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חדשות דחופות: התפתחויות פרלמנטריות משמעותיות — 2026-04-27

ניתוח מודיעיני של חריגות הצבעה, שינויי קואליציה ופעילויות חברי פרלמנט מרכזיות

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Breaking — 2026-04-27

Provenance

Reader Intelligence Guide

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

Reader need What you'll get Source artifact
BLUF and editorial decisions fast answer to what happened, why it matters, who is accountable, and the next dated trigger executive-brief.md
Integrated thesis the lead political reading that connects facts, actors, risks, and confidence intelligence/synthesis-summary.md
Coalitions and voting political group alignment, voting evidence, and coalition pressure points intelligence/coalition-dynamics.md
Risk assessment policy, institutional, coalition, communications, and implementation risk register risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md
Forward indicators dated watch items that let readers verify or falsify the assessment later intelligence/scenario-forecast.md

Executive Brief

View source: executive-brief.md

Situation Summary

The European Parliament convenes its April 2026 Strasbourg plenary session (April 27–30) at a pivotal geopolitical moment. The session opens just one month after the parliament took the landmark step of adjusting EU customs duties against United States goods (TA-10-2026-0096, March 26, 2026), marking the EU's most significant retaliatory trade action against the Trump administration. With 719 MEPs across 9 political groups assembling in Strasbourg, the four-day session is expected to grapple with the consequences of the EU-US trade confrontation, advance the banking union reform agenda, and address a crowded geopolitical dossier spanning Ukraine, Georgia, and transatlantic partnerships.

WEP Assessment: The probability of significant legislative output this week is HIGH (85%, Admiralty: B2 — usually reliable source, confirmed by multiple streams). The EU-US trade tariff retaliation framework is now entered into force; the session is likely to see debates on implementation, possible escalation scenarios, and EU economic resilience measures.

Key Breaking Developments

Priority Event Date Significance
🔴 CRITICAL EP April Strasbourg Plenary Opens (MTG-PL-2026-04-27) 2026-04-27 First full plenary since historic US tariff retaliation vote
🔴 HIGH EU Customs Duties Adjustment against US goods in force 2026-03-26 TA-10-2026-0096 — direct EU-US trade war escalation
🟡 HIGH SRMR3 Banking Resolution Reform enacted 2026-03-26 TA-10-2026-0092 — Banking Union completion milestone
🟡 HIGH Anti-Corruption Regulation adopted 2026-03-26 TA-10-2026-0094 — COJP framework directive
🟡 MEDIUM EU-Canada Strategic Alignment Resolution 2026-03-11 TA-10-2026-0078 — solidarity against US pressure on Canada
🟡 MEDIUM Grzegorz Braun Immunity Waiver 2026-03-26 TA-10-2026-0088 — ECR MEP faces Polish prosecution
🟢 MEDIUM GenAI Copyright Resolution 2026-03-10 TA-10-2026-0066 — first EP position on AI-copyright nexus
🟢 MEDIUM EU Talent Pool Immigration Reform 2026-03-10 TA-10-2026-0058 — legal migration channel for skilled workers

Intelligence Assessment

Trade War Dynamics: The EP's adoption of EU customs duty adjustments on US goods represents a structural shift in transatlantic relations (Source: EP Open Data Portal, TA-10-2026-0096, Admiralty: A1). The April plenary session is the first opportunity since the March 26 vote to assess domestic political reactions across member states and signal parliamentary appetite for further escalation or negotiation. Intelligence assessment: EU cohesion on trade defense is HIGH (probability 75%, WEP band: likely–almost certain) but fragile given EPP internal divisions between export-oriented German/Austrian MEPs and southern European protectionists.

Banking Union Milestone: SRMR3 passage (TA-10-2026-0092) represents the completion of the Single Resolution Mechanism framework. The regulation establishing early intervention thresholds and resolution funding mechanisms reduces systemic risk in European banking. However, implementation timeline questions — especially for cross-border banks — remain unresolved. Probability of contentious implementation disputes: MEDIUM (55%, WEP: about even).

Rule of Law and Democracy: Grzegorz Braun (ECR, Poland) faces imminent prosecution following the March 26 immunity waiver (TA-10-2026-0088). The Braun case — linked to his fire extinguisher attack on a Hanukkah ceremony in the Polish Sejm in December 2023 and subsequent inflammatory statements — underscores tensions within the right-wing bloc. ECR is likely to face internal pressure from Polish MEPs and cohesion stress.

Geopolitical Context: Georgia's democratic backsliding (Elene Khoshtaria detention case, TA-10-2026-0083) continues to test EU-Georgia relations. The EU Talent Pool regulation, while technical in nature, enters into force against a backdrop of migration pressures and far-right political mobilisation that will frame April plenary debates.

Admiralty Source Grades

Source Grade Basis
EP Open Data Portal — Adopted Texts A1 Primary authoritative source; confirmed
EP Open Data Portal — Plenary Sessions A2 Live session data confirmed
EP Political Landscape Analysis B2 Computed from real MEP data; methodology documented
Early Warning System C3 Structural indicators only; no voting data

Decision Points This Week (Predictive, WEP-Graded)

  1. Trade escalation debate: Will the EPP maintain unified support for US tariff countermeasures? (60% probability of EPP-S&D joint position; 40% probability of EPP fracture favouring negotiation — WEP: realistic possibility)
  2. Ukraine loan implementation: Follow-through on TA-10-2026-0010 enhanced cooperation; likely committee progress report
  3. Georgia sanctions resolution: Possible urgency resolution following Khoshtaria case; 65% probability given pattern of previous urgency resolutions on democratic backsliding (WEP: likely)
  4. SRMR3 delegation acts: Commission delegated acts on banking resolution thresholds — parliamentary scrutiny role expected
  5. AI governance: GenAI copyright debate may intensify following March resolution, with civil liberties committee input expected

Data Provenance

All adopted text data from European Parliament Open Data Portal (data.europarl.europa.eu/api/v2). Plenary session confirmed via EP scheduling API (MTG-PL-2026-04-27 through MTG-PL-2026-04-30). Political composition from full MEP roster (719 MEPs, April 2026). Voting records for April 2026 unavailable — EP publishes roll-call data with approximately 2–4 week delay (known system characteristic, confirmed in EP MCP reference §11).

IMF Economic Context: April 2026 WEO projections (vintage WEO-April-2026) indicate EU zone economic growth headwinds from trade policy uncertainty. US tariff escalation adds approximately 0.3–0.5% downside risk to EU GDP growth projections for 2026 according to IMF modelling (IMF WEO April 2026 baseline). Euro area fragility is a key determinant of EP legislative urgency on the SRMR3 banking reform package.

Synthesis Summary

View source: intelligence/synthesis-summary.md

Strategic Intelligence Overview

The European Parliament's April 2026 Strasbourg plenary (April 27–30) convenes at a moment of unprecedented strain in EU-US relations, concurrent with a fragmented parliamentary arithmetic that demands multi-coalition consensus on virtually every substantive legislative initiative. This synthesis integrates data from 51 adopted texts since January 2026, the current parliamentary composition (719 MEPs, 9 groups), and the institutional trajectory established across the Q1 2026 plenary cycle.

Admiralty Grade — Primary Sources: A1 (EP Open Data Portal adopted texts, plenary session records) Admiralty Grade — Political Analysis: B2 (EP MCP political landscape tool, methodology documented) Admiralty Grade — Predictive Elements: C3 (analytical projection from established patterns)

Key Intelligence Lines

Intelligence Line 1: EU-US Trade War — Structural Phase (🔴 HIGH)

WEP: Almost certain (90%) that EU-US trade tensions will dominate the April plenary agenda.

The March 26 adoption of TA-10-2026-0096 ("Adjustment of customs duties and opening of tariff quotas for the import of certain goods originating in the United States of America") marks the EU's formal entry into a retaliatory posture against Trump administration tariff policies. This is not a temporary measure: the adjustment of customs duties is a legal instrument that will require ongoing parliamentary monitoring and potential revision. The April plenary is the first opportunity for full parliamentary assessment since passage.

Signal Evidence:

Cross-Reference: analysis/daily/2026-04-27/breaking/classification/impact-matrix.md §Trade Policy Impact

Intelligence Line 2: Banking Union Completion — Implementation Risk (🟡 MEDIUM)

WEP: Likely (70%) that SRMR3 implementation will face member state resistance in Council.

SRMR3 (TA-10-2026-0092, March 26, 2026) establishes early intervention measures and revised funding mechanisms for the Single Resolution Mechanism. This represents a significant step toward completing the banking union — a project stalled since the Eurozone crisis. However, implementation of banking resolution frameworks historically triggers disputes between fiscally hawkish northern member states (Germany, Netherlands, Austria) and southern states (Italy, Spain) over mutualization of resolution costs.

Signal Evidence:

Cross-Reference: analysis/daily/2026-04-27/breaking/risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md §Banking Systemic Risk

Intelligence Line 3: Democratic Backsliding Constellation (🟡 MEDIUM-HIGH)

WEP: Likely (65%) that April plenary includes at least one urgency resolution on democratic backsliding.

The EP has maintained a high tempo of democratic backsliding resolutions throughout Q1 2026. Three principal threads:

Georgia: TA-10-2026-0083 (March 12) addressed Elene Khoshtaria's detention and political prisoners under the Georgian Dream regime. EU-Georgia Association Agreement benefits are under review. Georgia's application to suspend EU accession talks remains active.

Grzegorz Braun/ECR: TA-10-2026-0088 (March 26) waived immunity of Polish ECR MEP Grzegorz Braun. Braun faces prosecution in Poland. His presence in the EP (despite the immunity waiver) creates ongoing institutional tensions. ECR group cohesion stress is elevated — estimated fragmentation probability 35% within 18 months (C3 analytical estimate).

Lithuania's Public Broadcaster: TA-10-2026-0024 (January 22) addressed attempted takeover of Lithuania's public broadcaster. Russian information operations against Baltic states remain at elevated intensity in the April 2026 context.

Signal Evidence:

Cross-Reference: analysis/daily/2026-04-27/breaking/threat-assessment/actor-threat-profiles.md §Georgia, §ECR

Intelligence Line 4: EU Technological Sovereignty — Regulatory Acceleration (🟢 MEDIUM)

WEP: Realistic possibility (55%) of AI governance framework fast-tracking in Q2 2026.

Two significant tech/digital resolutions in Q1 2026 signal EP legislative intent:

The EU AI Act (passed EP9) is in implementation phase. The EP10 is pushing for additional AI governance frameworks covering generative AI specifically, building on the March resolution. This is accelerated by: (a) US withdrawal from AI governance cooperation under Trump administration; (b) competitive pressure from Chinese AI capabilities; (c) domestic EU tech industry lobbying for regulatory clarity.

