilogue timeline not affected by recess
3TA-10-2026-0094Anti-Corruption Directive7.05/10Adopted Mar 26 — transpositionUnchanged — 24-month clock ticking regardless
4TA-10-2026-0095CSAM Regulation Extension6.8/10Adopted Mar 26Unchanged
5TA-10-2026-0058EU Talent Pool6.7/10Adopted earlier 2026Unchanged
6TA-10-2026-0090Banking Union BRRD36.5/10Adopted Mar 26Linked to SRMR3 trilogue
7TA-10-2026-0091Banking Union DGSD26.5/10Adopted Mar 26Linked to SRMR3 trilogue

Significance Scoring Framework

The 7-dimension scoring model used:

  1. Legislative impact (weight 0.20): Scope of legal change, number of MS affected
  2. Political salience (weight 0.20): Media attention, public interest, group positioning
  3. Urgency (weight 0.15): Deadline proximity, time-sensitive elements
  4. Coalition implications (weight 0.15): Impact on group alliances, voting patterns
  5. Economic impact (weight 0.10): GDP effect, trade implications, budget consequences
  6. Institutional significance (weight 0.10): Precedent-setting, inter-institutional dynamics
  7. Geopolitical relevance (weight 0.10): External relations, strategic autonomy

TA-10-2026-0096 Score Breakdown

DimensionScoreWeightWeightedJustification
Legislative impact9/100.201.80EU-wide tariff countermeasures affecting all 27 MS trade policy
Political salience10/100.202.00Dominant political issue, all groups positioning
Urgency10/100.151.50T-1 day to implementation deadline
Coalition implications9/100.151.35Three-pole stress test — EPP bridging role critical
Economic impact9/100.100.90Direct trade flow consequences for EU economy
Institutional significance8/100.100.80Parliament vs Commission oversight question
Geopolitical relevance9/100.100.90US-EU trade relations defining moment
TOTAL9.25/10Rounded to 9.2

Classification Decision Matrix

ClassificationCountItems
CRITICAL1US Tariff Countermeasures
HIGH6Banking Union (3), Anti-Corruption, CSAM, EU Talent Pool
MEDIUM0None tracked (live data unavailable for new items)
LOW0None tracked

Data gap: Without live EP API feeds, no new motions or resolutions tabled since April 10 can be classified. Post-recess items from April 14 onward will need immediate classification upon API recovery.

Emerging Items for Post-Recess Classification

Based on cross-session intelligence, these items are expected to appear in feeds after Parliament resumes:

  1. Urgent motion(s) on tariff implementation — Expected April 14-15, likely CRITICAL significance
  2. Oral questions to Commission on Easter-period actions — Expected April 14, likely HIGH significance
  3. Committee rapporteur assignments for 13 COD procedures — Expected week of April 14-18, MEDIUM significance
  4. INTA report on trade policy consultation — Expected April 14, HIGH significance
  5. Banking Union trilogue mandate debate — Expected late April, HIGH significance

Risk Assessment

Risk Matrix

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

Risk Assessment Context

FieldValue
Assessment BasisPrecomputed stats (85KB) + 5 prior analysis runs + cross-session intelligence
Risk FrameworkLikelihood x Impact (5x5 matrix)
Overall Risk LevelCRITICAL (driven by T-1 tariff deadline proximity)
ConfidenceMEDIUM
Prior AssessmentRun 39 scored overall HIGH; updated to CRITICAL due to T-1 proximity

Risk Register

R1: US Tariff Escalation (CRITICAL — Score 25/25)

ParameterValue
Risk IDR1-TRADE-2026-0413-R40
Likelihood5/5 — April 15 deadline is T-1 (calendar-fixed)
Impact5/5 — Direct economic and political consequences for all 27 MS
Score25/25 (CRITICAL)
TrendEscalating (was 16/25 on Apr 11, 25/25 since Run 39)
SourceTA-10-2026-0096 (adopted Mar 26)

Analysis: Parliament returns April 14 (Monday) with the tariff implementation deadline on April 15 (Tuesday). This creates a structurally unprecedented 24-hour window for parliamentary scrutiny of the most significant trade measure in EP10's term. The Commission has operated 18 days without parliamentary oversight during Easter recess.

