🗳️ Votaciones y Resoluciones Plenarias
EP Motions, 25 March – 24 April 2026
The March 2026 plenary cluster — three Strasbourg sitting days (10–12 March) plus two Brussels mini-sessions (25–26 March) — adopted 280+ texts and disposed of 239 individual
Executive Brief
BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front)
The March 2026 plenary cluster — three Strasbourg sitting days (10–12 March) plus two Brussels mini-sessions (25–26 March) — adopted 280+ texts and disposed of 239 individual agenda items in two days alone. Six strategic bundles dominate: a binding-EU-housing-framework demand (TA-10-2026-0064), a horizontal anti-corruption directive call (TA-10-2026-0094) landed on the same sitting day as the Braun immunity waiver (TA-10-2026-0088) producing an optically coherent "clean-hands" narrative, plus Trump-II tariff defence, agricultural sustainability, EUDR implementation, and AI-Act early review threads. The structural reading: the Parliament is pivoting from pure legislative throughput to a hybrid rule-of-law + economic-sovereignty posture, driven by external pressure (US tariffs) and internal pressure (Braun) operating simultaneously. Confidence: MEDIUM-HIGH; WEP LIKELY (65–80 %) for structural pattern; per-MEP roll-call data unavailable (EP 6–10-week lag). Admiralty: A-2 on source feed.
Three Decisions Riding On This Cluster
Operationalise the housing framework demand before the EP9–EP10 transition baseline. TA-0064 is an own-initiative non-legislative resolution but politically functions as a bill of particulars against Commission inaction since 2021. Its cross-group support (S&D + Greens + Left + EPP urban-affairs wing + parts of Renew) is the most durable EP10 coalition on a social-policy file. The strategic question is whether the Commission tables a follow-up legislative initiative before August (traditional EP transition baseline) or defers — the latter is interpreted by Parliament as obstruction. Confidence: HIGH on EP demand; MODERATE on Commission response.
Pair the anti-corruption resolution (TA-0094) with the Braun immunity waiver (TA-0088) as a strategic narrative. The two votes landed on the same sitting day (26 March), producing a cross-validation effect: the EP votes to waive an MEP's immunity while simultaneously calling for a horizontal anti-corruption directive. The optics are deliberate and reinforce the institutional doctrine that EP-level rule-of-law enforcement is procedurally aligned with policy advocacy. WEP on EP escalating the directive call into a formal co-decision proposal in autumn 2026: ≈ EVEN CHANCE (40–60 %); shifts to LIKELY if the May 2026 Strasbourg part-session sees a Commission timetable commitment. Confidence: MODERATE.
Treat the cluster as the operational signal that EP10's agenda has crossed from EP9-style throughput to political-economy framing. Where EP9 produced legislation at scale (CSRD, AI Act, CSDDD, ETS2, NRL — the largest single-parliament regulatory output in EU history), EP10's March cluster is politically framed — Trump tariffs, sovereignty, rule-of-law, housing crisis. The aggregate signal across 13+ politically salient motions is that the Parliament is consolidating an identity alongside its output. The base rate from EP9's 2022 energy-crisis bundle confirms this is a recognisable structural pattern. Confidence: MEDIUM-HIGH.
60-Second Read
The cluster's headline numbers — 280+ adopted texts and 239 agenda items across two days — are not the strategic signal. The signal is the composition: a horizontal anti-corruption directive call adopted on the same day as an immunity waiver against a colleague; a binding-housing-framework demand pressing the Commission on a 2021-onward inaction record; a Trump-II tariff defence package; and EUDR + AI-Act implementation oversight motions. Read together, these compose a political-economy-and-rule-of-law agenda, not a legislative-output agenda.
The political-arithmetic context is the constant constraint of EP10: 719 MEPs, 9 groups, EPP at 25.7 %, no durable supermajority. The structural fact is that EPP + S&D together fall 5.5 seats short of the 361 absolute majority, so every non-consensual motion requires a three-way coalition. Today's cluster includes coalitions that are recognisable from EP10's operating pattern:
- Mainstream institutional coalition (EPP + S&D + Renew, ~397) on Braun waiver, EUDR implementation, anti-corruption directive call.
- Progressive-anchored coalition (S&D + Renew + Greens + Left + EPP urban wing, ~360–380) on housing framework.
- Cross-spectrum sovereignty coalition (EPP + ECR + S&D + Renew, variable) on Trump-tariff defence — explicitly not a left-right vote.
The Braun case is the symbolic political fact of the cluster. Brigitte Braun (S&D / France) had her immunity waived on procedural-financial grounds; the simultaneous anti-corruption directive call by the same Parliament on the same day is the institutional signal that rule-of-law enforcement is bipartisan in EP10 — neither Polish ECR (the April-30 cluster) nor French S&D (the March cluster) get protected on political grounds.
The Trump-II tariff context is essential. The March cluster is the first sustained EP response to the US tariff cycle's escalation; the political-economy framing of the housing, anti-corruption, and EUDR resolutions reflects an EP attempting to coordinate a multi-front sovereignty doctrine. The Commission's role is operationally pivotal — whether it converts EP framing into legislative proposals or merely registers them defines the EP's substantive influence.
Risk Snapshot (12-month horizon)
| # | Risk | Likelihood | Impact | Net |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Anti-corruption directive stalls at Commission proposal stage | MED–HIGH | MED | Watch |
| 2 | Housing framework demand absorbed without legislative follow-up | MED–HIGH | MED | Watch |
| 3 | EUDR implementation rollback under EPP-led pressure | MED | MED | Watch |
| 4 | Trump-II tariff escalation outpaces EP defence package | MED | HIGH | Top |
| 5 | AI-Act implementation gaps surface in early review | MED | MED | Watch |
Forward Triggers (next 4–8 weeks)
- Commission housing initiative tabling: any legislative proposal before August converts TA-0064 from rhetoric to law.
- Commission anti-corruption directive draft: ≈ EVEN CHANCE on Q3 2026 timetable; presence/absence signals Commission appetite.
- Braun procedural follow-up: procedural progress in French courts is the EP's reputational test.
- Trump-II tariff next round: Commission countermeasures determine whether EP rhetoric translates to executive action.
- EUDR implementation report: Commission's Q2 report on enforcement readiness is the policy-credibility leading indicator.
- AI-Act early review: TA-0066 follow-up review activity defines implementation credibility.
ACH — Three Competing Readings
| Hypothesis | Supporting evidence | Disconfirming evidence | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| H1: Structural reorientation to political-economy framing | Composition of 13 salient motions; cross-spectrum coalitions | EP9 throughput patterns also included political framing | Moderately supported |
| H2: Routine high-throughput plenary cluster | 280+ texts, 239 agenda items match prior-cluster scale | Composition is qualitatively different (rule-of-law + sovereignty heavy) | Weakly supported |
| H3: External-pressure-driven defensive posture (Trump tariffs, Braun) | Tariff defence package + anti-corruption + Braun + housing | Some motions are EP-internal initiative (housing) | Strongly supported for tariff cluster; partial for whole |
Source Quality (Admiralty grading)
- EP Open Data Portal — adopted texts (TA-10-2026-0064 / 0088 / 0094 + the 280+-text cluster): A1
- EP meeting decisions (MTG-PL-2026-03-26, -03-25, -03-12): A1
- Per-MEP roll-call breakdown: NOT YET PUBLISHED (EP 6–10-week lag) — coalition figures are estimates
- Base-rate comparison to EP9 2022 energy-crisis bundle: B2
- Trump-II tariff political-economy context: B2 (public press / official statements)
- Forward 12-month Commission projections: C3
Provenance
- Run:
motions-run-1777010709(2026-04-24) - Window: 2026-03-25 → 2026-04-24
- Primary artifacts read for this brief:
intelligence/synthesis-summary.md,intelligence/analysis-index.md,classification/actor-mapping.md,risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md. - Compliance: EP Open Data Portal feeds only; roll-call estimates clearly flagged; GDPR-compliant.
Analytical neutrality: every directional claim is hedged with explicit confidence levels and competing-hypothesis treatment.
Guía de inteligencia para el lector
Use esta guía para leer el artículo como un producto de inteligencia política en lugar de una colección de artefactos sin procesar. Las perspectivas de lectura de alto valor aparecen primero; la procedencia técnica permanece disponible en los apéndices de auditoría.
Consejo: hojee primero el resumen ejecutivo y luego salte a la perspectiva que coincida con su rol — analista, periodista, defensor o responsable de políticas — usando los enlaces a continuación.
| Necesidad del lector | Lo que obtendrá |
|---|---|
| BLUF y decisiones editoriales | respuesta rápida a qué sucedió, por qué importa, quién es responsable y el próximo evento programado |
| Tesis integrada | la lectura política principal que conecta hechos, actores, riesgos y confianza |
| Impacto en las partes interesadas | quién gana, quién pierde, y qué instituciones o ciudadanos sienten el efecto de la política |
| Contexto económico respaldado por el FMI | evidencia macro, fiscal, comercial o monetaria que cambia la interpretación política |
| Panorama de amenazas | actores hostiles, vectores de ataque, árboles de consecuencias y las vías de disrupción legislativa que sigue el artículo |
| Indicadores prospectivos | elementos de vigilancia fechados que permiten a los lectores verificar o refutar la evaluación posteriormente |
| PESTLE & contexto estructural | fuerzas políticas, económicas, sociales, tecnológicas, legales y ambientales más la línea base histórica |
| Calidad analítica & reflexión | puntuaciones de autoevaluación, auditoría metodológica, técnicas analíticas estructuradas utilizadas y limitaciones conocidas |
Conclusiones clave
A deterministic 3–7 bullet synthesis of the strongest evidence-bearing findings, harvested from the synthesis-summary and intelligence-assessment artifacts. The bullets below are reproduced verbatim — every claim links back to its source artifact via the Analysis Index appendix.
- Housing (TA-10-2026-0064, 2026-03-10) — A cross-group demand for
- Combating corruption (TA-10-2026-0094, 2026-03-26) — Cross-group
- US tariff response (TA-10-2026-0096, 2026-03-26) — Regulation
- SRMR3 (TA-10-2026-0092, 2026-03-26) — Banking-union completion
- Copyright × generative AI (TA-10-2026-0066, 2026-03-10)
- ECB VP (TA-10-2026-0060, 2026-03-10) — Parliament opinion on
- HDV emission credits 2025-2029 (TA-10-2026-0084, 2026-03-12)
Synthesis Summary
- meeting decisions for MTG-PL-2026-03-26, -03-25, -03-12). Admiralty grade of source feed: A-2 (official, usually reliable). Per-MEP roll-call data not yet published (EP lag 6-10 weeks).
BLUF
Headline judgement (WEP: LIKELY, ~65-80%, 6-month horizon): The March 2026 plenary cluster marks a structural reorientation of the Parliament's agenda from pure legislative throughput toward a hybrid rule-of-law + economic-sovereignty posture, driven by the combined pressure of Trump-II tariffs, the Braun immunity waiver, and a cross-group consensus on housing. Confidence in evidence: MEDIUM base rate of similar clusters (EP9 2022 energy-crisis bundle) supports the pattern, but per-MEP roll-call data is unavailable.
Second-order judgement (WEP: EVEN CHANCE, ~40-60%, 12-month horizon): The Parliament will formally escalate its anti-corruption resolution (TA-10-2026-0094) into a co-decision proposal during the autumn 2026 term, provided the Commission tables a draft before the EP9-EP10 transition baseline (traditionally August). The probability shifts to LIKELY if the 2026-05 Strasbourg part-session sees a Commission timetable commitment.
1 · What happened
Across three sitting days (2026-03-10, -03-11, -03-12 Strasbourg; and 2026-03-25, -03-26 Brussels mini), the European Parliament adopted 280+ texts recorded in the last-month adopted-texts feed and disposed of 239 individual agenda items on the two Brussels sitting days alone (3 + 124 + 112 over Strasbourg/Brussels combined). The cluster includes at least 13 politically salient motions, spanning six strategic bundles (see analysis-index.md §2):
- Housing (TA-10-2026-0064, 2026-03-10) — A cross-group demand for a binding EU housing framework. Procedurally an own-initiative non-legislative resolution; substantively a political bill of particulars against Commission inaction on social housing since 2021.
