EU Scream

Ep.121: Ungoverning the EU

Oct 31, 2025
Alberto Alemanno, a law professor and founder of The Good Lobby, delves into the controversial shift in the EU towards deregulation, driven by Mario Draghi's influence. He explores how the euphemism of 'simplification' masks a significant reduction in protective regulations, aligning troublingly with US trends. Alemanno warns that omnibus laws undermine due process, risk corporate predictability, and hint at a bigger threat to environmental standards. He questions whether the EU is losing its regulatory power, raising concerns over member states' control and the erosion of confidence in public institutions.
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INSIGHT

Simplification Is Deregulation In Disguise

  • The EU's current push for "simplification" is a euphemism for broad deregulation across sectors.
  • Alberto Alemanno warns this marks a dramatic U-turn from decades of regulatory leadership in Brussels.
INSIGHT

Regulation Blamed Without Solid Evidence

  • Deregulation rhetoric frames regulation as the main cause of Europe's alleged lack of competitiveness.
  • Alemanno argues the evidence for that claim is thin and ignores regulation's long-term social benefits.
INSIGHT

Omnibus Bills Undermine Predictability

  • Omnibus laws package many separate rules into one vote to speed rollbacks and cut corners.
  • Alemanno likens this to lex satura and warns it injects unpredictability that harms businesses and civil society.
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