Motions risk: Urgent motions for resolution may be tabled under Rule 163 (urgent procedure). EPP faces a bridging dilemma: its competitiveness alliance with ECR (0.95 cohesion) may fracture if ECR demands weaker countermeasures while S&D/Greens push for stronger response. The three-pole system faces its first real stress test.

R2: Banking Union Trilogue Stalemate (HIGH — Score 15/25)

ParameterValue
Risk IDR2-FINANCE-2026-0413-R40
Likelihood3/5 — Council position still forming, German elections may change dynamics
Impact5/5 — Failure would leave Banking Union incomplete, systemic risk
Score15/25 (HIGH)
TrendStable (unchanged from Apr 10)
SourceTA-10-2026-0092 (SRMR3), TA-10-2026-0090 (BRRD3), TA-10-2026-0091 (DGSD2)

Analysis: The three Banking Union files adopted March 26 face a complex trilogue with divergent national positions on deposit guarantee mutualisation. German resistance to burden-sharing and French ambitions for deeper integration create a negotiation axis that cuts across political group lines.

R3: Legislative Pipeline Congestion (ELEVATED — Score 12/25)

ParameterValue
Risk IDR3-PIPELINE-2026-0413-R40
Likelihood4/5 — 13 COD procedures awaiting assignment is verifiable from precomputed stats
Impact3/5 — Delay in legislation, not systemic failure
Score12/25 (ELEVATED)
TrendWorsening (was 10/25 on Apr 10, tariff crisis will absorb bandwidth)
SourcePrecomputed stats — 935 procedures for 2026 (annualized) vs 684 in 2025

Analysis: The record Q1 legislative pace (+46.2% vs 2025) created a backlog of 13 COD procedures needing rapporteur assignments. The tariff crisis will likely absorb INTA and ECON committee bandwidth in the first post-recess week, pushing these assignments further out. Risk of legislative traffic jam increases with each day of delay.

R4: Coalition Fragmentation on Trade (HIGH — Score 15/25)

ParameterValue
Risk IDR4-COALITION-2026-0413-R40
Likelihood3/5 — Three-pole system untested under genuine crisis
Impact5/5 — Could reshape EP10 coalition dynamics for remainder of term
Score15/25 (HIGH)
TrendRising (from MODERATE 10/25 on Apr 10)
SourceCross-session intelligence, Apr 10 motions analysis

Analysis: The Renew-ECR competitiveness alliance (0.95 cohesion in Apr 10 analysis) has only been tested on consensus issues. The tariff debate will force a choice between free-trade principles (ECR) and strategic autonomy protectionism (S&D/Greens). EPP's bridging role between grand coalition and competitiveness poles is the critical variable. A coalition fracture would redefine the remainder of EP10.

R5: Anti-Corruption Transposition Delay (MODERATE — Score 9/25)

ParameterValue
Risk IDR5-CORRUPTION-2026-0413-R40
Likelihood3/5 — Historical precedent of MS implementation delays
Impact3/5 — EU credibility risk, but 24-month window provides buffer
Score9/25 (MODERATE)
TrendStable
SourceTA-10-2026-0094

R6: EP API Data Infrastructure Gap (OPERATIONAL — Score 10/25)

ParameterValue
Risk IDR6-INFRA-2026-0413-R40
Likelihood5/5 — Currently active outage
Impact2/5 — Affects monitoring, not parliamentary operations
Score10/25 (OPERATIONAL)
TrendWorsening (48+ hours of degradation)
SourceThis run diagnostic data

Analysis: The EP API outage prevents automated monitoring of parliamentary activity. While this does not affect Parliament's operations, it creates a transparency gap during a critical period. If the API does not recover by April 14, the first post-recess proceedings may go unmonitored.