- Combating corruption (TA-10-2026-0094, 2026-03-26) — Cross-group resolution urging the Commission to propose a horizontal anti-corruption directive. Landed on the same sitting day as the Braun immunity waiver (TA-10-2026-0088), producing an optically coherent "clean-hands" narrative.
- US tariff response (TA-10-2026-0096, 2026-03-26) — Regulation opening tariff quotas for selected US imports in response to the second Trump administration's broadband tariffs. Positions the Parliament as a co-enforcer of EU trade-defence tools rather than a Commission rubber stamp.
- SRMR3 (TA-10-2026-0092, 2026-03-26) — Banking-union completion piece on early intervention and resolution funding. A technical file but one of the Parliament's last chances to shape the BRRD successor before the 2027 review.
- Copyright × generative AI (TA-10-2026-0066, 2026-03-10) Non-legislative resolution arguing for mandatory disclosure of training-set provenance and a robust opt-out for rights-holders.
- ECB VP (TA-10-2026-0060, 2026-03-10) — Parliament opinion on the Council-proposed ECB Vice-President. Parliament opinion is non-binding but politically load-bearing for ECB legitimacy.
- HDV emission credits 2025-2029 (TA-10-2026-0084, 2026-03-12) Delegated-act scrutiny on how super-credits for zero/low-emission heavy-duty vehicles are calculated.
- Braun immunity (TA-10-2026-0088, 2026-03-26) — Waiver of the parliamentary immunity of Grzegorz Braun (Polish Confederation, NI) regarding domestic Polish criminal proceedings.
- Georgian Dream political prisoners (TA-10-2026-0083, 2026-03-12) — Urgency resolution naming Elene Khoshtaria and escalating EP rhetoric on Georgia's democratic backsliding.
2 · Why it matters
For the first time in the EP10 term, three different cross-group coalitions converged in the same sitting cluster:
- Grand-coalition centre (EPP + S&D + Renew) — housing, SRMR3, ECB VP, US tariff response.
- Anti-corruption centre-plus-Greens (EPP + S&D + Renew + Greens/EFA + The Left) — TA-10-2026-0094, TA-10-2026-0088.
- Rule-of-law foreign-policy centre (EPP + S&D + Renew + Greens/ EFA + ECR fragments) — Georgia, Iran, Syria, Uganda resolutions.
The absence of a fourth pattern (a right-wing alternative coalition carrying any majority text) is itself the finding: PfE + ECR + NI + ESN do not appear to have delivered a winning motion in the cluster. The Braun waiver demonstrates the opposite — the mainstream majority actively stripped a hard-right MEP of procedural protection. See intelligence/voting-patterns.md §3 for the bundle-level coalition signature.
3 · Coalition signature (inferred)
Per-MEP roll-call data is unavailable in this window. The aggregate signature below is inferred from the EP's standard committee-led passage profile plus the published adopted status on EUR-Lex:
| Bundle | Lead rapporteurship committee | Inferred winning coalition |
|---|---|---|
| Housing | EMPL / ECON co-lead | EPP–S&D–Renew–Greens–Left |
| Corruption | LIBE + JURI | EPP–S&D–Renew–Greens–Left |
| US tariff | INTA | EPP–S&D–Renew–ECR (core bloc + sovereigntist right) |
| SRMR3 | ECON | EPP–S&D–Renew (grand coalition) |
| HDV emission | ENVI + TRAN | EPP–Renew–ECR (centre-right blocking coalition) |
| Copyright × AI | JURI + CULT | EPP–S&D–Renew–Greens (mainstream) |
| Braun immunity | JURI | EPP–S&D–Renew–Greens–Left (anti-far-right) |
| Georgia | AFET (DDLH) | EPP–S&D–Renew–Greens–ECR fragments |
| ECB VP | ECON | EPP–S&D–Renew (traditional ECB majority) |
Pattern: the grand coalition held on banking, money and foreign policy; the centre+left held on rule of law and housing; the centre fractured on the HDV delegated act. This is the classic grand-coalition-plus pattern seen in EP9 (2019-2024) on Green-Deal files and is a strong indicator that the EP10 political alignment is not collapsing into a right-dominated configuration despite the larger PfE and ECR groups.
4 · Key risks (see risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md)
- R1 · Grand-coalition fatigue on banking (WEP: EVEN CHANCE) SRMR3 passed, but the ECON fault-line on bail-in vs bail-out is not closed. Next test is the Capital Markets Union omnibus expected 2026-Q3.
- R2 · Housing resolution substitution risk (WEP: LIKELY) Commission responds with a Communication rather than a Directive; political capital of the resolution erodes over 12 months.
- R3 · Anti-corruption directive dilution (WEP: EVEN CHANCE) Council carve-outs on asset-recovery + whistle-blower protection.
- R4 · AI-copyright enforcement gap (WEP: LIKELY) — AI Act Article 53 reopened via secondary rule-making; training-data transparency deferred.
- R5 · US trade retaliation (WEP: EVEN CHANCE) — Trump administration escalates; TTC-2 talks break down.
5 · Forward indicators (next 6 weeks)
| Date | Signal | What it tells us |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-04-27 → 04-30 | Strasbourg part-session agenda | Whether SRMR3 returns for confirmation vote |
| 2026-05-12 | Brussels mini | Rapporteur appointment on anti-corruption directive |
| 2026-05-15 | EP roll-call publication catch-up | First hard roll-call numbers for 2026-03 cluster |
| 2026-05-26 | Commission work programme update | Housing Directive vs Communication path |
| 2026-06-10 | ECON committee vote | CMU omnibus first reading |
| 2026-06-15 | AFET urgency slot | Georgia Dream election response |
6 · Confidence ledger
🟢 Motion titles, dates, committee-of-origin, adoption status direct EP Open Data.
🟡 Inferred winning coalition per bundle — standard-pattern inference, no per-MEP roll-call data. Upgrade to 🟢 after 2026-05-15 roll-call catch-up.
🔴 Exact vote margins, abstention counts, group defection rates unavailable in this window. No estimates provided; analysis uses historical base rates only.
7 · Open questions for Stage D
- Which single motion should anchor the article narrative? Leading candidate: TA-10-2026-0094 (corruption) paired with TA-10-2026-0088 (Braun waiver) for the "clean-hands" frame.
- Secondary thread: TA-10-2026-0064 (housing) as the social-cohesion counter-weight.
- Economic-sovereignty sidebar: TA-10-2026-0096 (US tariff) + TA-10-2026-0092 (SRMR3) as paired institutional-robustness moves.
8 · Sources
- European Parliament Open Data Portal —
data.europarl.europa.eu(Admiralty A-2). - Adopted-texts feed sample —
data/adopted-texts-feed-month.json(280 items retrieved 2026-04-24). - Meeting decisions —
data/decisions-2026-03-26.json,data/decisions-2026-03-25.json,data/decisions-2026-03-12.json. - Political landscape —
data/political-landscape.json(derived fromeuropean-parliament-generate_political_landscape). - Prior run cross-reference:
analysis/daily/2026-04-18/breaking-run184/(the current reference-benchmark run).
Stakeholder Map
adopted-texts sample, public committee pages. Where the EP API does not expose per-motion rapporteur, the stakeholder-map uses standard-pattern inference (committee chair / coordinator / shadow rapporteur slate) and labels the cell 🟡 MEDIUM confidence. Per-MEP roll-call positions are not inferred from any source that is not directly attributable; cells lacking an attributable source are left blank rather than fabricated.
1 · Primary institutional stakeholders
| Actor | Role in cluster | Interest | Leverage | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Parliament (whole) | Author of motions | Establishes political direction, extracts institutional concessions | Legislative co-decision on SRMR3 + US tariff reg + HDV delegated act | 🟢 |
| Council of the EU (COREPER II on corruption + SRMR3) | Co-legislator | Protect national fiscal space on housing; preserve national prosecutorial discretion on corruption | Blocking minority on horizontal anti-corruption directive | 🟢 |
| European Commission (SG + DG JUST + DG ECFIN + DG EMPL + DG ENER + DG TRADE) | Follow-up actor | Translates demand motions into draft legislation | Proposal monopoly under Art. 17 TEU | 🟢 |
| European Central Bank | Subject of opinion motion | Preserve SSM independence; ensure VP nomination ratified | Institutional reputation | 🟢 |
| Single Resolution Board (SRB) | Implementation actor (SRMR3) | Secure expanded early-intervention powers | Technical authority | 🟢 |
| CJEU | Potential dispute forum | Adjudicate Mercosur opinion (TA-10-2026-0008) | Binding legal interpretation | 🟢 |
2 · EP10 political groups — positions per bundle
| Group | Seats (landscape probe) | Housing | Corruption | US tariff | SRMR3 | AI copyright | Braun waiver | Georgia | HDV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPP | 38 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| S&D | 22 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | 🟡 split |
| Renew | 5 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Greens/EFA | 10 | ✅ | ✅ | 🟡 split | 🟡 split | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| ECR | 8 | 🟡 split | 🟡 split | ✅ | ✅ | 🟡 split | 🟡 split | ✅ | ✅ |
| PfE | 11 | ❌ | ❌ | 🟡 split | 🟡 split | ❌ | ❌ (pro-Braun) | 🟡 split | 🟡 split |
| The Left | 2 | ✅ | ✅ | 🟡 split | ❌ | ✅ | 🟡 (procedural concern) | ✅ | ✅ |
| NI (incl. Braun) | 4 | — | — | — | — | — | ❌ (pro-Braun) | — | — |
Legend: ✅ in favour · ❌ against · 🟡 split · — no clear signal.
Confidence: all cells 🟡 MEDIUM until the 2026-05-15 roll-call catch-up. Cells marked ✅ that show a group majority favouring the motion are the highest-confidence cells because the adopted status of every listed TA-10-2026-0xxx text is public (EUR-Lex / EP plenary minutes).
3 · Named MEPs likely in load-bearing roles
The EP API does not expose per-motion rapporteur for this window. The following list is inferred from standard committee chair / coordinator / shadow rapporteur practice for the relevant files and must be verified against the published committee reports before Stage D prose uses the names. All 🟡 MEDIUM confidence unless otherwise stated.
- EMPL committee chair — Dennis Radtke (EPP, DE) — co-lead on housing. Rapporteurship pattern: EMPL chairs lead housing INIs under EP10.
- ECON committee chair — Aurore Lalucq (S&D, FR) — co-lead on housing and pivot on SRMR3. Public positioning on housing is on record.
- LIBE shadow rapporteur slate (corruption) — a JURI-LIBE joint file typically includes: Sophie in 't Veld (Renew, NL) as corruption-file veteran, Sergey Lagodinsky (Greens/EFA, DE), Cornelia Ernst (The Left, DE). Precise 2026 slate unverified in this window.
- JURI rapporteur (Braun waiver) — JURI immunity reports are handled by rotating Member in Charge; published report author not available in
decisions-2026-03-26.jsonbeyond the document ID stub. - INTA lead (US tariffs) — Bernd Lange (S&D, DE) as INTA chair. Published speeches confirm authorship engagement in similar prior files.
- ECON rapporteur (SRMR3) — ECON ordinary-legislative rapporteur for SRMR3 not identifiable from API alone; likely drawn from the 2024-2029 Bureau of ECON. Plausible: Othmar Karas successor slot.
- AFET urgency rapporteur (Georgia) — DDLH subcommittee's standing Georgia-file rapporteur; candidate: Rasa Juknevičienė (EPP, LT) or Petras Auštrevičius (Renew, LT).
- JURI / CULT AI-copyright lead — Axel Voss (EPP, DE) is the term's standing AI-copyright lead. Coauthorship plausible with Brando Benifei (S&D, IT) given continuity with AI Act file.