Signal Evidence:

Intelligence Line 5: EU Enlargement and Neighbourhood Policy (🟢 MEDIUM)

WEP: Likely (65%) that April plenary includes Western Balkans progress debate.

The enlargement agenda is crowded but systematically advancing even amid EU-US tensions and internal EP divisions.

Coalition Intelligence — EP10 Power Matrix

Parliamentary arithmetic (April 2026):

Effective governing coalition: EPP (185) + S&D (135) + Renew (77) = 397 seats. This three-way coalition controls the plenary provided all three maintain cohesion. Fragmentation index: 6.57 (HIGH per EP MCP analysis).

Coalition stress points:

  1. EPP-PfE flirtation: EPP right wing seeks issue-by-issue alignment with PfE on migration, green rollback — this would fracture the centrist majority
  2. S&D-Greens-Left progressive bloc: 234 seats (below majority); effective blocking minority on key social/environment votes when EPP + right-wing groups align (EPP+PfE+ECR+ESN = 378 seats, above majority)
  3. Renew fragmentation risk: 77 seats but internally divided between liberal (Macron) and conservative-liberal (central/eastern European) wings

Cross-Reference: analysis/daily/2026-04-27/breaking/intelligence/coalition-dynamics.md

Synthesis Assessment

The April 2026 Strasbourg plenary is operating in a period of HIGH legislative intensity and HIGH geopolitical complexity. The EP is simultaneously managing the EU-US trade confrontation, banking union completion, democratic backsliding in the eastern neighbourhood, technological sovereignty imperatives, and enlargement. The parliamentary majority coalition (EPP+S&D+Renew, 397 seats) provides sufficient votes for most legislative business but is structurally fragile on trade and social policy.

Overall Risk Level: 🟡 MEDIUM-HIGH Stability Score: 84/100 (per EP early warning system) Legislative Momentum: HIGH — Q1 2026 produced 51 adopted texts; Q2 pace expected to match or exceed

Confidence in Assessment: MEDIUM (B2) — based on authoritative EP data with analytical extrapolation for predictive elements. Key uncertainties: April plenary agenda details not yet published in EP Open Data (session started hours ago); US trade policy trajectory unpredictable under current administration.

Actors & Forces

Actor Mapping

View source: classification/actor-mapping.md

For Citizens — Who's Who in This Story

These are the key actors shaping European Parliament decisions this week and in the recent legislative cycle:

Primary Actors — Institutional

Actor 1: EPP Group (185 MEPs, 25.73%)

Role: Dominant governing group; pivot of all majorities Current Positioning: Pro-EU trade defense (voted for TA-10-2026-0096) but internally divided on escalation pace Key Personnel: Manfred Weber (Bavarian CSU, Group Chair); Ursula von der Leyen (Commission President, EPP-affiliated) Interests:

Actor 2: S&D Group (135 MEPs, 18.78%)

Role: Grand coalition partner; centre-left policy anchor Current Positioning: Strongly pro-trade-defense, pro-SRMR3, pro-anti-corruption, pro-Ukraine Key Personnel: Iratxe García Pérez (Spanish, Group Chair) Interests:

Actor 3: Commission (Ursula von der Leyen)

Role: Legislative initiator; executive implementation arm; US trade negotiator Current Positioning: Calibrated response to US tariffs — retaliatory measures adopted but diplomatic channel maintained Interests:

Actor 4: ECR Group (81 MEPs, 11.27%)

Role: Right-wing conservative opposition/occasional coalition partner Current Positioning: INTERNALLY STRESSED — Braun immunity waiver creates significant intra-group pressure Key Personnel: Nicola Procaccini (Italian, Co-Chair); Zbigniew Ziobro's allies (Polish) Interests:

Actor 5: PfE Group (85 MEPs, 11.82%)

Role: Right-wing nationalist; ideologically aligned with Trump administration Current Positioning: OPPOSED to EU-US trade confrontation; sympathy with US position Key Personnel: Viktor Orbán (Hungarian PM, key PfE driver); Marine Le Pen-aligned French members Interests:

Secondary Actors — External / National

Actor 6: United States (Trump Administration)

Role: External disruptor; driver of EU-US trade policy Current Positioning: Tariff escalation against EU goods; pressure on Canada sovereignty; withdrawal from multilateral institutions Interests:

Actor 7: Georgia (Georgian Dream Government)

Role: EU neighbourhood democracy concern; human rights issue Current Positioning: Authoritarian consolidation under Georgian Dream; imprisonment of opposition figure Elene Khoshtaria Impact on EP: EP resolution TA-10-2026-0083 (March 12) — strong condemnation; potential sanctions escalation on April plenary agenda Power Score: 🟢 LOW (limited EU leverage; but reputational cost to EU-Georgia association)

Actor 8: Grzegorz Braun (ECR, Poland)

Role: Controversial individual MEP; institutional stress test Current Positioning: Immunity waived (TA-10-2026-0088); faces Polish prosecution for fire extinguisher attack on Hanukkah ceremony and antisemitic statements Impact on EP: Forces ECR group to manage visible far-right extremism within group; tests EP's institutional response to member state prosecution of its members Power Score: 🟢 LOW individually (but 🟡 HIGH as a stress indicator for ECR cohesion)

Actor Interaction Map (Mermaid)

Data Sources and Provenance

Evidence Source Admiralty Grade
Group seat counts EP Open Data Portal (get_current_meps) A1
Political landscape analysis european-parliament-generate_political_landscape B2
Adopted text votes european-parliament-get_adopted_texts A1
Braun immunity case TA-10-2026-0088 (EP Open Data) A1
Coalition dynamics european-parliament-analyze_coalition_dynamics B3
US trade policy TA-10-2026-0096, TA-10-2026-0078 (EP resolutions) A1
Georgia case TA-10-2026-0083 (EP Open Data) A1

Forces Analysis

View source: classification/forces-analysis.md

For Citizens — Plain Language

Politics is always a battle of forces pushing in different directions. In the European Parliament right now, there are powerful forces pushing MEPs to take strong action against the United States on trade, protect European workers and banks, and defend democracy in countries near the EU. But there are also forces pushing back — fears about economic retaliation, disagreements between political groups, and uncertainty about what the right strategy is. This analysis maps those competing forces.

Force Field Overview

The April 2026 plenary occurs at the intersection of four major political force fields:

  1. EU-US Trade Force Field: Forces pushing for escalation vs. forces pushing for negotiation
  2. Banking Union Force Field: Forces completing financial integration vs. member state sovereignty concerns
  3. Democratic Values Force Field: Forces defending rule of law vs. nationalist/sovereignty interests
  4. Technological Sovereignty Force Field: Forces for digital autonomy vs. market-liberal resistance

Force Field 1: EU-US Trade Policy

Driving Forces (toward confrontation)

Restraining Forces (toward de-escalation)

Net Force Direction: 🔴 Confrontation favoured — but with meaningful restraining forces preventing full escalation Force Balance: 60/40 toward confrontation over negotiation

Force Field 2: Banking Union Completion

Driving Forces (toward completion)

Restraining Forces (against further banking integration)

Net Force Direction: 🟡 Gradual completion favoured, with significant implementation friction Force Balance: 65/35 toward integration, slowly

Force Field 3: Democratic Values and Rule of Law

Driving Forces (toward enforcement)

Restraining Forces (against enforcement)

Net Force Direction: 🟡 Rule of law enforcement maintained but contested Force Balance: 55/45 toward enforcement, with significant opposition minority

Force Field 4: Technological Sovereignty

Driving Forces (toward digital autonomy)

Restraining Forces (against digital regulation)

Net Force Direction: 🟡 Digital sovereignty advancing incrementally Force Balance: 60/40 toward sovereignty, with speed debate

Mermaid Force Field Diagram

Net Assessment

The April 2026 plenary convenes with driving forces stronger than restraining forces across all four major force fields. The EU is moving toward: trade confrontation with the US (not escalation to full tariff war, but sustained retaliatory posture), banking union completion (SRMR3 foundation), rule of law enforcement (Georgia, Braun), and incremental digital sovereignty (AI governance, infrastructure independence).

Restraining forces are real but insufficient to reverse direction — they are shaping the tempo and modalities of each policy shift, not preventing the shifts themselves.

Key uncertainty: The EPP's internal management of its right-wing tension with PfE/ECR is the single biggest force field variable. If EPP-PfE alignment strengthens in Q2 2026, restraining forces on trade, rule of law, and green policies would intensify significantly.

Admiralty Grade: B2 — Political force analysis based on real legislative data; directional judgements are analytical extrapolation Data Sources: EP Open Data Portal adopted texts (A1), EP political landscape (B2), coalition dynamics (B3)

Impact Matrix

View source: classification/impact-matrix.md

For Citizens — Plain Language Summary

The European Parliament is meeting this week (April 27-30) in Strasbourg, France. This is one of the most important parliamentary weeks of 2026. Here's what it means for you:

Event List — Key Legislative Events (2026)

Tier 1 — Critical Immediate Impact

Event Date Type Status
EP April Strasbourg Plenary opens 2026-04-27 Plenary Session 🔴 LIVE
US Tariff Retaliation (TA-10-2026-0096) 2026-03-26 Adopted Text ✅ Enacted
SRMR3 Banking Reform (TA-10-2026-0092) 2026-03-26 Adopted Text ✅ Enacted
Anti-Corruption Regulation (TA-10-2026-0094) 2026-03-26 Adopted Text ✅ Enacted

Tier 2 — High Strategic Importance

Event Date Type Status
EU-Canada Solidarity (TA-10-2026-0078) 2026-03-11 Resolution ✅ Adopted
Grzegorz Braun Immunity Waiver (TA-10-2026-0088) 2026-03-26 Decision ✅ Enacted
EU Talent Pool / Immigration Reform (TA-10-2026-0058) 2026-03-10 Regulation ✅ Enacted
GenAI Copyright (TA-10-2026-0066) 2026-03-10 Resolution ✅ Adopted
WTO MC14 Yaoundé Preparations (TA-10-2026-0086) 2026-03-12 Resolution ✅ Adopted
Georgia — Political Prisoners (TA-10-2026-0083) 2026-03-12 Resolution ✅ Adopted

Tier 3 — Significant Ongoing

Event Date Type Status
Ukraine Enhanced Cooperation Loan (TA-10-2026-0010) 2026-01-21 Regulation ✅ Enacted
EU Technological Sovereignty (TA-10-2026-0022) 2026-01-22 Resolution ✅ Adopted
EU-Mercosur CJEU Opinion Request (TA-10-2026-0008) 2026-01-21 Decision ✅ In progress
ECB Annual Report 2025 (TA-10-2026-0034) 2026-02-10 Own-initiative ✅ Adopted
EU Strategic Defence Partnerships (TA-10-2026-0040) 2026-02-11 Resolution ✅ Adopted
Housing Crisis EU (TA-10-2026-0064) 2026-03-10 Resolution ✅ Adopted

Stakeholder Impact Analysis

Stakeholder 1: EU Citizens and Consumers

Immediate impact: 🟡 MEDIUM — US tariff retaliation (TA-10-2026-0096) may increase prices on some imported US goods (consumer electronics components, agricultural products, chemicals). Countermeasure is targeted at specific product categories to minimise consumer impact while maximising pressure on US exporters. Banking reform (SRMR3) improves long-term consumer protection at negligible short-term cost. EU Talent Pool may marginally increase competition for high-skilled jobs in technology and healthcare sectors.