Composite Risk Assessment

CategoryRisk ScoreTrendConfidence
Trade Policy25/25EscalatingHIGH
Financial Regulation15/25StableMEDIUM
Legislative Pipeline12/25WorseningMEDIUM
Coalition Stability15/25RisingMEDIUM
Anti-Corruption9/25StableHIGH
Data Infrastructure10/25WorseningHIGH
COMPOSITE14.3/25RisingMEDIUM

Overall assessment: The composite risk score has risen from 13.17/25 (Apr 11 week-in-review) to 14.3/25, driven primarily by the T-1 tariff deadline proximity and increasing coalition fragmentation risk. The April 14-15 window represents the highest-risk period for EP10 since its inauguration.

Threat Landscape

Political Threat Landscape

View source: threat-assessment/political-threat-landscape.md

Threat Assessment Context

FieldValue
Assessment Date2026-04-13 (Easter recess Day 18/18 — final day)
Threat LevelCRITICAL (3.5/5) — trade deadline collision + data blackout
FrameworkMulti-framework analysis adapted for EU parliamentary democracy
ConfidenceMEDIUM (precomputed stats + 5 prior analysis runs)
Update from Run 39Threat level RAISED from HIGH (2.8/5) to CRITICAL (3.5/5) — T-1 proximity

Threat Landscape Overview

External Threats

T1: US Trade Escalation — Severity: CRITICAL

The April 15 tariff implementation deadline creates the most acute external threat to EP10 parliamentary proceedings. The Commission's countermeasures resolution (TA-10-2026-0096) authorized action, but the 18-day recess gap means Parliament has had no oversight of implementation preparations.

Threat actor: US Administration

T2: Geopolitical Instability Spillover — Severity: HIGH

Multiple external pressures converge on post-recess Parliament: trade tensions, defence spending debates (Clean Industrial Deal), and Eastern Partnership dynamics. These create a compressed legislative agenda where multiple urgent items compete for limited plenary time.

Institutional Threats

T3: Pipeline Obstruction — Severity: ELEVATED

The 13 pending COD procedures from Q1 2026 create institutional pressure on committee capacity. ECON and INTA committees face the highest burden, and the tariff crisis will absorb their bandwidth in the first post-recess week.

Evidence: 935 procedures annualized for 2026 vs 684 in 2025 (+36.7%). Legislative output per session at 2.11 acts/session indicates high throughput but potential fragility under disruption.

T4: Commission-Parliament Oversight Gap — Severity: HIGH

The Commission has operated 18 days without parliamentary oversight during Easter recess. If tariff countermeasures are implemented before Parliament can debate, this creates a precedent for Commission unilateral action on trade policy. The Left and Greens/EFA are most likely to raise formal oversight concerns.

T5: Trilogue Deadlock on Banking Union — Severity: HIGH

Council-Parliament trilogue on SRMR3/BRRD3/DGSD2 faces structural disagreement on deposit guarantee mutualisation. German resistance and French ambitions create an axis that cuts across political group lines, potentially stalling the most significant financial legislation of EP10.

Coalition Threats

T6: Three-Pole Fragmentation — Severity: ELEVATED

The three-pole system (grand coalition, competitiveness alliance, progressive bloc) has functioned on consensus issues. The tariff debate will force genuine choices:

The critical variable is EPP's position. As the bridge between poles, EPP's choice will determine which coalition forms on trade policy. If EPP sides with the competitiveness pole, S&D is isolated. If EPP sides with the grand coalition, ECR may defect.

T7: Grand Coalition Structural Weakness — Severity: MODERATE

EPP+S&D = 320 seats (44.5%), which is 5.5 percentage points below the majority threshold. This structural inability to form a traditional grand coalition means every significant vote requires at least one additional partner. On trade policy, the most likely third partner is Renew (76 seats), creating an EPP+S&D+Renew bloc of 396 seats (55%).

However, if Renew sides with ECR on competitiveness grounds, the alternative EPP+ECR+Renew bloc has 340 seats (47.2%), still short of majority. This forces EPP to include either PfE (84 seats) — ideologically problematic — or seek a broader coalition.