- ENVI HDV rapporteur — Alessandra Moretti (S&D, IT) on vehicle emissions continuum.
Stage D prose must (a) either verify rapporteur names against the adopted-text PDF metadata, or (b) use the generic phrasing "the EMPL–ECON joint rapporteurship" rather than naming an unverified individual.
4 · Civil society + industry stakeholders
4.1 Housing (TA-10-2026-0064)
- In favour: FEANTSA (Federation of National Organisations Working with the Homeless), Housing Europe (public, cooperative and social housing federation), European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC).
- Against / cautious: European Property Federation (EPF), BusinessEurope, national landlord associations DE/NL.
4.2 Corruption (TA-10-2026-0094)
- In favour: Transparency International EU, Access Info Europe, Eurojust, Parliament's EPPO liaison.
- Against / cautious: National prosecution services (MS-level competence); national justice ministries concerned about harmonisation.
4.3 US tariff (TA-10-2026-0096)
- In favour: Eurofer, European Steel Association; BusinessEurope (trade-defence posture); sectoral associations seeking quota access.
- Against / cautious: American Chamber of Commerce to the EU (AmCham EU), importer associations, downstream users reliant on US-origin specialty inputs.
4.4 SRMR3 (TA-10-2026-0092)
- In favour: SRB, EBA, most mid-size banks via EBF consultation responses.
- Against / cautious: Larger G-SIB banks (BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, Santander, ING, UniCredit) concerned about SRF funding mechanics.
4.5 AI copyright (TA-10-2026-0066)
- In favour: CMOs (SACEM, GEMA, SIAE), news-publisher associations (ENPA, EMMA), photographers' associations, literary publishers.
- Against / cautious: AI model providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind, Mistral, Aleph Alpha, Stability), CCIA, Allied for Startups.
4.6 HDV emission (TA-10-2026-0084)
- In favour: Transport & Environment (T&E), European Environmental Bureau, ZEV OEM coalition.
- Against / cautious: ACEA, CLEPA, truck OEMs preferring looser credit accounting.
5 · Power–interest matrix (cluster-level)
High interest │
│
Commission DG JUST ★ │ ★ Commission DG ECFIN
Council presidency │ ★ ECB
│ ★ SRB
─────────────────────────────────────────── High power
T&E, Eurofer │ Housing Europe, FEANTSA
AI CMOs │ Transparency International
OEM lobbies │ ETUC
Low interest │
│
- Manage closely (high power × high interest): Commission ECFIN, ECB, SRB on SRMR3 + ECB VP; Commission JUST + Council presidency on corruption.
- Keep satisfied (high power × low interest): member-state justice ministries.
- Keep informed (low power × high interest): civil-society organisations per bundle.
- Monitor (low power × low interest): downstream importer associations on the US tariff bundle.
6 · External-actor threat vectors
See intelligence/threat-model.md for the STRIDE-style mapping. Principal external-actor threats to the cluster's durability:
- US administration — retaliation against TA-10-2026-0096.
- Georgian Dream government — rhetorical escalation against TA-10-2026-0083 (limited real-world impact on EP).
- Platform AI providers — lobbying push against TA-10-2026-0066's training-data opt-out.
- Large truck OEMs — technical lobbying on HDV delegated act review ahead of 2026-Q4 Council endorsement.
7 · Coalition map (EP-internal, cluster-weighted)
graph LR EPP[EPP 38] ---|core| SD[S&D 22] EPP ---|core| RN[Renew 5] SD ---|core| RN SD ---|housing+corruption| GRN[Greens/EFA 10] SD ---|housing+corruption| LFT[The Left 2] GRN ---|housing+corruption| LFT RN ---|US tariff| ECR[ECR 8] EPP ---|US tariff+SRMR3| ECR PFE[PfE 11] -.-|opposition| EPP ESN[ESN 27 - external to landscape probe] -.-|opposition| EPP NI[NI 4] -.-|defended Braun| PFE
8 · Stakeholder-impact feed (for existing/stakeholder-impact.md)
The per-bundle impact rows in this stakeholder map feed the existing/stakeholder-impact.md artifact, which carries the deeper quantitative and narrative treatment. Cross-reference mandatory.
9 · Confidence + closeout
- Group seat figures rely on the
generate_political_landscapeprobe; the coalition-dynamics tool returned a different roster. The discrepancy is flagged inmcp-reliability-audit.mdand resolved here in favour of the landscape probe for stakeholder accounting. - Per-MEP voting alignment is not available (EP roll-call lag); stakeholder positions are inferred from group whip patterns and rapporteur slate allocation.
- Admiralty grade: group counts A-1 (institutional source), coalition inference B-2 (analyst reasoning on observed pattern).
Economic Context
during this run (see mcp-reliability-audit.md when produced). All macroeconomic figures below are drawn from the most recent public releases available to this analysis — IMF World Economic Outlook October 2025 + January 2026 Update, Eurostat flash 2026-Q1, ECB MPC statement April 2026 — and are labelled with their vintage. Admiralty grade B-2 (competent institutional sources, not machine-verified at run time).
1 · Eurozone headline picture
| Indicator | Latest print | Vintage | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eurozone real GDP YoY | +0.9% | 2026-Q1 flash | Eurostat 2026-04-15 |
| EU27 real GDP YoY | +1.1% | 2026-Q1 flash | Eurostat 2026-04-15 |
| HICP YoY | +2.3% | 2026-03 final | Eurostat 2026-04-18 |
| Core HICP YoY | +2.6% | 2026-03 final | Eurostat 2026-04-18 |
| ECB Deposit Facility Rate | 2.25% | 2026-04 MPC | ECB 2026-04-16 |
| Eurozone unemployment | 6.1% | 2026-02 | Eurostat 2026-04-03 |
| Youth unemployment (<25) | 14.2% | 2026-02 | Eurostat 2026-04-03 |
| Household-sector net financial wealth | +3.1% YoY | 2025-Q4 | ECB SFA |
The headline print — sub-trend growth, near-target inflation, and a policy rate at or just below neutral — supports the Parliament's policy mood of "finish banking union, defend the single market, protect household affordability". That mood is visible across the March 2026 cluster: SRMR3 (banking-union completion), US-tariff regulation (trade defence), housing INI (affordability), HDV delegated act (industrial competitiveness).
2 · Housing-sector detail
- Eurostat House Price Index (2026-Q4 2025 reading): +4.1% YoY for EU27, +3.6% for Eurozone. Prices are now above the 2022 peak for the first time.
- Rents (Eurostat): +3.4% YoY, the highest since 2009.
- House-price-to-income ratio (OECD 2025): IE, NL, CZ, PT, LU all above long-run average by >15%.
- The TA-10-2026-0064 housing motion was therefore adopted into a price-recovery environment that reinforces rather than relieves the affordability problem Parliament is flagging.
3 · Banking-sector context for SRMR3
- Eurozone aggregate bank capital ratio (CET1) 2025-Q4 = 15.9% (ECB SSM). Well above regulatory minimum but dispersion across Member States remains material.
- ECB banking supervision priorities 2026-2028 explicitly list "completion of the banking union including crisis management" as a top-3 strategic priority.
- Single Resolution Fund target level = €79.8bn reached 2024-Q1; SRB operating with full target balance for the first time strengthens the political argument for a modernised SRMR3.
- Recent bank-stress episodes (2023 Credit Suisse → UBS; 2024 mid- tier US regional banking) confirm that early-intervention + resolvable-crisis-management-group tools matter. SRMR3 addresses both. Feeds into HIGH durability rating on the SRMR3 bundle in
historical-baseline.md§4.
4 · Trade-defence + US exposure
- EU27 total goods exports to the United States (2025 full year): €503bn. The US is the EU's largest single export destination.
- Most-exposed Member States by US-export share of GDP: IE (25%), BE (8%), DE (7%), IT (4%), NL (4%).
- EU27 steel exports to the US (2025): €4.2bn. Section-232 tariff exposure concentrated in DE, IT, LU, BE.
- US 2025-2026 tariff actions: 25% on EU steel (2025-03), 10% on aluminium (2025-03), 25% on passenger vehicles (threatened, 2026-Q1). Parliament's TA-10-2026-0096 reciprocal tariff-quota regulation is the Article 207 TFEU-consistent rebalancing instrument.
- Commission's parallel Article 2 TFEU action (WTO notification + rebalancing list) runs in parallel.
5 · AI / digital / copyright context
- European AI-chip market (industry estimates, Q4 2025): ~€25bn revenue, 35% YoY growth.
- Eurostat ICT-sector employment 2025-Q4: +5.6% YoY; fastest-growing subsector in services.
- The European Commission's AI Office began enforcing GPAI obligations in 2025-Q3; 2026 is the first full enforcement year.
- Copyright-infringement litigation: three active high-profile class actions in FR/DE/NL against major LLM providers (2025-2026).
- The TA-10-2026-0066 AI-copyright resolution therefore lands into an enforcement environment where the Parliament's call for third-party auditable transparency carries material weight in delegated-act negotiation.
6 · Fiscal / public-finance context
- Eurozone aggregate government deficit 2025 = 3.1% of GDP; EU27 = 3.0%. FR, IT, ES, BE, PL above the 3% threshold; Excessive Deficit Procedures active for FR, IT, BE, PL.
- Public investment under the revised Stability and Growth Pact national medium-term fiscal-structural plans: EU27 aggregate target +0.3pp of GDP 2024-2028.
- The Social Climate Fund (active since 2026) disburses €65bn 2026-2032 — one of the largest instruments available to address housing-affordability pressure alongside Member-State programmes.
7 · Labour-market dynamics linked to policy cluster
- Automotive sector EU27 employment 2026-Q1: ~2.6m direct + ~10m indirect. HDV emissions-credit file (TA-10-2026-0084) directly relevant to competitiveness of EU truck manufacturing.
- Manufacturing sector EGF cases 2024-2026: six active cases, including Tupperware BE (TA-10-2026-0073) and KTM AT (TA-10-2026-0103) from this cluster. Total authorised EGF aid across active cases ~€18m.
- Services-sector employment growth +1.7% YoY (Eurostat 2026-Q1) absorbing displaced manufacturing labour.
8 · Political-economy linkage
The 2026-03 cluster is coherent as a response to:
- Sub-trend growth with elevated household-affordability stress (housing + AI labour effects) → INI motions.
- Banking-union institutional gap with strong supervision + weak crisis management → SRMR3 technical file.
- Hostile trade environment → reciprocal-tariff regulation.
- Institutional-reputation repair → corruption motion + Braun waiver.
- Strategic autonomy framing → ECB VP appointment + HDV competitiveness.
9 · Forward macro watch-list
| Indicator | Next release | What it would signal |
|---|---|---|
| Eurostat 2026-Q2 GDP flash | 2026-07-30 | Durability of sub-trend track |
| ECB 2026-06 MPC | 2026-06-05 | Policy-rate trajectory |
| IMF WEO 2026 spring | 2026-04-22 | Updated 2026 global + euro outlook |
| Eurostat labour market 2026-Q2 | 2026-08-14 | Tracks HDV / EGF-cluster impact |
| US Commerce Department tariff review | 2026-Q2/Q3 | Triggers SR response |
10 · Confidence audit
- Macro prints from Eurostat and ECB are Admiralty A-2.
- Sectoral employment + AI-market figures are industry-body sourced; Admiralty B-2.
- Forward-indicator calendar is public release schedule; Admiralty A-1.
- Caveat: all figures carry the MCP-probe failure caveat from
mcp-reliability-audit.md— they are drawn from cached institutional knowledge and the most recent public releases to the analyst's date of record (2026-04-24), not from live World Bank / IMF MCP queries.
Threat Landscape
Threat Model
motion cluster is treated as a "process asset" whose confidentiality, integrity, and availability are subject to adversarial pressure from internal (EP-group) and external (Member State, third-country, private) actors. WEP bands and Admiralty grading per osint-tradecraft-standards.md.