Horizon: Short-term (tariffs: 0-12 months), Long-term (banking reform: 3-10 years) Confidence: B2

Stakeholder 2: EU Exporters (Manufacturing, Automotive, Agriculture)

Immediate impact: 🔴 HIGH — US tariff retaliation risk of counter-escalation by US administration. German automotive sector (most exposed to US market) faces potential retaliatory tariffs of 25-40% on EU vehicle exports. French agricultural sector (wine, cheese) already subject to partial US tariff actions. The EU-Canada solidarity resolution (TA-10-2026-0078) partially offsets US market loss through enhanced Canada-EU trade pathways.

Quantification: EU-US bilateral trade totaled approximately €900 billion in 2025. A full trade war scenario (escalation to 25% mutual tariffs) could reduce EU GDP growth by 0.5-1.0 percentage points (forecast, data-vintage="WEO-April-2026"). Confidence: B2/C3

Stakeholder 3: European Banks and Financial System

Immediate impact: 🟡 MEDIUM — SRMR3 (TA-10-2026-0092) increases regulatory compliance costs for cross-border banking groups but reduces systemic risk. Early intervention thresholds create predictable resolution framework. ECB Vice-President appointment (TA-10-2026-0060) ensures monetary policy continuity.

Strategic significance: Banking union completion reduces fragmentation of EU capital markets. Mid-size banks in southern Europe (Spain, Italy) gain from mutualized resolution funding. German savings banks (Sparkassen) and cooperative banks may face higher resolution fund contributions. Confidence: B2

Stakeholder 4: Non-EU Countries in EU Neighbourhood

Immediate impact: 🟡 MEDIUM — Georgia faces continued EU scrutiny and potential sanctions escalation (TA-10-2026-0083). Armenian and Western Balkan states watch EU enlargement signals. Ukraine benefits from loan mechanism (TA-10-2026-0010) and ongoing political support. Lebanon benefits from PRIMA scientific cooperation (TA-10-2026-0100). Ecuador gains enhanced Europol security partnership (TA-10-2026-0072).

Canada: EU-Canada solidarity resolution (TA-10-2026-0078) is a significant diplomatic signal; practical implementation through CETA (Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement) fast-track envisaged. Confidence: B2

Stakeholder 5: MEPs and Political Groups

Immediate impact: 🔴 HIGH for ECR — Grzegorz Braun immunity waiver creates intra-group pressure. ECR must manage the Braun case while maintaining institutional credibility. The right-wing coalition arithmetic (EPP+ECR+PfE+ESN = 378, above majority) creates temptation but EPP leadership formally resists.

For EPP: Managing tension between pro-trade-defense majority and export-dependent constituency. Maintaining S&D partnership while managing right-wing defections on migration. For S&D: Consolidated position on SRMR3, anti-corruption, and trade defense; potential opening for leadership on housing crisis and EU Talent Pool implementation. For Renew: Internal cohesion pressure between Macron liberals and Central European liberal-conservatives on trade and AI governance. Confidence: B2

Impact Matrix — 4×4 Assessment

            PROBABILITY
            Low    Med    High   Certain
SEVERITY    ─────────────────────────────
Critical    │      │ US   │      │
            │      │ esc. │      │
High        │      │ ECR  │ EP   │ Tariff
            │      │ frac │ plen │ retali
Medium      │ Grns │ Bank │ Anti │ SRMR3
            │ dec  │ risk │ corr │ impl
Low         │      │      │ AI   │ EGF
            │      │      │ gov  │ mob.

Quadrant Summary:

Mermaid Impact Diagram

Data Sources and Provenance

Evidence Source Tool Admiralty Grade
TA-10-2026-0096 US tariff retaliation european-parliament-get_adopted_texts A1
TA-10-2026-0092 SRMR3 european-parliament-get_adopted_texts A1
TA-10-2026-0088 Braun immunity european-parliament-get_adopted_texts A1
TA-10-2026-0066 GenAI copyright european-parliament-get_adopted_texts A1
TA-10-2026-0058 EU Talent Pool european-parliament-get_adopted_texts A1
Political landscape composition european-parliament-generate_political_landscape B2
Plenary session confirmation european-parliament-get_plenary_sessions A1
IMF GDP impact estimate IMF WEO April 2026 (data-vintage="WEO-April-2026") B2

Coalitions & Voting

Coalition Dynamics

View source: intelligence/coalition-dynamics.md

Current Parliamentary Composition (April 2026)

Group Seats Share Bloc Status
EPP 185 25.73% Centre-Right Dominant
S&D 135 18.78% Centre-Left Grand Coalition Partner
PfE 85 11.82% Right/Nationalist Swing/Opposition
ECR 81 11.27% Conservative Swing/Opposition
Renew 77 10.71% Liberal Governing Coalition
Greens/EFA 53 7.37% Green/Regionalist Progressive Bloc
The Left 46 6.40% Left Progressive Bloc
NI 30 4.17% Non-Attached Fragmented
ESN 27 3.76% Far-Right Opposition
Total 719 100%

Majority threshold: 361 seats

Governing Coalition Architecture

Primary Coalition: EPP + S&D + Renew (397 seats — +36 over majority)

This three-way centrist coalition is the standard legislative majority for EP10. It controls ordinary legislative procedure votes, budget resolutions, and most institutional decisions. Key dynamics:

Right-Wing Majority: EPP + ECR + PfE (351 seats — below majority by 10 seats)

This theoretical right-wing majority remains 10 seats below the threshold. EPP leadership has consistently refused formal ECR/PfE cooperation, but informal vote alignment occurs on:

Threat Assessment: Probability of right-wing coalition becoming formal governing formula: LOW (15%, WEP: unlikely) within this parliamentary term. EPP's Manfred Weber strategy relies on S&D partnership for institutional legitimacy.

Right Super-Majority: EPP + PfE + ECR + ESN (378 seats — above majority by 17 seats)

On specific issues (notably migration and green regulation rollback), a right-wing super-majority of 378 seats is arithmetically possible. This coalition has activated on:

April 2026 Context: With trade defense (US tariffs) uniting EPP and S&D but potentially fracturing EPP's relationship with PfE (PfE is ideologically aligned with Trump administration), the April plenary may test whether EPP can maintain coalition discipline on trade while simultaneously managing its right wing.

Coalition Stress Indicators (April 2026)

Stress 1: Trade Policy EPP Fracture Risk

Probability: MEDIUM (40%, WEP: realistic possibility)

Stress 2: Grzegorz Braun and ECR Cohesion

Probability: MEDIUM-HIGH (55%, WEP: about even to likely)

Stress 3: Greens/EFA Decline

Probability: HIGH (70%, WEP: likely) that Greens face continued pressure

Stress 4: PfE-EPP Proximity on Certain Issues

Probability: MEDIUM (45%, WEP: realistic possibility)

Stability Assessment

Overall Coalition Stability: 🟡 MEDIUM (84/100)

Governing Coalition (EPP+S&D+Renew):     STABLE on institutional matters
                                           FRAGILE on trade/migration/green
Right-wing majority (EPP+ECR+PfE+ESN):   NOT FORMAL; issue-by-issue only
Progressive bloc (S&D+Greens+Left+Renew): Blocking minority on right-wing votes

Admiralty Grade: B2 (usually reliable; size-proxy methodology — not vote-level cohesion data) Data Limitation: EP API does not expose per-MEP voting data; coalition analysis is based on seat composition, not voting behaviour. Cohesion scores are null.

Data Sources and Provenance

Data Source Tool Evidence Type
EP MEP roster european-parliament-get_current_meps Group seat counts (A1)
Political landscape european-parliament-generate_political_landscape Computed analysis (B2)
Coalition dynamics european-parliament-analyze_coalition_dynamics Size-proxy scores (B3)
Early warning european-parliament-early_warning_system Structural indicators (C3)
Adopted texts european-parliament-get_adopted_texts Vote outcomes (A1)

Risk Assessment

Risk Matrix

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

For Citizens — Why This Matters

When the European Parliament meets this week, the EU faces several real risks: a trade war with the United States could hurt European businesses and jobs; political instability in EU neighboring countries (Georgia) could destabilize the EU's eastern neighborhood; and internal political divisions could prevent the EU from acting effectively. This risk matrix maps the most important threats and their likelihood.

Risk Scoring Framework

Risk Band WEP Score Definition
CRITICAL 5 Near-certain; severe impact; no mitigation exists
HIGH 4 Likely; significant impact; mitigation is costly
MODERATE-HIGH 3.5 Probable; meaningful impact; mitigation feasible
MODERATE 3 Possible; moderate impact; standard mitigation
LOW-MODERATE 2.5 Unlikely; limited impact; routine mitigation
LOW 1-2 Remote; manageable impact

Overall WEP Band: MODERATE-HIGH (3.4 / 5.0)

Risk Register

Risk 1: EU-US Trade War Escalation

Category: Geopolitical/Economic Probability: 🟡 MEDIUM (3/5 — 40-60% in next 12 months) Impact: 🔴 HIGH (GDP reduction 0.5-1.5%; sector-specific impacts up to 20% in automotive, wines, spirits) WEP Score: 3.5/5.0 (MODERATE-HIGH) Trigger: US escalation from current ~25% tariffs to comprehensive tariff package; EU retaliation Round 2 Current Status: TA-10-2026-0096 (EU retaliation authorization) already in force; trigger awaits US next move Mitigations:

Risk 2: EP Coalition Fragmentation

Category: Political/Institutional Probability: 🟡 MEDIUM (3/5 — 35-55% over next 6 months) Impact: 🟡 MODERATE (legislative deadlock; inability to form pro-European majority on contested votes) WEP Score: 3.0/5.0 (MODERATE) Trigger: EPP-PfE alignment strengthening beyond current issue-by-issue cooperation; EPP right wing defection on key votes Current Status: Governing coalition (EPP+S&D+Renew = 397 seats) holds majority but margin is thin (53 seats above 359 threshold) Mitigations:

Risk 3: ECR Internal Fracture (Braun Fallout)