Threat Actor Profiling

External Actors

ActorVectorCapabilityIntentConfidence
US AdministrationTariff escalationHIGHUncertainMEDIUM
Council of EUTrilogue blockingMEDIUMDivergent MS positionsMEDIUM
CommissionOversight bypassMEDIUMImplementation urgencyHIGH

Internal Actors

ActorVectorCapabilityIntentConfidence
ECRCompetitiveness counter-motionMEDIUMFree-trade orthodoxyMEDIUM
The Left/GreensCensure motion threatLOWDemocratic oversightHIGH
PfEPopulist counter-narrativeLOWAnti-establishmentHIGH

Forward-Looking Threat Assessment

April 14-18 Threat Calendar

DateEventThreat LevelKey Risk
Apr 14Parliament resumesHIGHCompressed agenda, multiple urgent items
Apr 15Tariff implementation deadlineCRITICALCommission action with/without parliamentary mandate
Apr 14-18Committee restartELEVATEDRapporteur assignments, INTA emergency session
Late AprBanking trilogue launchHIGHCouncil-Parliament deadlock risk

Threat Mitigation Indicators to Monitor

  1. Commission communication before April 14 plenary on tariff preparedness
  2. Conference of Presidents agenda for April 14 — will reveal priority-setting
  3. INTA committee emergency meeting notice
  4. Joint Motion for Resolution tabling — indicates cross-party consensus forming
  5. Individual motions tabled by ECR or The Left — indicates coalition fracture

Composite Threat Assessment

CategoryThreat LevelTrendConfidence
External (Trade)CRITICALEscalatingHIGH
Institutional (Pipeline)ELEVATEDWorseningMEDIUM
Institutional (Oversight)HIGHNew this assessmentHIGH
Coalition (Fragmentation)ELEVATEDRisingMEDIUM
Coalition (Grand Coalition)MODERATEStableHIGH
COMPOSITEHIGH-CRITICALEscalatingMEDIUM

The composite threat level has risen from HIGH (Run 39) to HIGH-CRITICAL (Run 40), reflecting the T-1 tariff deadline proximity and the newly identified Commission oversight gap threat. The April 14-15 window represents the peak threat period for the current assessment cycle.

Document Analysis

Document Analysis Index

View source: documents/document-analysis-index.md

Index Context

FieldValue
EP API StatusOUTAGE — no new documents retrieved this run
Document SourceCross-reference from prior analysis runs (Apr 10 motions, Apr 13 breaking)
Documents Tracked7 high-significance items from prior classification

Active Document Tracking

These documents were analyzed in prior runs and remain active for post-recess monitoring. No new documents could be retrieved due to EP API outage.

Document: TA-10-2026-0096 — EU Countermeasures to US Tariffs

FieldValue
TypeLegislative Resolution
Adopted2026-03-26 (March plenary)
Significance9.2/10 CRITICAL
StatusImplementation pending — T-1 to April 15 deadline
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10 (SYN-2026-04-10-001), Breaking Apr 13 (Run 168), Propositions Apr 13 (Run 41)
Key FindingCommission countermeasures authorized; 18-day oversight gap during Easter recess

Document: TA-10-2026-0092 — Banking Resolution (SRMR3)

FieldValue
TypeLegislative Resolution
Adopted2026-03-26
Significance7.1/10 HIGH
StatusCouncil trilogue preparation
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10
Key FindingLinked with BRRD3 and DGSD2 for comprehensive Banking Union reform

Document: TA-10-2026-0094 — Anti-Corruption Directive

FieldValue
TypeDirective
Adopted2026-03-26
Significance7.05/10 HIGH
Status24-month transposition period started
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10, Breaking Apr 13 (Run 168)
Key FindingFirst EU-wide anti-corruption directive requiring 27 MS criminal code amendments

Document: TA-10-2026-0095 — CSAM Regulation Extension

FieldValue
TypeRegulation
Adopted2026-03-26
Significance6.8/10 MEDIUM-HIGH
StatusTemporary measure — permanent regulation under discussion
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10

Document: TA-10-2026-0058 — EU Talent Pool

FieldValue
TypeRegulation
Adopted2026 (earlier in year)
Significance6.7/10 MEDIUM-HIGH
StatusImplementation phase
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10

Document: TA-10-2026-0090 — Banking Union BRRD3

FieldValue
TypeLegislative Resolution
Adopted2026-03-26
Significance6.5/10 MEDIUM-HIGH
StatusLinked to SRMR3 trilogue
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10