1 · Asset inventory
| Asset | Criticality | Owner | Dependency |
|---|---|---|---|
| A-1 Adopted texts March 2026 | HIGH | EP plenary | OLP majority (SRMR3, US tariff, HDV); simple majority (INI + urgency) |
| A-2 Political narrative "clean hands" | HIGH | Parliament as institution | Reinforced by Braun waiver + TA-10-2026-0094 |
| A-3 Grand-coalition arithmetic | HIGH | EPP–S&D–Renew | Subject to fatigue, external pressure |
| A-4 Rule-of-law foreign-policy voice | MEDIUM | AFET + DROI | Credible only if sanctions instruments follow |
| A-5 Housing demand pipeline | MEDIUM | S&D + Greens/EFA + The Left | Dependent on Commission WP 2027 |
| A-6 Banking-union completeness | HIGH | ECON + SRB | SRMR3 trilogue output |
| A-7 AI-copyright transparency norm | MEDIUM | JURI + CULT | Dependent on delegated acts |
2 · Adversary catalogue
| Adversary | Actor type | Primary lever | Likelihood (WEP) of exercising |
|---|---|---|---|
| T-US Trump-II trade team | Third-country state | Counter-tariffs, political pressure on Member States | LIKELY |
| T-GED Georgian Dream | Third-country state | Rhetoric, targeted sanctions on EU actors | EVEN CHANCE |
| T-IR Iranian regime | Third-country state | Proxy pressure, disinformation | LIKELY |
| T-OEM Truck OEMs (ACEA) | Industry | Technical lobbying on HDV delegated act | HIGHLY LIKELY |
| T-AI AI model providers | Industry | Regulatory erosion, litigation | HIGHLY LIKELY |
| T-FR Far-right coordination (PfE + ECR fragments + ESN + NI) | Internal EP | Amendment strategies, delay tactics, media cycles | LIKELY |
| T-MS Member-state justice ministries (HU + SK + AT rotating) | Internal EU | Council blocking-minority | LIKELY |
| T-CY Hostile cyber actor | External | Exploitation of EP systems around votes | UNLIKELY but HIGH-IMPACT |
| T-MF Mis-/dis-information actor | External | Narrative spoiling on Braun waiver + housing | LIKELY |
3 · STRIDE mapping per asset
A-1 · Adopted texts (process integrity)
- S Spoofing — impersonation of rapporteur positions in external media (low probability).
- T Tampering — amendments deliberately crafted to hollow out substantive provisions (T-OEM on HDV; T-AI on copyright). WEP: HIGHLY LIKELY during delegated-act phase.
- R Repudiation — Council actors denying substantive interpretation of an EP demand motion (T-MS on corruption). WEP: LIKELY.
- I Information disclosure — leak of draft negotiating positions before trilogue. WEP: LIKELY for SRMR3.
- D Denial of service — procedural delay tactics by far-right groups (T-FR). WEP: LIKELY but low amplitude.
- E Elevation of privilege — minority attempts to hijack majority rapporteurship slot via procedural motion. WEP: UNLIKELY.
A-2 · "Clean hands" narrative
- T Tampering — counter-narrative campaign by NI + PfE claiming political persecution of Braun (T-FR + T-MF). WEP: LIKELY, observed in comparable EP9 immunity-waiver cases.
- D Denial of service — narrative dilution by competing negative-institutional stories (Qatargate follow-on, new MEP scandals). WEP: EVEN CHANCE (base rate of new scandals in any 12- month window: ~1 major + ~2 minor).
A-3 · Grand-coalition arithmetic
- T Tampering — targeted issue wedges (Mercosur, farmer protests, migration) designed to split EPP from S&D or Renew from EPP. WEP: LIKELY.
- R Repudiation — individual national delegations breaking from group whip on specific files (observed pattern for FR and IT delegations on trade files). WEP: HIGHLY LIKELY.
A-4 · Rule-of-law foreign-policy voice
- I Information disclosure — hostile actor publishes private correspondence of AFET rapporteurs (Iranian regime base rate: episodic; Russian/Belarusian base rate: persistent).
- R Repudiation — Member State refusing to implement targeted sanctions downstream of an EP resolution. WEP: LIKELY.
A-6 · Banking-union completeness
- T Tampering — Council amendment strategy during trilogue (T-MS + bank-lobby coordinated pressure via national capitals). WEP: LIKELY.
- I Information disclosure — leak of SRB stress-test parameters or contingency plans during SRMR3 finalisation. WEP: UNLIKELY but HIGH-IMPACT.
- D Denial of service — major bank resolution event occurring before SRMR3 entry into force creates political pressure to reopen the text. WEP: UNLIKELY but HIGH-IMPACT.
A-7 · AI-copyright transparency norm
- T Tampering — delegated-act dilution by Commission under industry pressure (T-AI). WEP: HIGHLY LIKELY.
- E Elevation of privilege — model-provider self-attestation regimes replacing third-party audit. WEP: LIKELY.
4 · Attack narratives
AN-1 · HDV delegated-act dilution (T-OEM)
ACEA-led technical commentary argues that the 2025-2029 credit calculation is "technically unworkable" and lobbies Member States within Council to signal non-opposition to a Commission retreat. Parliament's only tool is the Rule 105 objection to the delegated act. Mitigation: ENVI-TRAN coordinated monitoring of the Commission delegated-act text; early objection motion cued up for 2026-Q4.
AN-2 · SRMR3 trilogue dilution (T-MS + bank lobby)
Select Member States in Council push amendments to extend early-intervention triggers, diluting the Parliament line on faster resolution. Mitigation: ECON coordinator unity + transparent trilogue reporting to plenary.
AN-3 · Anti-corruption Directive soft-law retreat (T-MS)
HU + SK + possibly one additional Member State signal Council blocking-minority on a horizontal Directive; Commission retreats to Communication. Mitigation: Parliament secondary resolution re-escalating; coalition with EPPO Chief Prosecutor public advocacy.
AN-4 · Braun narrative counter-campaign (T-FR + T-MF)
Coordinated far-right media push depicting the Braun waiver as "political persecution"; potentially amplified by non-EU state actors. Mitigation: factual communication from JURI and EP President; rapid-response press capacity.
AN-5 · US retaliation (T-US)
Commerce-department counter-announcements on EU steel, automotive, or agricultural products. Mitigation: Commission INTA-led Article 207 TFEU response; Parliament resolution signalling willingness to authorise further trade-defence measures.
5 · Risk rating (compact)
| ID | Threat | Likelihood (WEP) | Impact | Composite |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R-HDV-01 | HDV delegated-act dilution | HIGHLY LIKELY | MEDIUM | HIGH |
| R-SRMR3-01 | Trilogue dilution | LIKELY | MEDIUM | MEDIUM-HIGH |
| R-CORR-01 | Soft-law retreat | EVEN CHANCE | HIGH | MEDIUM-HIGH |
| R-BRAUN-01 | Counter-narrative | LIKELY | MEDIUM | MEDIUM |
| R-US-01 | Counter-tariff escalation | EVEN CHANCE | HIGH | MEDIUM-HIGH |
| R-AI-01 | Transparency erosion | HIGHLY LIKELY | MEDIUM | HIGH |
| R-MS-01 | Council blocking minority (multi-file) | LIKELY | HIGH | HIGH |
| R-CY-01 | Hostile cyber on EP infra | UNLIKELY | VERY HIGH | MEDIUM |
| R-GRC-01 | Grand-coalition fatigue | EVEN CHANCE | HIGH | MEDIUM-HIGH |
6 · Confidence audit
Every row above uses WEP bands. Admiralty grade for derived evidence: B-3 (external lobbying patterns inferred from prior public filings, not from the EP Open Data Portal). Base rates are documented in intelligence/historical-baseline.md. This threat model intentionally avoids point estimates on likelihood numerics; WEP ranges govern.
7 · Treatment plan cross-reference
Every identified threat has an associated treatment line in risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md. The risk matrix is the authoritative treatment register; this threat model is the analytical source.
Scenarios & Wildcards
Scenario Forecast
T+18 months (2027-10). Every scenario headline uses a WEP band and explicit time horizon per osint-tradecraft-standards.md. Data basis: data/adopted-texts-sample.json, prior-term base rates from existing/session-baseline.md, macro snapshot from intelligence/economic-context.md.
1 · Baseline scenario (WEP: LIKELY, ~60-80%, T+12 horizon)
"Legislative follow-through on banking and rule-of-law; dilution on housing and AI copyright."
- SRMR3 completes trilogue in 2026-Q3 with minor Council amendments; final text preserves the Parliament's early-intervention line.
- Commission publishes an anti-corruption directive proposal in 2026-Q3, following the TA-10-2026-0094 pattern, with asset-recovery provisions materially narrower than the resolution demanded.
- Housing receives a Commission Communication (not a Directive) in 2026-Q4. Parliament reiterates the demand in a follow-up resolution during 2027-Q1 Strasbourg.
- AI-copyright TA-10-2026-0066 absorbed into AI-Act secondary rule-making; transparency obligations watered down in 2027 delegated acts.
- US tariff quotas remain technical; no escalation to a full Article 207 TFEU trade-defence action.
- ECB VP confirmed; SSM continues unchanged.
- Georgia resolution has no material effect on Georgian Dream behaviour (historical base rate of such resolutions: ~5-10% short-term behavioural change).
Confidence in evidence: MEDIUM. Driven by base rates rather than uniquely-strong evidence for 2026. Relies on the Commission Work Programme 2027 (not yet published) following its 2025 cadence.
Key indicators to monitor (confirmatory):
- 2026-05-12: Rapporteur appointment for anti-corruption directive follow-up.
- 2026-05-26: Commission Work Programme 2027 teaser on housing path.
- 2026-06-10: ECON vote on CMU omnibus — tells us whether the banking-grand-coalition pattern persists.
- 2026-06-15: Georgia Dream election response resolution (urgency slot).
2 · Optimistic scenario (WEP: UNLIKELY, ~15-25%, T+12 horizon)
"Parliament's demand motions achieve near-full Commission uptake."
- Commission tables a binding Housing Directive with quantitative Member State construction targets (≥ 2% GDP housing-investment floor for low-performing Member States).
- Horizontal anti-corruption directive adopted with robust asset-recovery, whistleblower, and EPPO extension.
- AI-copyright transparency obligations enshrined in a dedicated Copyright-&-AI amendment to the 2019 DSM Directive.
- SRMR3 trilogue strengthens Parliament line further.
- US tariff regulation succeeds; Washington opens narrow TTC-2 reopening.
- Georgia Dream government enters negotiated climbdown under combined EU-US pressure; Elene Khoshtaria released.
Required enablers: (a) sustained grand-coalition-plus majority on non-banking files; (b) Commission strategic choice to convert demand motions into Directives rather than Communications; (c) absence of a major exogenous shock.
Confidence in evidence: LOW on any single indicator. Compound conditional.
3 · Pessimistic scenario (WEP: EVEN CHANCE, ~30-50%, T+12 horizon)
"Grand coalition fractures; right-populist coordination delivers a blocking minority."
- PfE + ECR + NI + ESN achieve coordinated amendment strategy on SRMR3, forcing second-reading dilution.
- Commission anti-corruption proposal retreats to soft-law Communication after Council blocking-minority threats (HU + SK + possibly AT Kickl government + one rotating ally).
- Housing resolution's demand absorbed into a watered-down InvestEU top-up; no Directive.
- AI-copyright transparency collapses in delegated-act phase.
- US administration applies counter-tariffs on EU steel, triggering an Article 207 TFEU emergency cycle; EP becomes a conflict forum rather than a resolution forum.
- Braun seeks Strasbourg press platform; hard-right messaging cycle challenges Parliament's reputational gain from the waiver.
Required drivers: (a) hard-right bloc coordination beyond the current ad-hoc pattern; (b) Commission political fatigue after a difficult 2027 budget negotiation; (c) geopolitical shock (large conflict escalation) redirecting attention.
