Political Group Memberships
Voting Statistics
Group Alignment
How often this MEP votes with their political group majority.
Rebel Subjects
Topics where this MEP most often breaks with their political group.
Procedures
187 votesFinancing for development – ahead of the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville
Demand increased development cooperation funding to achieve USD 1.3 trillion annually by 2035, including innovative financing and debt relief.
Strengthening rural areas in the EU through cohesion policy
Prioritise cohesion policy funding towards rural areas to address demographic decline, improve services, and modernise agriculture.
Amendments to Parliament’s Rules of Procedure concerning the declaration of input (Article 8 of Annex I to the Rules of Procedure)
Require rapporteurs to list interest groups and third-country representatives providing input on their reports.
Deliberations of the Committee on Petitions in 2023
Increase citizen awareness of petition rights through a structured information campaign in all EU languages.
Resolution on the old challenges and new commercial practices in the internal market
Fund customs authorities and market surveillance to combat illicit goods sold on e-commerce platforms.
Written Explanations
Written explanations of vote submitted after plenary sessions.
Resolution on reinforcing EU’s unwavering support to Ukraine against Russia’s war of aggression and the increasing military cooperation between North Korea and Russia
The Bulgarian S&D delegation, while recognising the need of full support to Ukraine, still has serious concerns about some provisions in this resolution that, in our view, threaten the prospects for peace and risk further military escalation and destabilisation with global implications. The call to grant Ukraine permission to use long-range missiles against targets within Russia, as well as to provide such weapons would escalate the conflict and potentially expand the war. The resolution also calls for NATO allies to collectively and individually commit no less than 0.25 % of their GDP annually to military support for Ukraine. That is neither realistic nor sustainable and goes well beyond the EP responsibilities, interfering with the sovereign rights of Member States to define their financial, foreign and defence policy, especially on such sensitive issue. Those key votes for our delegation have been lost, so we could not support the proposed motion for a resolution and voted against it as a whole.
No written explanations available.