Document: TA-10-2026-0091 — Banking Union DGSD2

FieldValue
TypeLegislative Resolution
Adopted2026-03-26
Significance6.5/10 MEDIUM-HIGH
StatusLinked to SRMR3 trilogue
Prior AnalysisMotions Apr 10

Data Gap Assessment

Without live EP API data, the following document types could not be checked for new items:

Expected post-recess documents (April 14+):

  1. Urgent motions on tariff implementation (Rule 163)
  2. Oral questions to Commission (Rule 136)
  3. Committee rapporteur assignment notices
  4. INTA emergency session documents
  5. Conference of Presidents agenda decisions

Supplementary Intelligence

Api Outage Diagnostic

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

Diagnostic Summary

FieldValue
Run ID40
Timestamp2026-04-13T21:19:00Z
Article Typemotions
EP API StatusUNREACHABLE (HTTP 000 — TCP connection timeout)
MCP Serverv1.2.7 — unhealthy, 0/13 feeds operational
Precomputed StatsAvailable (85 KB, 23 years 2004-2026)
Prior Run TodayRun 39 (analysis-only PR, same EP API outage)

Health Gate Attempts (3/3 Failed)

AttemptToolParametersResultTimestamp
1get_plenary_sessionslimit: 1, year: 2026TIMEOUT (90s)21:09:30Z
2get_plenary_sessionslimit: 1TIMEOUT (90s)21:11:08Z
3get_plenary_sessionsdateFrom, dateTo, limit: 1, year: 2026TIMEOUT (90s)21:12:42Z

Feed Endpoint Failures (4/4 Timed Out)

FeedTimeframeStatusTimestamp
get_adopted_texts_feedone-weekTIMEOUT (90s)21:14:18Z
get_parliamentary_questions_feedone-weekTIMEOUT (90s)21:14:18Z
get_procedures_feedone-weekTIMEOUT (90s)21:14:18Z
get_meps_feedone-weekTIMEOUT (90s)21:14:18Z

Supplementary Tool Failures (3 timeout + 1 null data)

ToolResultError CategoryDetail
detect_voting_anomaliesUPSTREAM_TIMEOUTTIMEOUTMEP endpoint timed out after 90s
generate_political_landscapeTIMEOUTTIMEOUT90s timeout
get_adopted_texts (year=2026)TIMEOUTTIMEOUT90s timeout
analyze_coalition_dynamicsNULL_DATAPARTIALReturned structure but all metrics null — MEP pagination failed at offset 0

Network Diagnostic

CheckResult
DNS Resolutiondata.europarl.europa.eu resolves to 34.251.207.80
Direct HTTP (curl, 30s timeout)HTTP 000 — TCP connection timeout
github.com HTTPSReachable
api.github.com HTTPSReachable
AWF FirewallNot blocking — DNS resolution succeeds

Root Cause Analysis

Primary cause: European Parliament API (data.europarl.europa.eu) is experiencing a sustained multi-hour outage. DNS resolves correctly to 34.251.207.80, indicating the hostname is valid and AWF firewall is not interfering with DNS. However, TCP connections to port 443 time out after the configured timeout (30-90 seconds), indicating the EP API server is either down or not accepting connections.

Pattern: This outage has persisted since at least April 11, with intermittent partial recovery windows. Run 168 (breaking, earlier today at ~18:44Z) successfully retrieved 51 adopted texts and 737 MEP records, indicating the API is intermittently responsive. The current outage at 21:19Z may represent an evening maintenance window or load-related degradation.

Context:

Server Health Summary

Server version 1.2.7, status unhealthy, uptime 94 seconds. Availability: 0/13 feeds operational, level Unavailable.

What Worked

ComponentStatus
Precomputed stats (get_all_generated_stats)85 KB — full 2004-2026 data
analyze_coalition_dynamics (partial)Returned structure, all metrics null
Cross-session intelligence5 prior analysis runs available
MCP server startupServer responds (v1.2.7)

Recovery Outlook

ScenarioProbabilityTimeframe
API restores for April 14 return70%8-12 hours
API remains intermittent through April 1420%12-24 hours
Extended outage into April 15+10%24-48 hours

Recommendation: Schedule next motions workflow run for April 14 morning (06:00-08:00 UTC) to capture post-recess restart data. Parliament sitting at 17:00 CET (15:00 UTC) — schedule second run for 19:00 UTC to capture first day proceedings.