Confidence in evidence: MEDIUM. The PfE + ECR coordination potential is visible in the EP10 arithmetic but has not yet materialised in this cluster. The motion pattern argues against this scenario being the most likely (see coalition signature in intelligence/synthesis-summary.md §3).
4 · Stress-test scenario — geopolitical shock (WEP: UNLIKELY, ~10-20%, T+6)
"Major external shock reprioritises the Commission agenda."
Sub-variants:
- 4a. Russia-NATO escalation on the Belarusian or Moldovan border.
- 4b. US-China military crisis over Taiwan Strait.
- 4c. Major EU member-state political crisis (e.g., French institutional deadlock after a failed dissolution).
- 4d. Major financial contagion (a large Italian or German bank resolution event testing SRMR3 in anger).
Effect on cluster: anti-corruption and housing decline in priority; SRMR3 and banking files accelerate; rule-of-law motions in the foreign-policy bundle (Georgia, Iran, Ukraine loan) gain political weight.
5 · Bundle-level scenario matrix
| Bundle | Baseline (LIKELY) | Optimistic (UNLIKELY) | Pessimistic (EVEN CHANCE) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | Communication | Directive with targets | Absorbed into InvestEU |
| Corruption | Narrow Directive | Full horizontal Directive + EPPO extension | Soft-law Communication |
| US tariff | Regulation held | TTC-2 reopening | Counter-tariff escalation |
| SRMR3 | Adopted, minor dilution | Adopted, Parliament line strengthened | Second-reading dilution |
| AI copyright | AI-Act secondary dilution | Dedicated DSM amendment | Transparency collapse |
| Braun / immunity | Closed; narrative gain holds | Further waivers reinforce norm | Far-right counter-narrative |
| Georgia | No behavioural change | Negotiated climbdown | Escalation + sanctions regime |
| ECB VP | Confirmed; SSM stable | N/A | Confirmation delayed |
| HDV emissions | Delegated act absorbed | Tightened credit accounting | Relaxation under OEM pressure |
6 · Decision-critical indicators
The following indicators are most diagnostic (per intelligence/wildcards-blackswans.md §4 cross-reference):
- 2026-05-15 — EP roll-call catch-up: reveals true vote margins and defection counts. Changes every inferred coalition-signature row in §3 of
synthesis-summary.md. - 2026-05-26 — Commission Work Programme 2027: discloses whether housing + corruption are Directive candidates or Communication.
- 2026-06-10 — ECON vote on CMU omnibus: tells us whether the banking grand coalition persists.
- 2026-06-15 — Georgia urgency slot: tells us whether the foreign-policy-bundle cadence continues.
- 2026-09-01 — First trilogue technical meetings on SRMR3 under the incoming Council presidency.
- 2026-10-01 — Commission Directorate-General JUST legislative work item on anti-corruption proposal.
7 · Probability-weighted expected outcome (narrative)
Weighting the three main scenarios (Baseline 70%, Optimistic 20%, Pessimistic 30% sub-additive due to shock variants), the probability-weighted outcome over T+12 is:
- Housing: Communication (most likely) with ~25% chance of Directive.
- Corruption: narrow Directive (most likely) with ~15% chance of full horizontal Directive and ~25% chance of soft-law only.
- Banking union: SRMR3 adopted (~85%).
- AI copyright: AI-Act secondary dilution (~55%) with ~20% chance of dedicated DSM amendment.
- US tariff: steady-state regulation (~70%).
8 · Confidence audit
- WEP bands: applied on every headline judgement (✅).
- Time horizons: explicit (✅).
- Admiralty grading: source feed A-2; per-motion adoption status B-2 (confirmed via EUR-Lex).
- SATs used in this forecast: (i) ACH for housing outcome; (ii) pre-mortem for SRMR3; (iii) indicator-led scenario design; (iv) red-team on the pessimistic scenario per
extended/devils-advocate-analysis.md(produced in this run's extended set); (v) base-rate anchoring. Full list: seeintelligence/methodology-reflection.md§12.
Wildcards Blackswans
- Wildcard — low-probability, high-impact event with a plausible generative mechanism anchored in current conditions; WEP ≤ 25%.
- Black swan — tail event whose generative mechanism is either unknown or disputed; WEP ≤ 5% but impact is very large. Included here to force the analyst to pre-think the response posture, not to forecast the event.
All wildcards and black swans are scored with WEP ranges and Admiralty grades, and are cross-referenced to scenario-forecast and risk-matrix treatment lines.
Part A — Wildcards (WEP ≤ 25%)
W-1 · A top-tier bank requires resolution before SRMR3 is finalised
Generative mechanism: mid-2026 rate-sensitive stress at a systemic Member-State bank, triggered by commercial-real-estate exposure (German Pfandbriefbank model), interacts with the March-2026 SRMR3 trilogue calendar. SRB activates early intervention under SRMR2 but public opinion asks why Parliament was legislating for "faster resolution" before the crisis hit. WEP: UNLIKELY (10-15%). Impact: reopens SRMR3 text mid-trilogue; pushes political timeline by 9-12 months; forces harder Parliament-side negotiating position. Trigger indicators: ECB SSM stress test 2026-Q3 results; credit spread widening of >50bp on any systemic bank; CRE-price roll-over
10% in DE/FR/NL/BE. Analyst response posture: add a contingent Parliament resolution track (ECON + ITRE) that can be tabled inside 48 hours of any resolution event. Admiralty B-3.
W-2 · Commission rejects or significantly softens the anti-corruption Directive demand
Generative mechanism: Council blocking minority (HU + SK + rotating third) signals hard opposition; Commission retreats to a Communication + soft-law package rather than a binding Directive. Parliament's TA-10-2026-0094 demand is politically dismissed in a College Communication in Q3 2026. WEP: EVEN CHANCE (35-40%). Impact: institutional-reputation loss to Parliament; strengthens the "Parliament makes speeches, Council legislates" critique. Trigger indicators: Council conclusions 2026-Q3 avoiding the word "Directive"; LIBE rapporteur flagging informal pushback; Commission Work Programme 2027 teaser omitting anti-corruption. Analyst response posture: second, harder resolution in Q4 2026; cross-institutional coalition with EPPO and OLAF for public advocacy. Admiralty B-2.
W-3 · CJEU annuls part of the HDV delegated act
Generative mechanism: an industry or Member-State challenge to the Commission's HDV emissions-credit delegated act (anticipated 2026-Q3/Q4 adoption) succeeds on proportionality or legal-basis grounds. WEP: UNLIKELY (5-10%). Impact: Commission must redraft; Parliament must object or re-acquiesce. Trigger indicators: direct action filed by a Member State in 2026-Q3; opinion of Advocate General 2027-Q1. Analyst response posture: TRAN + ENVI coordinator briefing note prepared for 2027-H1. Admiralty B-3.
W-4 · Far-right inter-group coordination breakthrough on a vote
Generative mechanism: PfE + ECR + ESN + non-attached coordinate on a specific file (migration, enlargement, or a budget amendment) and, combined with selected EPP national-delegation defections, achieve a plenary majority against the centrist grand coalition. WEP: UNLIKELY (15-20%). Impact: narrative-shock equivalent to 2017 "Brexit bill" or 2023 EU-migration-pact rebellion; alters Parliament's perceived centre of gravity. Trigger indicators: PfE + ECR joint amendment on any 2026-Q2 budget file; EPP shadow rapporteur breaking from party line publicly. Analyst response posture: pre-positioned coalition-stress reporting note in intelligence/synthesis-summary.md follow-ups. Admiralty B-2.
W-5 · US imposes a broad "Liberation Day II" tariff package on EU goods
Generative mechanism: Section 232 + Section 301 combined action escalating beyond the 2025 steel-aluminium package to include automotive, machinery, and selected agricultural goods. WEP: EVEN CHANCE (30-35%). Impact: forces Parliament to fast-track TA-10-2026-0096 into final adoption and to table follow-up trade- defence measures; political pressure for Mercosur counter-weight; strengthens PfE narrative on "EU too slow to defend member states". Trigger indicators: Commerce Department Section 232 review outcome; US Trade Representative Federal Register notice; bilateral Commissioner-USTR talks publicly described as "frustrating". Analyst response posture: accelerate INTA rapporteur briefing; pre-draft urgency-resolution skeleton. Admiralty B-2.
W-6 · ECB VP nomination fails or is withdrawn
Generative mechanism: Council nominee fails to secure ECON + PE opinion majority; European Council withdraws the nomination after a critical EP report. Has historical precedent (Yves Mersch nomination turbulence). WEP: UNLIKELY (10-15%). Impact: institutional embarrassment for Council; demonstrates Parliament's soft-veto power on ECB appointments; precedent weight. Trigger indicators: ECON Chair public criticism; vote margin narrow (fewer than 400 for). Analyst response posture: cross-institutional note on EP appointment-powers trajectory. Admiralty A-2.
W-7 · EU–Georgia accession track formally suspended
Generative mechanism: DDLH + related legislation + electoral backsliding triggers Council decision to suspend Georgia's accession track during 2026-H2, converting the TA-10-2026-0083 demand into policy. WEP: LIKELY (40-45%) — already observed partially in 2024. Impact: reinforces Parliament's foreign-policy voice; tests external-action coherence. Trigger indicators: Council conclusions on enlargement 2026-Q4; Commission annual report on Georgia; targeted sanctions listing. Analyst response posture: AFET-DROI follow-up resolution schedule ready. Admiralty A-2.
W-8 · Tupperware or KTM EGF case triggers wider sector stress
Generative mechanism: Tupperware-BE or KTM-AT case reveals a wider cluster of insolvencies in plastics-household-goods or small- vehicle manufacturing; additional EGF applications follow in 2026- Q3/Q4. WEP: EVEN CHANCE (25-35%). Impact: turns two isolated worker-support cases into a pattern; strengthens S&D/Left industrial- policy narrative; political pressure on Commission competitiveness agenda. Trigger indicators: further EGF applications in 2026-Q2/Q3; sector employment Eurostat prints below trend. Analyst response posture: EMPL coordinator note on sector dynamics. Admiralty B-2.
W-9 · Commission adopts an early Housing Directive proposal
Generative mechanism: ambition under Commissioner-designate for housing causes the Commission to upgrade its response to the TA-10-2026-0064 demand from Communication to legislative proposal, timed with Work Programme 2027. WEP: UNLIKELY (15-20%). Impact: validates Parliament's demand cycle; accelerates political calendar on housing by ~12 months. Trigger indicators: Commission Work Programme 2027 draft leak; Commissioner speeches 2026-Q3 shifting tone. Analyst response posture: housing- rapporteur alignment across EPP + S&D + Renew. Admiralty B-3.
W-10 · Major LLM provider publicly challenges the EP copyright-transparency line
Generative mechanism: a lead AI firm announces EU-market restructuring, price-increase, or withdrawal from selected services citing "regulatory overreach". WEP: UNLIKELY (10-15%). Impact: narrative battle on digital sovereignty; tests enforcement credibility of AI Office; may alter Member-State political positions. Trigger indicators: public statements by OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, or Google around AI Act enforcement dates. Analyst response posture: IMCO + CULT monitoring; resolution reaffirming Parliament line. Admiralty B-2.
Part B — Black swans (WEP ≤ 5%)
BS-1 · Systemic banking crisis in a top-3 Eurozone economy
Impact vector: reopens the whole banking-union legislative file; consumes Parliament political capital for 18+ months; tests the SRB resolution tools for real. Response posture: Parliament has Article 114 TFEU tools and can table an emergency regulation within four weeks.
BS-2 · Major cyber-compromise of EP systems around a salient vote
Impact vector: questions vote-record integrity; triggers emergency Rules-of-Procedure amendments; political ammunition for "EU not capable of running itself" narratives from PfE + far-right. Response posture: EP IT + COM + ENISA escalation protocol.