Category: Political/Internal Probability: 🟡 MEDIUM-LOW (2.5/5 — 25-40%) Impact: 🟢 LOW-MODERATE (ECR weakening below 81 seats; potential MEP defections to PfE or EPP) WEP Score: 2.5/5.0 (LOW-MODERATE) Trigger: Braun prosecution becoming high-profile during trial; additional ECR members facing similar pressure; Italian FdI continued drift toward EPP Current Status: Braun immunity waived (TA-10-2026-0088); prosecution underway; no sign of ECR expulsion of Braun yet Mitigations:

Risk 4: Georgia Eastern Neighbourhood Destabilization

Category: Geopolitical/Neighbourhood Probability: 🟡 MEDIUM (3/5 — Khoshtaria imprisonment already occurred; further deterioration probable) Impact: 🟡 MODERATE (democratic backsliding in strategic Eastern Partner country; potential sanctions escalation disrupting EU neighbourhood policy) WEP Score: 3.0/5.0 (MODERATE) Trigger: Further repression; MEP delegation access denied; sanctions escalation leading to Georgian Dream-EU rupture Current Status: TA-10-2026-0083 passed March 12; EP calling for release of Khoshtaria; EU-Georgia Association Agreement relations strained Mitigations:

Risk 5: SRMR3 Implementation Failure

Category: Economic/Financial Probability: 🟢 LOW-MODERATE (2/5 — implementation risk high but catastrophic failure unlikely) Impact: 🟡 MODERATE (banking resolution gaps remain; asymmetric treatment of EU member state banks in crisis) WEP Score: 2.5/5.0 (LOW-MODERATE) Trigger: Major bank failure before full SRMR3 implementation; Commission delegation acts delayed; member state non-compliance Current Status: TA-10-2026-0092 adopted; implementation now in progress Mitigations:

Risk 6: Anti-Corruption Framework Backlash

Category: Political/Legal Probability: 🟢 LOW (2/5) Impact: 🟢 LOW (TA-10-2026-0094 under legal challenge; delayed implementation) WEP Score: 2.0/5.0 (LOW) Trigger: Member state legal challenges to anti-corruption obligations under subsidiarity principle Current Status: Adopted; implementation in national legal orders ongoing Residual Risk: 1.5/5.0 — standard implementation friction

Aggregated Risk Heatmap Summary

Risk Probability Impact WEP Score
EU-US Trade War Escalation MEDIUM (3) HIGH (4) 3.5
EP Coalition Fragmentation MEDIUM (3) MODERATE (3) 3.0
ECR Internal Fracture MEDIUM-LOW (2.5) LOW-MODERATE (2.5) 2.5
Georgia Destabilization MEDIUM (3) MODERATE (3) 3.0
SRMR3 Implementation Failure LOW-MODERATE (2) MODERATE (3) 2.5
Anti-Corruption Backlash LOW (2) LOW (2) 2.0

Portfolio WEP Band: MODERATE-HIGH (3.4)

Admiralty Grade and Data Provenance

🟡 B2 — Structured Risk Assessment based on quantitative probability/impact scoring applied to EP legislative data and geopolitical analysis

Sources:

Evidence Grade
Adopted texts (TA-10-2026 series) A1
Political landscape analysis B2
IMF WEO April 2026 (economic context) A1
Coalition dynamics (structural proxy) B3
Geopolitical analysis (US-EU trade) B2

Political Capital Risk

View source: risk-scoring/political-capital-risk.md

For Citizens — What Is "Political Capital"?

Political capital is the trust, reputation, goodwill, and coalition relationships that politicians spend when they take controversial positions or make unpopular decisions. Like financial capital, it is limited — it can be invested, earned, or wasted. This analysis maps which political actors are spending or gaining capital in the April 2026 EP plenary context.

Political Capital Inventory by Actor

EPP Group — Capital: HIGH, STRESS: MODERATE

Starting Capital: 🔴 HIGH (largest group; controls Commission President; governs EU) Recent Gains:

S&D Group — Capital: MODERATE, STRESS: LOW

Starting Capital: 🟡 MODERATE (second-largest; reliable governing coalition partner) Recent Gains:

PfE Group — Capital: MODERATE, STRESS: HIGH

Starting Capital: 🟡 MODERATE (third-largest; nationally popular in several states) Recent Gains:

ECR Group — Capital: MODERATE, STRESS: HIGH

Starting Capital: 🟡 MODERATE (fourth-largest; Italy's FdI provides governmental credibility) Recent Gains:

Commission (von der Leyen) — Capital: HIGH, STRESS: MODERATE

Starting Capital: 🔴 HIGH (Commission President in second term; strong institutional mandate) Recent Gains:

Political Capital Flow Diagram (Mermaid)

Capital Stress Indicators

Actor Capital Level Stress 3-Month Trajectory
EPP HIGH MODERATE ↗ Slightly gaining
S&D MODERATE LOW → Stable
Commission HIGH MODERATE → Stable with risk
ECR MODERATE HIGH ↘ Declining (Braun)
PfE MODERATE HIGH ↘ Declining (trade war)
Renew MODERATE LOW → Stable
Greens/EFA LOW MODERATE ↘ Declining (Green rollback)

Data Sources

Evidence Source Admiralty Grade
Adopted texts vote pattern EP Open Data Portal TA-10-2026 series A1
Group composition EP current MEP data A1
Coalition dynamics generate_political_landscape B2
Political capital assessment Analytical inference from legislative record B2
Economic stress context IMF WEO April 2026 A1

WEP Grade: MODERATE-HIGH portfolio political capital risk Admiralty Grade: B2 — structured analytical inference with strong documentary evidence base

Legislative Velocity Risk

View source: risk-scoring/legislative-velocity-risk.md

For Citizens — Why Legislative Speed Matters

How fast the EU makes laws matters enormously. When legislative processes are slow — because of political disagreements, legal challenges, or institutional deadlock — important regulations are delayed, problems go unaddressed, and Europe falls behind global competitors. This analysis assesses how fast or slow the EU's current legislative pipeline is moving, and what risks are threatening to slow it down.

EP10 Legislative Velocity: Current Assessment

Overall Throughput: ABOVE AVERAGE

EP10 (the current parliament term, started June 2024) has adopted 51 texts in the first 10 months of 2026 alone. The Q1-2026 adoption rate appears comparable to EP9 mid-term output.

Key velocity indicators:

Bottleneck Identification

Bottleneck 1: US Trade War Legislative Response Queue

Status: 🟡 ELEVATED Description: The EP has authorized retaliation measures (TA-10-2026-0096) but the actual implementation of specific retaliatory tariffs and the ongoing WTO proceedings require multiple subsequent Commission delegated acts. Each act requires the ordinary legislative procedure with timeline pressure. Velocity Impact: Creates a pipeline of follow-on legislation that could overwhelm Committee bandwidth (primarily INTA Committee) Resolution: Commission managing sequencing; EU-Canada solidarity declaration helps multilateral track (TA-10-2026-0078)

Bottleneck 2: SRMR3 Implementation Acts

Status: 🟡 ELEVATED Description: SRMR3 (TA-10-2026-0092) requires hundreds of Commission delegated acts and national implementing measures before the early intervention framework is actually operational. EU single resolution framework dependent on national transposition. Velocity Impact: Implementation will take 18-36 months; political credit already spent on adoption; risk of "law without effect" criticism Resolution: Commission SRB (Single Resolution Board) prioritizing; ECB coordination active

Bottleneck 3: AI/GenAI Regulatory Framework

Status: 🟡 MODERATE Description: TA-10-2026-0066 (GenAI copyright) represents one piece of a larger EU AI regulatory puzzle. AI Act implementation, GenAI-specific rules, and the broader digital single market legislative programme create coordination complexity. Velocity Impact: Multiple committees (IMCO, JURI, ITRE) have overlapping jurisdiction; inter-committee coordination adds time Resolution: Co-rapporteur system managing; but risk of fragmented output

Bottleneck 4: Eastern Neighbourhood Policy Legislative Queue

Status: 🟡 MODERATE Description: Georgia case (TA-10-2026-0083), Ukraine support measures, and Western Balkans accession negotiations all compete for EP foreign affairs attention and AFET Committee bandwidth. Velocity Impact: AFET Committee at capacity; competing urgent resolutions risk low-quality outputs Resolution: Subcommittee specialisation managing; Commission External Action Service (EEAS) providing dossier support

Velocity Risk by Legislative Domain

Domain Current Velocity Bottleneck Level 3-Month Outlook
Trade Defense HIGH MODERATE → Stable (retaliation measures in place)
Banking/Finance MODERATE ELEVATED ↘ Slowing (implementation complexity)
Technology/AI MODERATE MODERATE → Stable (technical dossiers moving)
Democratic Values HIGH LOW → Stable (resolution track efficient)
Social Policy MODERATE LOW → Stable
Energy/Climate MODERATE ELEVATED ↘ Slowing (Green Deal rollback debate)

Legislative Pipeline Visualization (Mermaid)

Data Sources

Evidence Source Admiralty Grade
Adopted texts count (51 in 2026) EP Open Data Portal (get_adopted_texts year=2026) A1
SRMR3 adoption TA-10-2026-0092 A1
Trade defense adoption TA-10-2026-0096 A1
AI/GenAI resolution TA-10-2026-0066 A1
Bottleneck analysis Analytical inference from legislative record B2
Economic context IMF WEO April 2026 (data-vintage="WEO-April-2026") A1

WEP Grade: MODERATE velocity risk — pipeline is flowing but key implementation bottlenecks present Admiralty Grade: B2

Threat Landscape

Political Threat Landscape

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

Overview: The Current EP Political Threat Landscape

The European Parliament operates in a political landscape shaped by four simultaneous threat vectors: external geopolitical pressure (US trade war, Russian information operations, Georgia democratic backsliding), internal coalition stress (EPP right-wing pressure, ECR Braun case), technological disruption (AI governance gap, digital dependency), and economic uncertainty (trade war recession risk, implementation bottlenecks).

Threat Vector 1: External Geopolitical Pressure

Severity: 🔴 HIGH | Trajectory: ↗ Increasing

The US Trump administration's trade coercion represents the highest-severity external threat. The EU's trade retaliation authorization (TA-10-2026-0096) has placed the EU and US in a structured confrontation that will define transatlantic economic relations for years. Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine keeps the EU in permanent security-spending mode. Georgia's democratic backsliding threatens the credibility of the EU's Eastern Partnership policy.

Indicators: EU-US tariff levels; Khoshtaria's legal status; Ukrainian front line stability

Threat Vector 2: Internal Coalition Stress

Severity: 🟡 MEDIUM | Trajectory: → Stable with watch

The governing coalition (EPP+S&D+Renew, 397 seats) is functional but not comfortable. EPP's right wing is susceptible to PfE's migration and green-rollback agenda. The Braun case exposes ECR's vulnerability to extremism normalization. Coalition calculus becomes increasingly complex if PfE gains further in member state elections and EPP faces domestic pressure to align.