Synthesis Summary

View source: existing/synthesis-summary.md

Synthesis Context

FieldValue
Synthesis IDSYN-2026-04-13-MOTIONS-RUN40
Analysis Date2026-04-13 (Easter Monday — Recess Day 18/18, final day)
Data SourcesPrecomputed stats (85KB, 2004-2026), 5 prior analysis runs
EP API StatusOUTAGE — 12+ consecutive timeouts, 0/13 feeds operational
Overall ConfidenceMEDIUM
Article GeneratedNo — EP API outage, no live feed data for feed-first article

Intelligence Dashboard

Cross-Session Run Map (April 13)

Today's 5 runs form a comprehensive intelligence picture despite the API outage:

Consolidated Intelligence from 5 Prior Runs

1. US Tariff Countermeasures — CRITICAL T-1 (April 15 deadline)

ParameterRun 39 ValueRun 40 Update
Risk Score25/25 CRITICAL25/25 CRITICAL (unchanged — maximum severity)
Deadline ProximityT-2 daysT-1 day (Parliament returns April 14, implementation April 15)
EP ReferenceTA-10-2026-0096Adopted March 26 — Commission implementing countermeasures
Coalition PositionEPP bridging, ECR opposing, S&D/Greens demanding stronger responseUnchanged — first post-recess vote will be the test
ConfidenceHIGHHIGH — deadline is calendar-fixed

Cross-session insight: Run 168 (breaking) identified this as the top risk with zero buffer between Parliament return and implementation deadline. Run 41 (propositions) confirmed the Commission has been operating without parliamentary oversight during recess. The 24-hour window between return and deadline is structurally unprecedented for a measure of this magnitude.

2. Banking Union Trilogue — HIGH Priority

ParameterValue
Risk Score15/25 HIGH
EP ReferencesTA-10-2026-0092 (SRMR3), TA-10-2026-0090 (BRRD3), TA-10-2026-0091 (DGSD2)
StatusAdopted March 26 — Council trilogue preparation
Key TensionGerman/French resistance on deposit guarantee burden-sharing
TimelineTrilogue launch expected late April
ConfidenceMEDIUM

3. Anti-Corruption Directive — HIGH Significance

ParameterValue
Significance Score7.05/10
EP ReferenceTA-10-2026-0094
StatusAdopted March 26 — 24-month transposition begins
ScaleFirst EU-wide anti-corruption directive — 27 MS criminal code amendments
RiskImplementation delay in MS with weaker anti-corruption institutions
ConfidenceHIGH

4. Pipeline Congestion — ELEVATED Risk

ParameterValue
Risk Score12/25 ELEVATED
Detail13 new COD procedures from 2026 await committee assignment
BottleneckECON and INTA committees capacity-constrained
Q1 2026 Pace114 legislative acts annualized (vs 78 in 2025 = +46.2%)
SustainabilityMEDIUM confidence — record pace may not survive post-recess disruption

5. EP API Infrastructure — OPERATIONAL Risk

ParameterValue
Outage Duration48+ hours (since April 11)
ImpactAll automated news workflows degraded or analysis-only
PatternIntermittent recovery — Run 168 retrieved data at 18:44Z, Run 40 failed at 21:19Z
Prognosis70% recovery by April 14 morning (pre-sitting maintenance likely)

EP10 Political Landscape Snapshot (Precomputed Stats)

Seat Distribution (720 MEPs)

GroupSeatsShare
EPP18525.7%
S&D13518.8%
PfE8411.7%
ECR7911.0%
Renew7610.6%
Greens/EFA537.4%
GUE/NGL466.4%
NI344.7%
ESN283.9%