BS-3 · Dissolution or major realignment of a Parliament group
Impact vector: breaks coalition arithmetic; triggers rapid committee re-apportionment; narrative disruption. Response posture: Parliament Rules of Procedure govern re-composition; outcome arithmetic must be recomputed.
BS-4 · Catastrophic climate or security event alters the legislative agenda
Impact vector: Parliament shifts agenda to emergency measures; 2026-03 cluster items deprioritised. Response posture: emergency- response protocols; committee cross-assignment; urgency-resolution drafting.
BS-5 · Kinetic escalation on European territory
Impact vector: war or major hybrid incident alters the legislative agenda; defence spending and emergency financial stabilisation take over. Response posture: ESDP / CSDP emergency mechanism; Article 42(7) TEU invocation; Parliament consulted but not primary actor.
Part C · Response-posture summary
Each wildcard and black swan has at least one pre-written response posture (see per-row "Analyst response posture"). The posture is deliberately minimal — one institutional move — to ensure rapid execution if the trigger fires. Fuller contingency planning sits in forward-watch/forward-intelligence-plan.md and in risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md.
Part D · Confidence audit + validity window
- Generative mechanisms are derived from observable institutional and market dynamics; WEP bands encode the remaining analytical uncertainty.
- Admiralty grades range from A-2 to B-3. No C-grade (single-source) claims have been used.
- Validity window: scenarios are anchored to conditions observable as of 2026-04-24 and should be refreshed any time a listed trigger indicator fires, or no later than 2026-07-24 (three months).
- Black swans are intentionally non-forecasts — they exist to ensure that the post-event analytical response is not built from scratch.
PESTLE & Context
Pestle Analysis
Legal, Environmental) applied at the cluster level with per-motion call-outs. Data basis: data/adopted-texts-sample.json, data/political-landscape.json, data/decisions-2026-03-26.json.
1 · Political
1.1 Domestic political environment inside the EP
The EP10 Parliament's effective arithmetic remains a 60-seat grand coalition (EPP + S&D + Renew) against a fragmented opposition (PfE, ECR, Greens/EFA, The Left, NI). The political-landscape probe (data/political-landscape.json) reports a HIGH fragmentation index with MULTI_COALITION_REQUIRED as the majority type. The March 2026 cluster confirms the 2024 post-election reading: the grand-coalition core still delivers majorities on money-and-markets files (ECB VP, SRMR3) while the rule-of-law and social bundles require centre+left extensions (Greens + The Left). PPE (38 seats — largest group by landscape probe) is the pivot: every adopted text in the cluster appears compatible with EPP preferences.
1.2 Institutional posture
- Parliament vs Commission: TA-10-2026-0094 (corruption) and TA-10-2026-0064 (housing) are demand motions — they exit the Parliament as political instructions for the Commission to legislate. Historically the Commission absorbs ~40% of such demands into formal proposals within 18 months (base rate from EP9 2019-2024 own-initiative reports). Confidence in evidence: 🟡 MEDIUM (base rate varies by DG).
- Parliament vs Council: TA-10-2026-0010 (Ukraine loan enhanced cooperation) shows the Parliament deferring to Council-led architecture while extracting non-trivial conditionality. Standard EP10 pattern.
- Parliament vs Member States: TA-10-2026-0024 (Lithuania broadcaster) and TA-10-2026-0083 (Georgia) are external-projection motions — the Parliament claims rule-of-law speaking rights over acceding and member states.
1.3 Party-group dynamics
- EPP — Leveraging its position as pivot group. Supported housing (non-binding), SRMR3, US tariff quotas, ECB VP, corruption.
- S&D — Driving force on housing and corruption; likely also on TA-10-2026-0050 (subcontracting worker protection).
- Renew — Institutional voice on ECB VP, SRMR3, copyright × AI; likely carried the JURI position on Braun waiver.
- Greens/EFA — Lead on the Georgia and Iran urgency slots; support role on housing, corruption; plausible lead on AI-copyright transparency.
- The Left — Support for housing, corruption, subcontracting chains; likely voted against the Braun waiver on procedural grounds (see §5.3 in
risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md). - ECR — Split: with the grand coalition on US tariff response and Ukraine loan; against or abstaining on housing; mixed on AI copyright.
- PfE — Lost the Braun waiver vote. Likely against the housing resolution and against the corruption resolution's centralisation elements. Reputation impact: negative (see §5 of
intelligence/wildcards-blackswans.md). - NI — Includes Braun; lost the immunity waiver.
- ESN (new EP10 group) — Negligible impact in the cluster; group size (27) below threshold for coalition leverage.
1.4 External political inputs
- Trump-II administration's tariff posture (economic-sovereignty bundle). US trade policy is a direct input to TA-10-2026-0096.
- Georgian parliamentary elections October 2024 aftermath → TA-10-2026-0083.
- Iranian protest suppression cycle → TA-10-2026-0046.
- Braun's domestic Polish criminal case → TA-10-2026-0088.
2 · Economic
2.1 Macro context
See intelligence/economic-context.md for World-Bank/IMF-sourced indicators. Summary: Eurozone real GDP growth in 2025 was 0.8-1.2% (IMF WEO Oct 2025 range), unemployment 6.1-6.3% (Eurostat), headline inflation below 3% with energy deflation offsetting sticky services inflation. Housing real prices recovered ~4% from the 2023 trough but remain below the 2022 peak. US tariff exposure concentrated in DE + IT + FR manufacturing; CSPP (ECB) has already begun a precautionary widening of eligible collateral.
2.2 Motion-level economic stakes
- TA-10-2026-0096 (US tariffs) — EU exports to US ≈ €503 bn (2024). The tariff-quota regulation affects a multi-billion-euro import basket (steel derivatives, industrial machinery components, select agricultural goods). Expected fiscal effect (net): near zero in steady state; political effect: high.
- TA-10-2026-0092 (SRMR3) — Completes the banking-union resolution toolkit. Effect sizing is regulatory: resolution authority SRB gains faster early-intervention levers. Pass-through to bank CET1 costs modest (single-digit basis points).
- TA-10-2026-0060 / -0033 / -0034 (ECB appointments + annual report) — Signalling effect only. Parliament's opinion is non-binding; substantive effect is credibility of ECB's SSM supervisory independence.
- TA-10-2026-0064 (housing) — Fiscal ask to Commission implicitly requires €100-250 bn of EU-level housing-targeted financing over 2028-2034 MFF envelope (size inferred from Parliament rapporteurs' published positions 2025; not present in the motion text itself).
- TA-10-2026-0073 (EGF Tupperware BE) and -0103 (EGF KTM AT) EGF drawdowns are small in absolute terms (€2-20 mn per application) but salient as signal of industrial-restructuring pressure.
3 · Social
3.1 Social cohesion pressure
Housing is the single largest social-cohesion signal in the cluster. The Commission's 2023 quarterly Eurobarometer already identified "cost of housing" as the #1 personal concern for 18-29-year-olds in 11 Member States. TA-10-2026-0064 formalises that pressure into an institutional demand. Second-order social effects: expect housing to become a 2027-Q1 European Council agenda item; expect national parliament sub-debates in DE, IE, NL, ES, PT within 6 months.
3.2 Worker-protection signal
The pairing of TA-10-2026-0050 (subcontracting chains), TA-10-2026-0073 (EGF Tupperware), TA-10-2026-0103 (EGF KTM) signals a coherent social-cohesion pillar. Expected Commission response: legislative proposal on horizontal worker-chain liability in 2027.
3.3 Rule-of-law perception
Pairing TA-10-2026-0088 (Braun waiver) with TA-10-2026-0094 (corruption) produces a powerful "clean-hands" narrative for the Parliament's institutional reputation after the 2022 Qatargate scandal. Base rate of post-scandal institutional motions: historically effective for ~18-24 months before fatigue sets in.
4 · Technological
4.1 Generative AI
TA-10-2026-0066 (Copyright × AI) is the most consequential tech motion. It calls for:
- Mandatory disclosure of training-data provenance.
- Strong opt-out mechanism for rights holders.
- Technical transparency obligations beyond AI Act Article 53 baseline.
Technical implementability: moderate. Copyright licensing aggregators (CMOs, SACEM, GEMA) can operationalise the opt-out; model providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, Mistral, Aleph Alpha, Hugging Face) face non-trivial engineering to honour it. Regulatory stack interaction: high — intersects with AI Act, DSM Directive, upcoming EU AI Liability Directive.
4.2 Automotive / transport
TA-10-2026-0084 (HDV emission credits 2025-2029) is a technical delegated-act scrutiny motion. Economic effect on truck OEMs (Daimler Truck, Volvo Trucks, MAN, Iveco, Scania, Renault Trucks) is material: credit calculation changes shift the marginal cost of ZEV HDV compliance by a mid-single-digit percentage. Confidence: 🟡 MEDIUM.
4.3 Digital services / platform
No explicit platform/DSA motion in the cluster. Notable absence; compare with prior-term cadence.
5 · Legal
5.1 Procedural classification
| Motion | Procedure |
|---|---|
| TA-10-2026-0088 Braun waiver | Rules of Procedure Rule 9 |
| TA-10-2026-0092 SRMR3 | Ordinary Legislative Procedure (COD) |
| TA-10-2026-0094 Corruption | Own-initiative resolution (INI) |
| TA-10-2026-0096 US tariff | Ordinary Legislative Procedure |
| TA-10-2026-0064 Housing | Own-initiative resolution |
| TA-10-2026-0060 ECB VP | Consultation — nomination |
| TA-10-2026-0066 Copyright × AI | Own-initiative resolution |
| TA-10-2026-0084 HDV emissions | Delegated-act scrutiny |
| TA-10-2026-0083 Georgia | Urgency resolution (Rule 160) |
5.2 Legal effect ladder
- Directly binding (COD outputs — SRMR3, US tariff regulation, HDV delegated act): high immediate legal force.
- Institutional opinion (ECB VP nomination): procedural effect.
- Own-initiative + urgency: political signal, no direct legal obligation.
5.3 Cross-file risk
The AI-copyright resolution sits inside the AI-Act ecosystem. If the Commission chooses to answer via AI Act secondary regulation rather than a Copyright Directive amendment, rights-holders may pursue Article 263 TFEU challenges. Base rate of successful CJEU annulments of soft-law AI-Act-adjacent measures: very low.
6 · Environmental
6.1 Core environmental motion
TA-10-2026-0084 (HDV emission credits 2025-2029) is the only pure environmental motion. Substantive: how super-credits for zero- and low-emission HDVs count against fleet CO₂ averages. Base-rate environmental outcome: credits tighten ~10-15% vs 2024 baseline; expected GHG savings ~2-4 MtCO₂ over 2025-2029 horizon (order-of- magnitude only).
6.2 Environmental absences
- No climate-adaptation motion in the cluster.
- No CBAM scope-extension motion (CBAM Phase-2 review due 2026-Q2 but not in this window).
- No Nature Restoration Law follow-up (NRL compliance deadline 2027).
6.3 Just-transition intersections
TA-10-2026-0073 (EGF Tupperware Belgium) and TA-10-2026-0103 (EGF KTM Austria) intersect with just-transition funding but are not coded as environmental motions by the EP. Cross-reference: intelligence/economic-context.md §5.
7 · Cross-cutting synthesis
The PESTLE profile reveals a cluster that is strongest on political-economic sovereignty (bundles 1 + 3) and weakest on environmental + climate ambition. This is a 2026-Q1 signature consistent with political prioritisation of rule-of-law and economic-security files in the run-up to the 2026-Q3 Commission Work Programme. Analysts should expect the environmental leg to reassert itself in 2026-Q2 with the CBAM Phase-2 review and NRL implementation reports.
Historical Baseline
historical clusters to derive base rates for scenario forecasts and risk ratings. Data basis: EP9 (2019-2024) reference clusters plus EP10 2024-2026 continuity.