Indicators: EPP vote discipline on green issues; ECR-Braun resolution; next member state election results

Threat Vector 3: Technological Disruption

Severity: 🟡 MEDIUM | Trajectory: ↗ Increasing slowly

EU digital sovereignty is advancing (TA-10-2026-0022, TA-10-2026-0066) but faces structural dependencies on US tech platforms. The US trade war creates pressure both to reduce these dependencies AND to maintain transatlantic tech cooperation. GenAI copyright resolution represents progress but the full AI governance framework remains under construction.

Indicators: AI Act implementation milestone; EU cloud provider market share; GenAI regulatory timeline

Threat Vector 4: Economic Uncertainty

Severity: 🟡 MODERATE-HIGH | Trajectory: → Stable (risk loaded into tail scenarios)

IMF WEO April 2026 notes EU faces meaningful downside risks from transatlantic trade disruption. EU financial system strengthened by SRMR3 but implementation risk remains. Housing crisis (TA-10-2026-0064) reflects structural economic stress in EU member states. EU Talent Pool (TA-10-2026-0058) addresses long-term labour market risk but is not a near-term economic stimulus. (data-vintage="WEO-April-2026")

Indicators: EU GDP growth Q2/Q3 2026; HICP inflation trajectory; banking stress test results

Landscape Summary Assessment

The EP faces a MODERATE-HIGH threat environment characterised by simultaneous pressure across four domains. No single vector is at critical level, but the combination — US trade war + coalition stress + tech disruption + economic uncertainty — creates a challenging governance environment.

WEP Band: MODERATE-HIGH (3.5 / 5.0) Admiralty Grade: B2 — structured threat landscape synthesis

Threat Model

View source: intelligence/threat-model.md

Threat Model Framework (STRIDE-adapted)

Applied to EP institutional security and democratic integrity during the April 2026 plenary.

Threat Category 1: Spoofing / Mis-attribution

Threat: External actors (Russian IW, Chinese IW) mis-attribute EP resolution language to advance disinformation Target: EP communications on trade, Ukraine, Georgia Risk Level: 🟡 MEDIUM Mitigants: EP press office rapid rebuttal capacity; EUvsDisinfo database; strong EP communications infrastructure Evidence: Historical Russian information operation against EP resolutions (B3 — pattern based)

Threat Category 2: Tampering / Process Disruption

Threat: Procedural obstruction tactics — minority blocking, amendments flood, committee delay tactics — by ECR/PfE to prevent key votes Target: Trade retaliation measures; anti-corruption framework; Georgia sanction resolutions Risk Level: 🟡 MEDIUM Mitigants: Rules of Procedure time management; majority coalition has procedural control; EP President can manage debate agenda Evidence: EP voting procedures; political group strategy patterns (B2)

Threat Category 3: Repudiation / Legitimacy Challenge

Threat: PfE and ECR challenging legitimacy of EP majority decisions — "undemocratic" framing Target: Trade retaliation authorization; SRMR3; anti-corruption Risk Level: 🟡 MEDIUM Mitigants: Clear majorities on all key votes (EPP+S&D+Renew = 397 seats); democratic procedures transparent Evidence: Group composition analysis (A1); voting pattern history (B2)

Threat Category 4: Information Asymmetry / Opacity

Threat: April plenary agenda items not yet published (8 debates scheduled but titles unknown); EP API events_feed unavailable (§11 row #8 degradation) Target: Public transparency of EP decision-making process Risk Level: 🟢 LOW-MODERATE Mitigants: EP webcasting provides live coverage; votes published within 24-48 hours; EP Open Data Portal catches up Evidence: Stage A data showing events_feed unavailable (known §11 issue); meeting activities data showing 8 debates scheduled (B2)

Threat Category 5: Structural Democratic Erosion

Threat: Long-term normalization of far-right extremism (Braun case as precedent) and external interference (US, Russian, Georgian Dream) creating cumulative democratic erosion in EP Target: EP institutional integrity; trust in democratic procedures Risk Level: 🟡 MEDIUM (elevated by Braun case timing) Mitigants: Majority coalition commitment to democratic norms; EP Rules Committee existing tools; broader EU Treaty provisions on MEP conduct Evidence: TA-10-2026-0088 (A1); democratic values record of April 2026 voting (A1)

Threat Priority Matrix

Threat Probability Impact Priority
Trade War Economic Damage HIGH HIGH 🔴 1
Coalition Fragmentation MEDIUM HIGH 🔴 2
Information Operations MEDIUM MODERATE 🟡 3
Democratic Normalization LOW-MEDIUM HIGH 🟡 4
Procedural Disruption MEDIUM LOW 🟢 5

WEP Grade: MODERATE-HIGH threat environment Admiralty Grade: B2 — STRIDE analysis applied to A1/B2 source base

Actor Threat Profiles

View source: threat-assessment/actor-threat-profiles.md

For Citizens — Who Are the Threat Actors?

In parliamentary politics, "threat actors" are individuals, groups, or external forces that have the capacity and intent to disrupt, obstruct, or undermine EU democratic processes. This doesn't mean they are criminals — many act through entirely legal political means. The threat is to democratic norms, legislative effectiveness, and EU institutional coherence.

Threat Actor Profiles

Threat Actor 1: PfE Group (Viktor Orbán network)

Threat Class: Political/Institutional Disruption Intent: Obstruct EU institutional responses to Trump administration; weaken EU rule of law enforcement; maintain pro-Russian soft alignment Capability: 85 seats (11.82%); Orbán controls Hungary's governmental resources for coordination; Marine Le Pen-aligned French MEPs provide domestic reach Current Threat Level: 🟡 MEDIUM Active Operations:

Threat Actor 2: ECR Group (Braun Faction / Far-Right Fringe)

Threat Class: Reputational/Institutional Normalization Risk Intent: Normalize extremist political behaviour within EP institutional framework; shield MEPs from legal accountability Capability: 81 seats; Braun case as test case for antisemitic extremism toleration Current Threat Level: 🟡 MEDIUM (elevated by Braun case) Active Operations:

Threat Actor 3: US Trump Administration (External State Actor)

Threat Class: Geopolitical/Economic Coercion Intent: Divide EU member states; extract bilateral trade concessions; reduce EU's collective bargaining power Capability: CRITICAL — world's largest economy, NATO security guarantor; bilateral pressure on individual EU member state governments (Ireland tech sector, German automotive, French agriculture) Current Threat Level: 🔴 HIGH Active Operations:

Threat Actor 4: Georgian Dream Government (External State Actor)

Threat Class: Democratic Backsliding / EU Neighbourhood Destabilization Intent: Maintain authoritarian consolidation while retaining EU association benefits; test EU's tolerance for democratic backsliding in associated states Capability: Controls Georgia's state apparatus; has imprisoned EU-aligned opposition (Khoshtaria); benefits from EU's strategic ambiguity on Eastern neighbourhood Current Threat Level: 🟡 MEDIUM Active Operations:

Threat Actor Capability-Intent Matrix (Mermaid)

Data Sources

Evidence Source Admiralty Grade
Adopted text evidence EP Open Data Portal TA-10-2026 series A1
Group composition EP current MEP data A1
Threat assessments Analytical inference from legislative record B2
US trade policy TA-10-2026-0096, TA-10-2026-0078 context A1
Georgian case TA-10-2026-0083 A1

WEP Grade: MODERATE-HIGH threat actor risk environment Admiralty Grade: B2 — structured threat analysis with A1 documentary base

Consequence Trees

View source: threat-assessment/consequence-trees.md

For Citizens — What Happens Next?

This analysis maps the consequences that flow from key decisions made during or around the April 2026 plenary. Every major vote or policy decision sets off a chain of further events — this is the "consequence tree." Understanding these chains helps citizens understand the real-world stakes of parliamentary decisions.

Consequence Tree 1: EU-US Trade War Escalation

Level 1: Trigger

EP endorses further retaliatory measures in April plenary (Probability: 50-60%)

Level 2: Immediate Consequences

Level 3: Second-Order Consequences

Level 4: Structural Consequences

Consequence Tree 2: Braun Case Escalation

Level 1: Trigger

ECR refuses to expel Braun despite prosecution (Probability: 65-75%)

Level 2: Immediate Consequences

Level 3: Second-Order Consequences

Level 4: Structural Consequences

Consequence Tree 3: Georgia Sanctions Decision

Level 1: Trigger

April plenary adopts measures escalating pressure on Georgia (Probability: 55-65%)

Level 2: Immediate Consequences

Level 3: Second-Order Consequences

Consequence Tree Visualization (Mermaid)

Aggregate Consequence Assessment

The April 2026 plenary decisions will shape EU institutional direction across three domains. The stakes are highest on the EU-US trade track (direct economic impact) and lowest on Georgia (important symbolically but limited economic leverage). The Braun case is an institutional inflection point that will set precedents for how the EP manages far-right extremism within its own membership.

WEP Grade: MODERATE-HIGH consequence severity across portfolio Admiralty Grade: B2 — consequence analysis based on A1 legislative record + analytical extrapolation

Legislative Disruption

View source: threat-assessment/legislative-disruption.md

For Citizens — How Laws Get Blocked

Not every proposal becomes EU law. Legislation can be disrupted in many ways: minority blocking coalitions can prevent qualified majority votes in Council; legal challenges can overturn laws in court; implementation gaps can make laws ineffective; and political shifts can reverse previously adopted frameworks. This analysis maps the active legislative disruption threats in the current EP cycle.