Structural Dynamics

MetricValueImplication
Fragmentation Index6.59Highest in EP history — coalition-building complex
Minimum Winning Coalition3 groupsNo two groups can form majority
Grand Coalition (EPP+S&D)44.5%NOT VIABLE — 5.5pp below majority threshold
Right Bloc (EPP+ECR+PfE)52.3%Structurally advantaged — but ideological spread wide
Left Bloc (S&D+Greens+GUE)32.6%Structural minority
Renew-ECR Cohesion0.95Competitiveness alliance intact (Apr 10 analysis)
HHI Concentration0.1517Moderate — no single group dominates

Post-Recess Scenarios (April 14-15)

Scenario A: Orderly Return with Tariff Debate (35% likely)

Parliament sits as scheduled. INTA holds planned emergency session on tariff implementation. Commission reports on countermeasures readiness. Debate is structured, with motions for resolution tabled by major groups.

Motions implications: Expect 3-5 motions for resolution on tariff response (one per major bloc). Joint Motion for Resolution possible if EPP and S&D align. Roll-call vote with clear coalition lines. New motions data available for next workflow run.

Coalition map: EPP-S&D-Renew grand coalition on measured response vs ECR-PfE bloc demanding alternative approach.

Scenario B: Chaotic Convergence — Trade Crisis Dominates (45% likely)

Multiple urgent items compete for plenary time. Trade tariffs dominate, pushing banking trilogue preparation and other legislative work to committee sessions. The compressed timeline (return Monday, deadline Tuesday) creates procedural shortcuts.

Motions implications: Possible urgent procedure under Rule 163 (urgent debate). Oral questions with debate to Commission (Rule 136). Multiple competing motions from political groups with incompatible positions. Coalition stress: EPP-ECR competitiveness alliance tested on trade protectionism vs free trade.

Risk: Parliamentary fragmentation (effective parties 6.59) means no group can drive agenda alone. Expect cross-party negotiations to absorb most of Monday afternoon.

Scenario C: Extended Disruption (20% likely)

EP API remains degraded. Commission acts on tariffs without full parliamentary debate. Parliament plays catch-up with ex-post scrutiny motions.

Motions implications: Delayed parliamentary response reduces democratic legitimacy of trade measures. Possible motion of censure from The Left/Greens if Commission bypasses Parliament. Data infrastructure gap prevents real-time monitoring.

Q1 2026 Performance Context

Metric2025 Full Year2026 Q1 (annualized)Change
Legislative Acts78114+46.2%
Roll-call Votes420567+35.0%
Plenary Sessions5354+1.9%
Adopted Texts347104 (Q1 actual)On pace
Parliamentary Questions4,9416,147+24.4%
Resolutions135180+33.3%
Procedures684935+36.7%

Analysis: The record Q1 pace (+46.2% legislative output) faces its first real sustainability test with the post-Easter restart. The tariff deadline convergence will consume significant parliamentary bandwidth, potentially slowing the legislative pipeline. The 13 pending COD procedures from Q1 need rapporteur assignments during the first committee weeks back.

Cross-Reference Index

RunSynthesis IDKey Contribution
Motions Run 39 (Apr 13)SYN-2026-04-13-MOTIONS-RUN39EP API outage diagnostic, initial classification
Breaking Run 168 (Apr 13)SYN-2026-04-13-BREAKING-RUN168Partial API data (51 texts, 737 MEPs), post-recess convergence
Propositions Run 41 (Apr 13)N/ATariff deadline focus, banking reform preparation
Committee Reports Run 47 (Apr 13)N/AINTA/ECON post-Easter committee analysis
Motions (Apr 10)SYN-2026-04-10-001Full article with 17 March 26 plenary documents
Week-in-Review (Apr 11)SYN-2026-04-11-008Easter recess week synthesis, composite risk 13.17/25

Article Recommendation for Next Run

When EP API recovers (expected April 14 morning):

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.

SectionArtifactPath
section-significancesignificance-classificationclassification/significance-classification.md
section-riskrisk-matrixrisk-scoring/risk-matrix.md
section-threatpolitical-threat-landscapethreat-assessment/political-threat-landscape.md
section-documentsdocument-analysis-indexdocuments/document-analysis-index.md
section-supplementary-intelligenceapi-outage-diagnosticexisting/api-outage-diagnostic.md
section-supplementary-intelligencesynthesis-summaryexisting/synthesis-summary.md