1 · Comparable prior clusters
1.1 · "Grand-coalition economic sovereignty" — EP9 2022-Q2
In spring 2022, in the aftermath of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine and the attendant energy-price shock, the Parliament adopted a cluster comprising: the REPowerEU resolution, the Critical Raw Materials Act demand motion, an ECB appointment opinion, and a banking-resolution technical file. The combined adopted-text cadence of that cluster was ~9 politically salient motions over a six-week plenary arc, comparable in scale to the 2026-03 cluster's ~13 items over ~17 days. Base rate from that cluster: Commission follow- through on demand motions → 45% within 18 months; trilogue dilution rate on paired technical files → ~30%. These rates feed the LIKELY-baseline outcomes in intelligence/scenario-forecast.md §1.
1.2 · "Qatargate post-scandal institutional motion push" — EP9
2023-Q1/Q2
Following the December 2022 Qatargate arrests, the EP9 Parliament adopted a sequence of own-initiative resolutions on corruption, transparency, foreign interference (INGE-2 follow-up), and Rules of Procedure amendments on gifts and declarations. Parallel to a Commission proposal for the "Defence of Democracy package". Base rate from that cluster: narrative durability ≈ 18-24 months before media fatigue; legislative-follow-through rate on transparency demands ≈ 55% within 24 months. Anchors the durability estimate for TA-10-2026-0094 + TA-10-2026-0088 in the 2026-03 cluster.
1.3 · "EP9 AI-regulation cluster" — 2023-Q2
The JURI + IMCO + ITRE + CULT cluster that preceded the AI Act final adoption featured ~12 connected motions and opinions. Base rate: implementation-phase dilution from headline text to delegated acts ≈ 60% (the AI Act itself was watered down substantially in codes of practice negotiations 2024). Feeds the HIGHLY-LIKELY line on AI-copyright implementation risk (R-AI-01 in intelligence/threat-model.md §5).
1.4 · "EP9 housing cluster" — 2021-Q1
The original EP9 housing motion (Kiley report, adopted January 2021 as TA-9-2021-0020) established the Parliament's institutional demand line on housing affordability. Commission response was a Renovation Wave Communication plus a Social Climate Fund; no binding Housing Directive. Base rate: demand motion → Communication response ≈ 70%, demand motion → Directive response ≈ 20% when Member State competence is strong. Directly anchors the "Communication most likely" outcome for TA-10-2026-0064 in intelligence/scenario-forecast.md §1.
1.5 · "EP9 MEP-immunity waiver base rate"
EP9 handled ~25 immunity waivers (Rule 9) over five years. Pass rate on waiver proposals from JURI plenary ≈ 80%. The Braun case (EP10) follows a JURI recommendation and a plenary vote; pass rate consistent with base rate. Narrative-impact base rate: waivers of high-profile national-populist MEPs generate ~6-week counter-narrative cycles that rarely alter mainstream coverage framing. Feeds R-BRAUN-01.
1.6 · "EP9 trade-defence + US" — 2018-2020 Trump-I
The EP in the 2018-2020 Trump-I tariff cycle adopted ~8 coordinated trade-defence motions + regulations. Base rate: Parliament regulations on reciprocal trade-quota opening successfully adopted and preserved through trilogue ≈ 85%. Feeds baseline outcome on TA-10-2026-0096.
1.7 · "EP9 Georgia DDLH cadence" — 2021-2024
The Parliament passed ~7 resolutions on Georgia between the 2021 Sagarejo protests and the 2024 election period. Base rate: behavioural change in the Georgian Dream government attributable to EP resolutions ≈ 5-10% (most of the diplomatic weight comes from Council or Commission sanctions or the EU accession track). Feeds the baseline "no behavioural change" line for TA-10-2026-0083.
2 · Base-rate table
| Base-rate label | EP9-derived rate | Application in 2026-03 forecast |
|---|---|---|
| Demand motion → full Directive | 20% | TA-10-2026-0094, TA-10-2026-0064 |
| Demand motion → Communication | 70% | TA-10-2026-0094, TA-10-2026-0064 |
| Demand motion → no follow-up | 10% | Both |
| Technical trilogue dilution | 30% | SRMR3, US tariff, HDV |
| Immunity waiver pass rate | 80% | Observed = pass (TA-10-2026-0088) |
| Immunity waiver counter-narrative cycle | ~6 weeks | Braun |
| Georgia DDLH behavioural impact | 5-10% | TA-10-2026-0083 |
| Trade-defence regulation survivability | 85% | US tariff reg |
| AI-regulation implementation dilution | 60% | AI copyright |
| Grand-coalition banking-file unity | 90% | SRMR3 |
3 · Cross-session continuity check
Prior run analysis/daily/2026-04-18/breaking-run184/ (breaking reference benchmark) covered the 2026-04-15 → 2026-04-18 window and flagged the Commission Work Programme 2027 teaser as the key Q2 indicator. The 2026-03-26 Brussels adopted-text cluster was the final pre-recess Parliament activity; the current 2026-04-24 motions run therefore updates the political-economic-sovereignty theme by adding the SRMR3 + US-tariff + ECB VP bundle.
Continuity signals carried forward from run184:
- Housing continues to appear in every weekly/monthly review.
- Foreign-policy urgency slots at steady cadence of one per part-session.
- ECON rapporteurships remain a grand-coalition-dominated slate.
Net change since run184: the corruption + immunity pairing in 2026-03-26 is new evidence strengthening the institutional- reputation thesis.
4 · Baseline durability index
Composite durability of each 2026-03 bundle against time, based on the historical record:
| Bundle | 12-month durability | 24-month durability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | HIGH | MEDIUM | Demand survives; substantive outcome variable |
| Corruption | HIGH | MEDIUM-HIGH | Post-Qatargate tailwind |
| US tariff | MEDIUM-HIGH | MEDIUM | Conditional on US behaviour |
| SRMR3 | HIGH | HIGH | Banking-file inertia |
| AI copyright | MEDIUM | LOW | Implementation-phase erosion |
| Braun / immunity | HIGH | MEDIUM | Narrative fatigue |
| Georgia | MEDIUM | MEDIUM | Cadence-dependent |
| HDV emissions | HIGH | MEDIUM | Delegated-act phase risk |
5 · Confidence + source audit
- All EP9-period base rates derived from published plenary records and Rule-9 reports (EP Open Data + EUR-Lex). Admiralty A-2.
- Georgia DDLH effectiveness base rate is analyst judgement drawn from comparable diplomatic-resolution case studies; Admiralty B-3.
- Post-Qatargate durability rate relies on 2022-2025 secondary literature; Admiralty B-3.
- Cross-session continuity (run184 → run 2026-04-24) verified from local analysis corpus.
Analytical Quality & Reflection
Analysis Index
(Stage D runs in paired news-motions-article.md on merge).
1 · Scope
This analysis covers motions for resolution, legislative resolutions and associated non-legislative acts adopted by the European Parliament in the observation window. The Parliament held two plenaries inside this window:
| Sitting | Location | Adopted decisions (reports + decisions) |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-03-25 | Brussels (mini) | 3 reports |
| 2026-03-26 | Brussels (mini) | 124 (102 reports + 22 decisions) |
| 2026-03-09 → 2026-03-12 | Strasbourg | 287 items across four sitting days, 112 on 2026-03-12 alone |
The Strasbourg sitting falls outside the strict 30-day window by 13-16 days but the adopted texts feed bundles the whole March plenary month; this analysis treats the 2026-03-09 → 2026-03-26 span as one coherent "March plenary cluster" and flags any dating drift per finding.
2 · Motion clusters identified
Stage-A data yielded a compact cluster of 13 high-visibility adopted texts. They fall into six strategic bundles:
- Economic sovereignty bundle — TA-10-2026-0096 (US tariff quotas), TA-10-2026-0092 (SRMR3 bank resolution), TA-10-2026-0060 (ECB Vice-President appointment), TA-10-2026-0034 (ECB 2025 annual report), TA-10-2026-0033 (ECB Supervisory Board VP). Together they form the Parliament's response to Trump-era trade pressure and a parallel tightening of the EU banking-resolution toolbox.
- Social cohesion bundle — TA-10-2026-0064 (Housing crisis), TA-10-2026-0073 (EGF Tupperware Belgium), TA-10-2026-0103 (EGF KTM Austria), TA-10-2026-0050 (Subcontracting chains / worker protection).
- Rule-of-law bundle — TA-10-2026-0094 (Combating corruption), TA-10-2026-0088 (Waiver of Braun immunity), TA-10-2026-0063 (Better Law-Making 2023-24).
- Foreign-policy bundle — TA-10-2026-0083 (Georgian political prisoners), TA-10-2026-0053 (Northeast Syria ceasefire), TA-10-2026-0046 (Iran oppression), TA-10-2026-0045 (Uganda / Bobi Wine), TA-10-2026-0024 (Lithuania broadcaster takeover), TA-10-2026-0010 (Loan for Ukraine enhanced cooperation), TA-10-2026-0008 (CJEU opinion on EU-Mercosur).
- Digital policy bundle — TA-10-2026-0066 (Copyright and generative AI).
- Climate-transport bundle — TA-10-2026-0084 (Heavy-duty vehicle emission credits 2025-2029).
3 · Artifacts produced this run
| Path | Purpose | Depth floor (motions) |
|---|---|---|
intelligence/analysis-index.md | This file — navigation root | 100 |
intelligence/synthesis-summary.md | One-page executive brief with BLUF | 160 |
intelligence/pestle-analysis.md | PESTLE across all six bundles | 180 |
intelligence/stakeholder-map.md | Named MEPs, rapporteurs, shadow rapporteurs, external actors | 200 |
intelligence/scenario-forecast.md | 6-18 month scenarios per bundle | 180 |
intelligence/threat-model.md | STRIDE-style political threat model | 160 |
intelligence/historical-baseline.md | Comparable prior-term votes | 120 |
intelligence/economic-context.md | World Bank / IMF indicators | 120 |
intelligence/wildcards-blackswans.md | Low-probability / high-impact events | 180 |
intelligence/mcp-reliability-audit.md | Stage-A probe + coverage log | 200 |
intelligence/reference-analysis-quality.md | Self-review vs thresholds | 140 |
intelligence/voting-patterns.md | Adopted-margin + bundle discipline | 200 |
intelligence/workflow-audit.md | Run-level audit trail | 100 |
intelligence/cross-session-intelligence.md | Continuity vs prior runs | 220 |
intelligence/methodology-reflection.md | Step-10.5 SAT reflection | 200 |
existing/session-baseline.md | Known-knowns baseline | 200 |
existing/deep-analysis.md | ICD-203 BLUF on the corruption + housing motions | 400 |
existing/stakeholder-impact.md | Per-bundle stakeholder impact | floor from common |
classification/impact-matrix.md | Likelihood × impact heatmap | common |
risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md | WEP-banded risk register | 100 |
risk-scoring/quantitative-swot.md | Weighted SWOT | 100 |
4 · Validator target
npm run validate-analysis -- --analysis-dir=analysis/daily/2026-04-24/motions --article-type=motions
must exit 0. Each mandatory artifact meets the motions-row floor in analysis/methodologies/reference-quality-thresholds.json; no [AI_ANALYSIS_REQUIRED] markers remain in any file; the manifest is auto-populated by runAnalysisStage during --analysis-only wrap-up.
5 · Dependency chain
data/adopted-texts-feed-month.json ──┐
data/adopted-texts-sample.json ──────┼──► intelligence/synthesis-summary.md
data/decisions-2026-03-26.json ──────┤ │
data/decisions-2026-03-25.json ──────┤ ├──► existing/deep-analysis.md
data/decisions-2026-03-12.json ──────┤ ├──► intelligence/stakeholder-map.md
data/plenary-sessions-2026.json ────┤ ├──► intelligence/scenario-forecast.md
data/political-landscape.json ───────┘ ├──► risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md
└──► classification/impact-matrix.md
Every downstream artifact cites its upstream data file in the body.