Disruption Threat Assessment

Status: 🟡 POTENTIAL (not yet materialized) Mechanism: US could mount WTO challenge to EU retaliation measures (TA-10-2026-0096); parallel bilateral pressure on EU member states to defect from unified EU position Affected Legislation: TA-10-2026-0096 (US tariff retaliation authorization); follow-on delegated acts Actor: US Trump administration; some EU business lobbies Probability of Disruption: 40-55% of partial disruption (delay/modification); 10-15% of full reversal Evidence: WTO dispute settlement procedures; historical EU-US trade disputes patterns (B2) Legislative Response Readiness: Commission has legal team deployed; EU trade defense instruments (TDI) provide established procedural pathway

Disruption Threat 2: SRMR3 Member State Non-Compliance

Status: 🟡 POTENTIAL (implementation phase risk) Mechanism: Germany, Netherlands, or Austria could resist full SRB authority expansion; Bundestag constitutional challenge possible; member state non-transposition within deadline Affected Legislation: TA-10-2026-0092 (SRMR3) Actor: Northern creditor state governments; Bundesverfassungsgericht (German Constitutional Court) Probability of Disruption: 25-35% of partial disruption; 5% of full reversal Evidence: Historical German court challenges to EU banking union provisions; member state implementation patterns (B2) Legislative Response Readiness: Commission infringement proceedings authority; ECB supervisory override capacity

Disruption Threat 3: Anti-Corruption Framework Subsidiarity Challenge

Status: 🟢 LOW (monitoring only) Mechanism: Some member states invoking subsidiarity on anti-corruption obligations; European Court of Justice challenge Affected Legislation: TA-10-2026-0094 (anti-corruption framework) Actor: Member states with implementation concerns Probability of Disruption: 15-25% of limited disruption (delays); less than 5% of full reversal Evidence: Subsidiarity protocol mechanisms; ECJ jurisprudence on EU competence (B2)

Disruption Threat 4: AI/GenAI Framework Fragmentation

Status: 🟡 POTENTIAL (ongoing) Mechanism: AI Act implementation creates regulatory fragmentation between national authorities; Big Tech lobbying for lighter GenAI obligations; US trade pressure to align EU AI framework with US preferences Affected Legislation: TA-10-2026-0066 (GenAI copyright); AI Act implementation delegated acts Actor: US tech industry; some EU member state digital ministries; market-liberal EP factions Probability of Disruption: 35-45% of significant modification; 20-30% of framework delay Evidence: AI Act implementation challenges (B2); TA-10-2026-0066 context (A1)

Disruption Pathway Map (Mermaid)

Aggregate Disruption Risk Assessment

Legislation Disruption Probability Severity Net Risk
Trade Retaliation 40-55% HIGH 🔴 SIGNIFICANT
SRMR3 25-35% MODERATE 🟡 MODERATE
Anti-Corruption 15-25% LOW 🟢 LOW
GenAI 35-45% MODERATE 🟡 MODERATE

Portfolio Disruption WEP Band: MODERATE — laws are being adopted but face meaningful implementation challenges

Data Sources

Evidence Source Admiralty Grade
Adopted texts EP Open Data Portal TA-10-2026 series A1
Disruption mechanisms Analytical inference from legal/political patterns B2
WTO procedures Public record (WTO dispute settlement rules) A1
German court challenges Historical precedent analysis B3

WEP Grade: MODERATE legislative disruption risk Admiralty Grade: B2

Scenarios & Wildcards

Scenario Forecast

View source: intelligence/scenario-forecast.md

Scenario Framework

Three scenarios for the next 90 days (May–July 2026) based on EP April plenary decisions and external developments.

Scenario A: Sustained European Assertiveness (40% Probability)

Narrative: The April plenary affirms EU-US trade retaliation, strengthens Georgia sanctions language, and approves anti-corruption implementation measures. EPP-S&D-Renew coalition holds. The US opts for preliminary trade negotiations rather than full escalation. SRMR3 implementation proceeds on schedule. EU emerges from Q2 2026 with strengthened institutional credibility.

Triggers: EU-Canada trade deal progress; US business lobby pressure secures negotiations; EPP right wing remains disciplined; German federal government supports EC position WEP Score: 3.0/5.0 (MODERATE — stable but vigilance required) Indicators to watch:

Scenario B: Managed Friction (45% Probability) — Most Likely

Narrative: April plenary passes routine resolutions without major escalation. EU-US trade tensions remain high but neither side escalates to full tariff war. Georgia situation deteriorates slowly but EU stops short of formal sanctions. Coalition holds but with visible internal tensions. SRMR3 implementation delayed by 6 months. EP legislative output strong but implementation velocity low.

Triggers: EPP internal divisions on trade escalation; Commission preference for negotiated solution; Georgia case not resolved but not catastrophically worse; ECR stabilizes post-Braun WEP Score: 3.5/5.0 (MODERATE-HIGH — manageable but watchlist) Indicators to watch:

Scenario C: Institutional Stress (15% Probability)

Narrative: US escalates to broader tariff war including services/tech; EU member states begin defecting from unified EP position (Germany opens bilateral track); coalition fractures on Green Deal rollback vote; Georgia arrests more EU-affiliated civil society leaders; Braun case becomes media firestorm splitting ECR further.

Triggers: Trump escalation to 50%+ tariffs on EU manufactures; major German corporate lobbying breaking EU solidarity; second major ECR controversy simultaneous with Braun WEP Score: 4.5/5.0 (HIGH — crisis management mode) Indicators to watch:

Scenario Probability Summary

Scenario Probability WEP Primary Driver
A — Sustained Assertiveness 40% MODERATE (3.0) EPP discipline + US negotiation
B — Managed Friction 45% MODERATE-HIGH (3.5) Status quo continuation
C — Institutional Stress 15% HIGH (4.5) US escalation + coalition fracture

Baseline (Scenario B most likely): EU navigates multiple simultaneous pressures with imperfect but functional institutional responses. IMF WEO April 2026 downside scenarios materialize partially but not catastrophically (data-vintage="WEO-April-2026").

Admiralty Grade: B2 — scenario analysis extrapolated from A1 legislative record and geopolitical assessment

Wildcards Blackswans

View source: intelligence/wildcards-blackswans.md

Black Swan Events (Low Probability, Extreme Impact)

Black Swan 1: Major EU Bank Failure During SRMR3 Implementation Gap

Probability: 🟢 1-3% Impact: 🔴 CRITICAL — financial contagion; SRMR3 untested at scale; political crisis Scenario: A medium-large EU bank (Italy, Spain, or Eastern Europe) encounters liquidity crisis before SRMR3 early intervention tools are fully operational. Resolution fund activation creates intergovernmental crisis over mutualization. Warning Indicators: ECB stress test failures; sovereign bond spread widening; bank equity price collapse

Black Swan 2: EP Governing Coalition Collapse

Probability: 🟢 2-4% Impact: 🔴 CRITICAL — institutional paralysis; Commission confidence vote; new EP majority configuration Scenario: EPP-PfE informal alignment on three or more votes triggers S&D and Renew to publicly denounce partnership; extraordinary EP plenary convenes to discuss political direction; Commission facing EP confidence motion Warning Indicators: EPP whip failing on Green Deal vote; Weber-Orbán bilateral meeting; S&D-EPP joint statement absence on major vote

Black Swan 3: US-EU Security Crisis (Beyond Trade)

Probability: 🟢 1-2% Impact: 🔴 CRITICAL — NATO coherence; EU defence integration acceleration; fundamental EU-US relationship realignment Scenario: Trump administration formally announces Article 5 conditionality; EU member state seeking bilateral US security guarantee undermines collective EU position; EP emergency session on EU defence Warning Indicators: US Secretary of Defense statements on Europe; European defence spending commitments; bilateral US-UK security agreements

Wildcard Events (Moderate Probability, High Uncertainty)

Wildcard 1: Sudden Georgian Escalation

Probability: 🟡 15-25% Impact: 🟡 HIGH — forces EP to rapid sanctions; tests EU neighbourhood policy Scenario: Georgian Dream arrests 5+ EU-affiliated civil society leaders in a single week; EU-Georgia Association Committee chair calls emergency session; April plenary passes emergency sanctions resolution Current Position: Khoshtaria imprisonment (one arrest) — escalation to mass arrests would be qualitative jump

Wildcard 2: ECR Fragmentation Beyond Braun

Probability: 🟡 15-20% Impact: 🟡 HIGH — ECR falls below 81 seats; PfE gains; governing coalition needs to recalculate Scenario: Second major ECR scandal simultaneous with Braun trial; Italian FdI leadership publicly distances from ECR; 10-15 MEPs migrate to EPP or PfE Warning Indicators: FdI leadership statements; ECR group votes on Braun expulsion (or absence of vote)

Wildcard 3: Technology Black Swan (Major Data Breach/AI Incident)

Probability: 🟡 10-15% Impact: 🟡 HIGH — accelerates AI Act enforcement; creates political urgency for EP digital sovereignty agenda Scenario: Major AI-powered disinformation attack on EP elections or Commission communications; or major EU data breach involving MEP personal data Warning Indicators: CERT-EU threat level; AI Act enforcement office staffing

WEP Assessment

Portfolio WEP Band for Black Swans: HIGH (inherently) — black swans carry maximum WEP when they materialize Wildcards WEP Band: MODERATE-HIGH

Admiralty Grade: B2 — scenario extrapolation; inherently uncertain; use only as early warning framing

Cross-Run Continuity

Cross Run Diff

View source: intelligence/cross-run-diff.md

Cross-Run Differential Summary

This is the first run for 2026-04-27 breaking news analysis. No prior same-day run manifest.json exists for comparison. Cross-run diff is therefore a baseline establishment report rather than a differential analysis.

Baseline Established: 2026-04-27 Run 1777273481

New Developments Since Previous Analysis Cycle

Based on comparison with typical breaking news cadence and the 51 adopted texts in 2026 Q1-Q2 visible in the EP Open Data Portal:

New since last documented EP breaking event:

  1. April 27-30 Strasbourg plenary is LIVE — first active plenary since March 26 session that passed US tariff retaliation
  2. TA-10-2026-0096 (US tariff retaliation) passed March 26 — this is the most recent major breaking event prior to this analysis
  3. MTG-PL-2026-04-27 confirmed via EP API with 8 debates scheduled but agenda titles not yet published (session just started)
  4. No new EP adopted texts dated April 27 visible in feed (FRESHNESS_FALLBACK indicates April 2026 data; specific April 27 items may not yet be published)

Structural Changes Detected

Re-Run Merge Rule Application

Per 02-analysis-protocol.md §2: No prior same-day manifest exists. Re-run merge rule does not apply. All artifacts are written fresh.

Baseline Flag Summary

Indicator Status Flag
Prior run exists No N/A (clean baseline)
Political landscape changed No STABLE
New adopted texts today 0 confirmed FRESHNESS_FALLBACK
Active plenary YES 🔴 ACTIVE — MTG-PL-2026-04-27
Events feed available NO 🟡 KNOWN DEGRADATION (§11)
Procedures feed available RECESS_MODE 🟡 KNOWN DEGRADATION (§11)

Admiralty Grade: A2 — this is a factual data availability report with no inferred content

Extended Intelligence

Comparative International

View source: extended/comparative-international.md

Comparative Context: EP vs. Other Democratic Parliaments

How does the EU Parliament's current situation compare to peer democratic institutions globally?

Comparison 1: EU vs. US Congress on Trade Policy

Context: Both parliaments are navigating the same trade war from opposite sides. US Congress: Has largely ceded trade authority to the executive; Congressional Republicans divided between free-traders and economic nationalists but deferring to Trump on tariffs; limited institutional pushback on executive trade actions. EP Assessment: EP has been MORE assertive than US Congress in using its institutional role to scrutinize and direct trade policy. TA-10-2026-0096 represents EP actively setting trade retaliation framework — a stronger institutional role than the US Congress currently plays on similar issues. Implication: EP's institutional assertiveness on trade is a democratic strength relative to peer institutions.

Comparison 2: EU Banking Reform vs. US Dodd-Frank

Context: Both are post-crisis banking regulatory frameworks. US: Dodd-Frank (2010) — comprehensive; faced significant rollback under Trump 1.0 (2018 EGRRCPA partial rollback); implementation incomplete on several provisions. EU SRMR3: More incremental than Dodd-Frank at the system-wide level; advantage is that EU framework is being strengthened (not weakened) in current political cycle; disadvantage is that EU banking union remains incomplete (no EDIS). Implication: EU is more vulnerable to banking crisis than US due to incomplete banking union; SRMR3 is progress but not sufficient.

Comparison 3: EU Democratic Values Enforcement vs. Council of Europe

Context: Both institutions face democratic backsliding challenges. Council of Europe: Has Venice Commission; European Court of Human Rights; limited enforcement tools beyond expulsion (used for Russia). EP: Has Article 7 TEU; has adopted strong resolutions on Georgia, Braun; governing coalition committed to rule of law. Implication: EP is more effective than Council of Europe at actual legislative enforcement because it controls legislative power; but still lacks direct sanction authority over MEP conduct.

Key Comparative Findings

  1. EP is institutionally assertive relative to US Congress on trade — a democratic strength
  2. EU banking union is incomplete relative to US/UK frameworks — a structural vulnerability
  3. EP enforcement tools are stronger than Council of Europe but weaker than a national parliament — an institutional design limitation
  4. EU's multilateral posture (EU-Canada solidarity, WTO engagement) is more robust than US unilateralism — a foreign policy strength

WEP Grade: MODERATE — EU institutional performance is above-average comparative baseline Admiralty Grade: B2 — comparative analysis with B2 institutional knowledge base

Devils Advocate Analysis

View source: extended/devils-advocate-analysis.md

Purpose: Challenging Dominant Analytical Assumptions

This analysis deliberately challenges the prevailing analytical consensus to surface risks of analytical bias and groupthink.

Challenge 1: "EU Trade Retaliation Will Deter US" — CHALLENGED

Consensus view: EU's adoption of TA-10-2026-0096 sends a credible retaliatory signal that will deter further US tariff escalation.

Devil's Advocate: The Trump administration has historically responded to EU retaliation with further escalation rather than de-escalation. The EU's retaliatory measures are carefully calibrated to avoid provoking a response — which paradoxically signals a limit on EU willingness to escalate. US read: EU is bluffing. Risk of misreading EU resolve is HIGH. The US may correctly assess that Germany's automotive sector dependence will eventually fracture EU solidarity. Probability this challenge is correct: 35-45%.

Challenge 2: "Governing Coalition Is Stable" — CHALLENGED

Consensus view: EPP+S&D+Renew coalition with 397 seats provides a comfortable majority.

Devil's Advocate: 397 seats is only 38 above the 359 threshold. On any given vote, 20 EPP members defecting to the right — combined with full ECR+PfE+ESN opposition — can flip the outcome. EP votes are not party-line votes with full discipline; individual MEP absenteeism and cross-voting are routine. The "stable majority" is an average — on contested issues, the real majority may be much thinner. Probability this challenge is materially correct: 30-40%.

Challenge 3: "EP Can Constrain Georgia" — CHALLENGED

Consensus view: EP resolutions and EU leverage (Association Agreement, visa liberalisation) can force Georgian Dream to change behaviour.

Devil's Advocate: Georgian Dream has made clear that it prioritizes domestic authoritarian consolidation over EU association benefits — the party has explicitly chosen to sacrifice the EU path. EU leverage through trade preferences and visa liberalisation is meaningful to Georgian civil society and business, but the Georgian Dream government's political survival does not depend on EU approval. Probability this challenge is correct: 50-60% (Georgia continues deteriorating despite EP pressure).

Challenge 4: "SRMR3 Solves EU Banking Risk" — CHALLENGED

Consensus view: SRMR3 adoption completes the EU's banking safety net.

Devil's Advocate: SRMR3 is an incremental reform, not a comprehensive solution. It still leaves significant resolution funding gaps, does not create a full EU-level deposit guarantee, and its early intervention framework has never been tested under real stress conditions. The next banking crisis in EU may expose SRMR3's limits just as dramatically as the 2012 crisis exposed SRMR1's gaps. Probability this challenge is correct: 25-35%.

Net Assessment

Devil's advocate analysis supports the view that the analytical baseline is broadly correct but risk skew is asymmetric: downside scenarios are more severe than upside scenarios. The baseline (Scenario B, Managed Friction) is most likely, but the tail risks (Scenario C, Institutional Stress) are more severe than the upside surprises (Scenario A).

WEP Grade: MODERATE — devil's advocate challenges are real but not conclusive Admiralty Grade: B2 — adversarial analytical exercise against A1/B2 base

Forward Indicators

View source: extended/forward-indicators.md

Purpose

Forward indicators are observable signals that, if they change, should trigger reassessment of the analytical baseline. This is a monitoring framework for the next 90 days.

Tier 1 — Primary Indicators (Check Weekly)

Trade War Trajectory

Coalition Health

Georgia

Tier 2 — Secondary Indicators (Check Monthly)

Banking/SRMR3

AI/Digital

ECR/Braun

Tier 3 — Economic Context Indicators (Quarterly)

Indicator Summary Table

Indicator Current Status Threshold for Reassessment
US tariff level ~25% 35%+
EPP vote discipline INTACT >15 EPP defections on key vote
Khoshtaria status IMPRISONED RELEASED or TRIAL STARTED
SRB delegated acts 0/350+ published < 50 published by Q3 2026
ECR member count 81 Below 70
IMF GDP forecast EU Baseline (WEO Apr 2026) Downgrade >0.5 pp

WEP Grade: MODERATE — indicators established; no triggers currently crossed Admiralty Grade: A2 — factual indicator framework; forward uncertainty is inherent

Historical Parallels

View source: extended/historical-parallels.md

Purpose: Learning from Historical Analogues

Historical parallels provide context for understanding current EP dynamics. They should be used as lenses, not blueprints — each situation is unique.

Parallel 1: EU-US Steel Tariff Dispute (2002-2004)

Historical Event: Bush administration imposed 30% steel tariffs in 2002 under Section 201; EU retaliated with targeted tariffs on politically sensitive US goods (Florida orange juice, textile products targeting swing states). Outcome: US withdrew tariffs in December 2003 after WTO ruled against them and EU retaliation was calibrated to target politically sensitive US constituencies. Relevance to 2026: EU's current retaliation strategy (TA-10-2026-0096) follows a similar targeted-constituency logic. The 2002-2004 precedent suggests the strategy can work — but required 18 months and WTO ruling. Key difference: Trump administration shows much less respect for WTO rulings than Bush did.

Parallel 2: EP10 Governing Coalition vs. EP7 (2009-2014 EPP-S&D)

Historical Event: EP7 governing coalition (EPP+S&D under Barroso Commission, post-financial crisis) managed multiple crises: eurozone crisis, Greek bailouts, Cyprus resolution. Outcome: Coalition held through multiple high-stakes votes; EPP and S&D maintained discipline despite significant economic pain and public pressure. Relevance to 2026: EP10's current governing coalition faces analogous multi-crisis stress (trade war, democratic values, banking). EP7 precedent suggests coalitions are more durable than outside observers expect when institutional incentives for cooperation remain strong.

Parallel 3: EP Treatment of Austrian FPÖ (2000)

Historical Event: Austrian far-right FPÖ entered national government in 2000; EU imposed sanctions on Austria (bilateral, not formal EU mechanisms). Outcome: Sanctions proved ineffective; lifted after six months; established precedent that EU has limited tools to constrain far-right in government. Relevance to 2026 (Braun): The Braun case is individual (not government-level) but highlights the same institutional tension — EP can express condemnation but has limited compulsory tools short of formal Rules of Procedure sanctions.

Parallel 4: Georgia vs. Ukraine Pre-2014 Trajectory

Historical Event: Ukraine under Yanukovych (2010-2014) followed a similar trajectory to current Georgia — authoritarian consolidation while nominally pursuing EU association; EU leveraged association agreement to encourage democratic standards. Outcome: Ukraine's Euromaidan revolution reversed the trajectory; but required mass popular mobilization, not EU institutional pressure alone. Relevance to 2026 (Georgia): Georgian civil society is strong but Georgian Dream has demonstrated willingness to use violence and imprisonment. EP resolutions are necessary but insufficient without stronger EU sanctions and active support for Georgian civil society.

Key Historical Lessons Applied

  1. Targeted trade retaliation can work — but requires 18+ months and credible WTO backing. US willingness to respect WTO rulings is lower in 2026 than in 2003 (critical caveat).
  2. EP coalitions are durable under multi-crisis stress — EP7 precedent is encouraging for EP10 stability.
  3. EU has limited tools for constraining far-right normalization — Braun case will likely follow FPÖ pattern: strong condemnation, limited compulsory effect.
  4. Association agreement leverage alone cannot stop authoritarian consolidation in neighbourhood states without mass mobilization or credible sanctions.

WEP Grade: MODERATE — historical analogues are informative but imperfect Admiralty Grade: B2 — historical analysis based on public record; B3 for inferential application to current context

Intelligence Assessment

View source: extended/intelligence-assessment.md

ICD-203 BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front)

The European Parliament's April 2026 Strasbourg plenary convenes on 2026-04-27 with the governing coalition intact and the EU in a structured confrontation posture with the United States over trade, while simultaneously managing Georgian democratic backsliding, SRMR3 banking reform implementation, and the internal ECR/Braun controversy. The most consequential near-term risk is EU-US trade war escalation; the most consequential institutional risk is EPP right-wing drift toward PfE accommodation. The political system is functional but operating under simultaneous stress across four vectors.

Assessment Body

Key Judgement 1 (High Confidence): Governing Coalition Holds Through Q2 2026

EPP (185) + S&D (135) + Renew (77) = 397 seats — 38 above the 359 minimum majority. All three parties have strong institutional incentives to maintain the coalition. EPP's right-wing pressure is real but insufficient to break formal coalition discipline in the near term.

Key Judgement 2 (Moderate Confidence): US-EU Trade Confrontation Persists, Escalation 40%

The EU has crossed the Rubicon on trade retaliation (TA-10-2026-0096). The US Trump administration has demonstrated willingness to use tariffs as coercive tools. The most likely scenario is managed confrontation — neither a return to free trade nor a full trade war. Full escalation (Scenario C) probability: 15%. Negotiated improvement (Scenario A): 40%. IMF WEO April 2026 economic context: EU downside risk from trade disruption is meaningful but not catastrophic (data-vintage="WEO-April-2026").

Key Judgement 3 (Moderate Confidence): Georgia Situation Worsens Before It Improves

Georgian Dream has demonstrated willingness to imprison opposition leaders and test EU tolerance. EP resolution (TA-10-2026-0083) has not changed Georgian government behaviour. April plenary is likely to strengthen language further. EU sanctions escalation probability: 40-50% in Q2 2026.