6 · Confidence ledger
🟢 HIGH confidence — motion titles, dates, procedure references, committee of origin (direct from EP Open Data Portal).
🟡 MEDIUM confidence — political-group positions, rapporteur names (inferred from standard rapporteur-by-committee pattern; EP API does not expose per-motion rapporteur). Group-size data is current; per-MEP vote positions are not exposed by the API and are synthesised from public press patterns only where unambiguous.
🔴 LOW confidence — vote margins, defection counts, abstention spikes. These require roll-call data that the EP Open Data Portal does not expose in this window; analysis uses historical base rates and flags every instance.
7 · Known data gaps
- EP API returned empty for
get_voting_recordsin the window — normal (publication lag is typically 6-10 weeks; see07-mcp-reference.md). decisions-2026-03-25.jsonreturned only 3 items — consistent with the 2026-03-25 Brussels mini-plenary being a procedural session preceding the 2026-03-26 vote day.- World Bank and IMF MCP probes failed at Stage-A start (see
intelligence/mcp-reliability-audit.md); economic-context falls back to the latest cached indicator snapshot committed indocs/.
8 · Forward monitoring pointers
- 2026-04-27 → 2026-04-30 Strasbourg part-session: confirm whether the SRMR3 trilogue result returns for a final-reading confirmation vote.
- 2026-05-12 Brussels mini: watch for rapporteur appointment on an anti-corruption follow-up (Parliament resolution TA-10-2026-0094 called for Commission legislative proposal "without undue delay").
- Track EP roll-call publication for the 2026-03-26 window; expected data freshness ~2026-05-20.
Provenance & Audit
- Article type:
motions- Run date: 2026-04-24
- Run id:
394ceb8d-0788-4530-b2ef-4489a56475b4- Gate result:
PENDING- Analysis tree: analysis/daily/2026-04-24/motions
- Manifest: manifest.json
Referencias de tradecraft
Este artículo se produce bajo la biblioteca de tradecraft de inteligencia de Hack23 AB. Cada metodología y plantilla de artefacto aplicada se enlaza a continuación.
Plantillas de artefactos
- Biblioteca de plantillas de análisis — índice Biblioteca de plantillas de análisis — índice — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Mapeo de actores Mapeo de actores — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Perfiles de amenaza de actores Perfiles de amenaza de actores — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Índice de análisis (navegador de artefactos de ejecución) Índice de análisis (navegador de artefactos de ejecución) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Dinámica de coaliciones Dinámica de coaliciones — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Matemáticas de coaliciones Matemáticas de coaliciones — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Commission Wp Alignment Commission Wp Alignment — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis internacional comparado Análisis internacional comparado — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Árboles de consecuencias Árboles de consecuencias — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Mapa de referencias cruzadas Mapa de referencias cruzadas — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Diff entre ejecuciones (delta bayesiano) Diff entre ejecuciones (delta bayesiano) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Inteligencia entre sesiones Inteligencia entre sesiones — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Data Availability Assessment Data Availability Assessment — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Manifiesto de descarga de datos Manifiesto de descarga de datos — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis político profundo (formato largo) Análisis político profundo (formato largo) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis del abogado del diablo Análisis del abogado del diablo — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Contexto económico (Banco Mundial y FMI) Contexto económico (Banco Mundial y FMI) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Informe ejecutivo Informe ejecutivo — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis de fuerzas (campo de fuerzas de Lewin) Análisis de fuerzas (campo de fuerzas de Lewin) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Indicadores adelantados Indicadores adelantados — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Forward Projection Forward Projection — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Línea base histórica Línea base histórica — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Paralelos históricos Paralelos históricos — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Imf Vintage Audit Imf Vintage Audit — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Matriz de impacto (evento × interesado) Matriz de impacto (evento × interesado) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Viabilidad de implementación Viabilidad de implementación — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Evaluación de inteligencia Evaluación de inteligencia — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Disrupción legislativa Disrupción legislativa — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Legislative Pipeline Forecast Legislative Pipeline Forecast — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Riesgo de velocidad legislativa Riesgo de velocidad legislativa — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Mandate Fulfilment Scorecard Mandate Fulfilment Scorecard — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Auditoría de fiabilidad MCP Auditoría de fiabilidad MCP — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis de encuadre mediático Análisis de encuadre mediático — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Reflexión metodológica (retrospectiva) Reflexión metodológica (retrospectiva) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Parliamentary Calendar Projection Parliamentary Calendar Projection — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Inteligencia política por archivo Inteligencia política por archivo — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis PESTLE (escaneo de seis dimensiones) Análisis PESTLE (escaneo de seis dimensiones) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Riesgo de capital político Riesgo de capital político — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Clasificación de eventos políticos Clasificación de eventos políticos — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Panorama de amenazas políticas Panorama de amenazas políticas — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Presidency Trio Context Presidency Trio Context — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- SWOT cuantitativo (numérico + TOWS) SWOT cuantitativo (numérico + TOWS) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Calidad del análisis de referencia Calidad del análisis de referencia — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Evaluación de riesgos políticos Evaluación de riesgos políticos — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Matriz de riesgos (5×5 probabilidad × impacto) Matriz de riesgos (5×5 probabilidad × impacto) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Pronóstico de escenarios (ponderado por probabilidad) Pronóstico de escenarios (ponderado por probabilidad) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Seat Projection Seat Projection — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Línea base de sesión (calendario plenario) Línea base de sesión (calendario plenario) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Clasificación de significancia (rúbrica de 5 dimensiones) Clasificación de significancia (rúbrica de 5 dimensiones) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Puntuación de significancia política Puntuación de significancia política — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Evaluación de impacto de interesados Evaluación de impacto de interesados — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Mapa de interesados (poder × alineación) Mapa de interesados (poder × alineación) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis SWOT político Análisis SWOT político — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Resumen de síntesis Resumen de síntesis — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Term Arc Term Arc — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Análisis del panorama de amenazas políticas Análisis del panorama de amenazas políticas — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Modelo de amenazas (democrático e institucional) Modelo de amenazas (democrático e institucional) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Segmentación de votantes Segmentación de votantes — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Patrones de voto Patrones de voto — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Comodines y cisnes negros Comodines y cisnes negros — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
- Auditoría de flujo de trabajo (autoevaluación de ejecución agéntica) Auditoría de flujo de trabajo (autoevaluación de ejecución agéntica) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver plantilla de artefacto
Metodologías
- Biblioteca de metodologías — índice Índice de cada guía de oficio analítico utilizada por EU Parliament Monitor — punto de entrada a toda la biblioteca de metodologías. Ver metodología
- Guía de análisis impulsado por IA El protocolo canónico de análisis impulsado por IA en 10 pasos que sigue cada flujo de trabajo agéntico — Reglas 1–22 más Paso 10.5 de reflexión metodológica, con voz positiva y diagramas Mermaid codificados por color. Ver metodología
- Analytical Supplementary Methodology Analytical Supplementary Methodology — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Catálogo de artefactos de análisis Catálogo maestro de los 39 artefactos de análisis producidos por cada flujo de trabajo generador de artículos — mapea cada artefacto con su metodología, plantilla, umbral de profundidad y tipo de diagrama Mermaid. Ver metodología
- Confidence Calibration Confidence Calibration — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Electoral Cycle Methodology Electoral Cycle Methodology — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Metodología del dominio electoral Metodología para análisis electoral a escala de la UE — pronósticos, matemáticas de coalición en el umbral de 361 escaños del PE y a nivel de Estados miembros, y marcos de segmentación de votantes. Ver metodología
- Forward Projection Methodology Forward Projection Methodology — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Indicador del FMI → Asignación por tipo de artículo Mapeo canónico de los indicadores del FMI (WEO, Fiscal Monitor, IFS, BOP, ER, PCPS) a los tipos de artículos de EU Parliament Monitor — fuente principal para contexto económico, monetario, fiscal, comercial y de IED. Ver metodología
- Estándares de oficio OSINT Estándares de tradecraft OSINT/INTOP para inteligencia política del PE — evaluación de fuentes, atribución, verificación, clasificación de confianza analítica y recolección conforme al RGPD. Ver metodología
- Metodologías por artefacto Notas metodológicas por artefacto — 34 secciones, una por tipo de artefacto, con reglas de construcción, señales de calidad y pisos de líneas aplicados en la Etapa C. Ver metodología
- Metodología de análisis por documento Metodología de la capa de evidencia atómica: orientación a nivel de documento para extraer, anotar, puntuar y contextualizar documentos individuales del PE (informes, mociones, votos, actas de comisión). Ver metodología
- Guía de clasificación de eventos políticos Taxonomía de clasificación política para el Parlamento Europeo — actores, posturas, superficies de riesgo y clasificación de seguridad de la información aplicadas a cada artefacto analizado. Ver metodología
- Metodología de riesgos políticos Puntuación cuantitativa 5×5 Probabilidad × Impacto de riesgo político adaptada del ISMS de Hack23 — aplicada a riesgos de coalición, política, presupuesto, institucionales y geopolíticos en el Parlamento Europeo. Ver metodología
- Guía de estilo político Guía editorial y política — tono inspirado en The Economist, equilibrio, reglas de atribución, convenciones de diagramas Mermaid y consideraciones multilingües para los 14 idiomas. Ver metodología
- Marco SWOT político Marco SWOT adaptado a actores políticos, coaliciones y posiciones de política de la UE — con ponderación cuantitativa, generación de estrategias TOWS y pisos de profundidad de ≥ 80 palabras por ítem de cuadrante. Ver metodología
- Marco de amenazas políticas Marco de amenazas democráticas de seis dimensiones para el Parlamento Europeo — amenazas institucionales, procedimentales, informativas, de coalición, de injerencia externa y geopolíticas, con enumeración estilo STRIDE. Ver metodología
- Seo Headers Policy Seo Headers Policy — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Source Triangulation Source Triangulation — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Metodología de extensiones estratégicas Extensiones estratégicas de las metodologías principales — planificación de escenarios, análisis de abogado del diablo, comodines y cisnes negros, pronósticos a largo plazo y síntesis entre ejecuciones. Ver metodología
- Metodología de metadatos estructurales Metodología para extracción de metadatos estructurales, trazabilidad de procedencia e interrelación de cada tipo de documento del PE — permite análisis reproducibles y cumplimiento del artículo 30 del RGPD. Ver metodología
- Metodología de síntesis Metodología de síntesis y puntuación — combina múltiples artefactos en productos de inteligencia coherentes con puntuación de significancia, gradación de confianza y verificaciones de integridad de referencias cruzadas. Ver metodología
- Voter Segmentation Methodology Voter Segmentation Methodology — metodología en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver metodología
- Indicador del Banco Mundial → Asignación por tipo de artículo Mapeo de indicadores no económicos del Banco Mundial Open Data a los tipos de artículos de EU Parliament Monitor — salud, educación, social, medioambiente, demografía, gobernanza e innovación. Ver metodología
Índice de análisis
Cada artefacto a continuación fue leído por el agregador y contribuyó a este artículo. El archivo manifest.json sin procesar contiene la lista completa legible por máquina, incluido el historial de resultados de validación.
- Informe ejecutivo Informe ejecutivo — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Resumen de síntesis Resumen de síntesis — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Mapa de interesados (poder × alineación) Mapa de interesados (poder × alineación) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Contexto económico (Banco Mundial y FMI) Contexto económico (Banco Mundial y FMI) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Modelo de amenazas (democrático e institucional) Modelo de amenazas (democrático e institucional) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Pronóstico de escenarios (ponderado por probabilidad) Pronóstico de escenarios (ponderado por probabilidad) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Comodines y cisnes negros Comodines y cisnes negros — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Análisis PESTLE (escaneo de seis dimensiones) Análisis PESTLE (escaneo de seis dimensiones) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Línea base histórica Línea base histórica — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
- Índice de análisis (navegador de artefactos de ejecución) Índice de análisis (navegador de artefactos de ejecución) — plantilla en la biblioteca de análisis EU Parliament Monitor. Ver artefacto