Key Judgement 4 (High Confidence): SRMR3 Will Be Implemented with Delays

The political adoption is complete (TA-10-2026-0092). Implementation will proceed but with 6-18 month delays on key delegated acts due to German and Dutch governmental complications. No acute banking crisis is expected in near term; implementation delay is a long-term structural risk.

Key Judgement 5 (Low Confidence): ECR Internal Dynamics Remain Fluid

The Braun case creates genuine ECR instability. FdI-Meloni's continued pragmatic drift may produce a formal ECR split or migration of Italian MEPs to EPP. Low confidence because internal group politics are opaque to external analysis.

Analytic Standards Compliance

Admiralty Grade: B2 — Structured intelligence assessment based on A1 EP Open Data and B2 analytical inference

MCP Reliability Audit

View source: intelligence/mcp-reliability-audit.md

Executive Summary

This audit assesses the reliability of EP MCP server tools used in Stage A data collection for the April 27, 2026 breaking news run. All tool failures are triaged against the §11 known-issues table before classification.

Overall Reliability: 🟡 DEGRADED (5/8 primary tools returned data; 3 degraded/unavailable) Action Required: None — all degraded tools match known §11 patterns (🟢 or 🔵 classification)

Tool Audit Table

Tool Status Result §11 Triage Action
get_adopted_texts_feed 🟢 OK 25 items (FRESHNESS_FALLBACK to year=2026 list) §11 row: FRESHNESS_FALLBACK expected when today-feed is empty None
get_events_feed 🔴 ERROR "EP API returned error-in-body" §11 row #8: getEventsFeed() downgrades TIMEOUT to 🟡 SLOW_FEED_WARNING Known degraded endpoint; no action
get_procedures_feed 🟡 DEGRADED RECESS_MODE — historical data (1972-1980) returned §11 row #5: detectProceduresFeedRecessMode() detects historical-archive responses; adds recessMode:true Expected recessMode; no action
get_meps_feed 🟢 OK Full MEP roster (payload too large — 33MB) §11: OVERSIZED_PAYLOAD — full-census dump; MCP saves to payloadPath No upstream issue; data accessible
get_adopted_texts (year=2026) 🟢 OK 51 items returned across 3 pages Direct endpoint reliable None
get_plenary_sessions (year=2026) 🟢 OK 21 sessions confirmed including MTG-PL-2026-04-27 Direct endpoint reliable None
generate_political_landscape 🟢 OK 719 MEPs, 9 groups, full composition Computed from real data None
analyze_coalition_dynamics 🟡 LIMITED Group composition data; cohesion null (per-MEP data unavailable) §11: Per-MEP voting statistics not available from EP API Expected limitation; size-proxy only
early_warning_system 🟡 LIMITED Structural indicators only; 3 warnings §11: Voting cohesion unavailable Expected; still useful
get_voting_records (Apr 2026) 🔴 EMPTY 0 records returned for Apr 1-27 §11: EP publishes roll-call data with 2-4 week delay Expected delay; not an error
get_meeting_foreseen_activities 🟡 LIMITED 8 activities scheduled; no titles published yet Normal for day-of session; data populates as session proceeds None
get_parliamentary_questions 🟡 LIMITED 11 questions; no titles/authors (placeholder data) Known EP API limitation for questions endpoint No action

Degraded Tool Analysis

1. get_events_feed — Error-in-Body

Classification: 🟢 KNOWN (§11 row #8 — getEventsFeed downgrades TIMEOUT errors to SLOW_FEED_WARNING) Impact: Moderate — events data unavailable, but plenary session data obtained via direct get_plenary_sessions endpoint Workaround Applied: Used get_plenary_sessions(year=2026) as direct fallback; confirmed April 27-30 Strasbourg plenary confirmed

2. get_procedures_feed — RECESS_MODE

Classification: 🟢 KNOWN (§11 row #5 — detectProceduresFeedRecessMode() — historical-archive responses expected during low-activity periods) Impact: Low — procedure feed data from 1972-1980 unusable, but adopted texts and plenary decisions provide equivalent legislative intelligence Workaround Applied: Adopted texts feed and direct get_adopted_texts(year=2026) used as primary source; 51 adopted texts in 2026 captured comprehensively

3. get_voting_records (April 2026) — Empty Results

Classification: 🟢 KNOWN (EP API roll-call publication delay: 2-4 weeks) Impact: Low for breaking news — April 2026 session only started today; no votes yet tabulated even if the April plenary week were complete Workaround Applied: March 26, 2026 session voting outcomes captured via adopted texts; current session to be tracked in future runs

4. Payload Size Issues (get_meps_feed)

Classification: 🔵 KNOWN LIMITATION (OVERSIZED_PAYLOAD — full-census dump >200 items) Impact: Minimal — data saved to payloadPath and accessible; group composition correctly derived from generate_political_landscape Workaround Applied: Political landscape tool used for group-level analysis

Data Coverage Assessment

Category Coverage Quality
Adopted texts (2026) HIGH — 51 items captured A1
Plenary sessions (2026) HIGH — all 21 sessions confirmed A1
Political landscape HIGH — all 9 groups, 719 MEPs A1/B2
Voting records LOW (expected — publication delay) N/A
Events/agenda LOW (feed error + day-of session) C3
MEP individual data MEDIUM (payload too large; group data available) B2
Coalition cohesion LOW (structural data only — no per-MEP voting) B3

Reliability Score

Stage A Reliability: 🟡 MEDIUM-HIGH (7/10)

Upstream Issue Filing Assessment

Per §11 triage protocol: No new upstream issues to file. All degraded tools match known patterns. Existing upstream PRs/issues (v1.2.15+ normalization via PR #405) remain relevant for group-code normalization.

Recommendation: No action required. Data quality sufficient for Stage B analysis.

Analytical Quality & Reflection

Methodology Reflection

View source: intelligence/methodology-reflection.md

SAT (Structured Analytic Technique) Documentation

Techniques Applied

  1. Political Force Field Analysis (classification/forces-analysis.md) — applied Lewin's force field framework to EP political dynamics across four domains. Technique was appropriate for the multi-vector political environment.

  2. Actor Mapping / Social Network Analysis (classification/actor-mapping.md) — mapped primary and secondary actors; used capability-intent matrix. Strength: grounded in A1 EP Open Data evidence. Limitation: voting-level MEP data unavailable (EP API delay); group-level proxies used.

  3. Structured Risk Scoring (risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md) — WEP 1-5 scale applied consistently; probability × impact scoring; residual risk after mitigations. Standard risk management technique applied to political domain.

  4. Political Capital Analysis (risk-scoring/political-capital-risk.md) — adapted from public diplomacy capital accounting; applied to EP groups and Commission. Novel application; appropriateness: HIGH for EP institutional context.

  5. STRIDE Threat Modeling (intelligence/threat-model.md) — adapted from information security; applied to institutional integrity. Technique extension is experimental; confidence level appropriately downgraded to B2.

  6. Scenario Analysis (intelligence/scenario-forecast.md) — three scenarios A/B/C with explicit probability estimates. Scenario B (Managed Friction, 45%) most likely; A and C bracket range. Standard SAT technique, well-established.

  7. Devil's Advocate (extended/devils-advocate-analysis.md) — explicitly challenged four consensus assumptions. Found that trade deterrence assumption is most vulnerable; coalition stability assumption is moderately challenged.

  8. Historical Parallel Analysis (extended/historical-parallels.md) — four historical analogues identified. Quality of analogues: HIGH for steel tariffs (2002-2004) and coalition durability (EP7); MODERATE for Georgia-Ukraine parallel.

  9. Consequence Tree Analysis (threat-assessment/consequence-trees.md) — mapped second and third-order consequences for three key decision nodes. Technique appropriate; uncertainty increases with each level of consequence.

Data Quality Assessment

Data Category Quality Limitation
EP adopted texts HIGH (A1) Complete within 2026 data
Political group composition HIGH (A1) Current, accurate
Voting records UNAVAILABLE EP API 2-4 week delay
Events/agenda titles UNAVAILABLE API degradation (§11 known)
Procedures feed RECESS_MODE Historical data (§11 known)
MEP individual positions INFERRED (B2) Group-level only
Economic context (IMF WEO) HIGH (A1) data-vintage="WEO-April-2026"

Analytical Confidence Summary

Limitations and Caveats

  1. No plenary vote data available — April 27 session just started; votes will not be published for 2-4 weeks. Analysis is based on structural factors and the pre-session legislative record.
  2. No MEP-level behavioral data — EP API provides only aggregate votes, not individual MEP positions. All individual MEP analysis is inferred.
  3. Events feed unavailable — agenda details for MTG-PL-2026-04-27 are unknown (§11 row #8 degradation). Breaking news analysis is based on the structural political situation and the known pre-session legislative record.
  4. FRESHNESS_FALLBACK on adopted texts feed — feed returned 2026 items but not specifically April 27 items. Most recent confirmed EP action is March 26, 2026.
  5. First run of day — no prior run comparison possible; cross-run diff is baseline only.

Quality Assessment

Overall analysis quality: MEETS THRESHOLD for Stage C gate

Step 10.5 attestation: Methodology reflection complete. This is the final artifact per the 10-step analysis protocol.

Supplementary Intelligence

Tradecraft References

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

Methodologies

Artifact templates

Analysis Index

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

Section Artifact Path
section-executive-brief executive-brief executive-brief.md
section-synthesis synthesis-summary intelligence/synthesis-summary.md
section-actors-forces actor-mapping classification/actor-mapping.md
section-actors-forces forces-analysis classification/forces-analysis.md
section-actors-forces impact-matrix classification/impact-matrix.md
section-coalitions-voting coalition-dynamics intelligence/coalition-dynamics.md
section-risk risk-matrix risk-scoring/risk-matrix.md
section-risk political-capital-risk risk-scoring/political-capital-risk.md
section-risk legislative-velocity-risk risk-scoring/legislative-velocity-risk.md
section-threat political-threat-landscape intelligence/political-threat-landscape.md
section-threat threat-model intelligence/threat-model.md
section-threat actor-threat-profiles threat-assessment/actor-threat-profiles.md
section-threat consequence-trees threat-assessment/consequence-trees.md
section-threat legislative-disruption threat-assessment/legislative-disruption.md
section-scenarios scenario-forecast intelligence/scenario-forecast.md
section-scenarios wildcards-blackswans intelligence/wildcards-blackswans.md
section-continuity cross-run-diff intelligence/cross-run-diff.md
section-extended-intel comparative-international extended/comparative-international.md
section-extended-intel devils-advocate-analysis extended/devils-advocate-analysis.md
section-extended-intel forward-indicators extended/forward-indicators.md
section-extended-intel historical-parallels extended/historical-parallels.md
section-extended-intel intelligence-assessment extended/intelligence-assessment.md
section-mcp-reliability mcp-reliability-audit intelligence/mcp-reliability-audit.md
section-quality-reflection methodology-reflection intelligence/methodology-reflection.md