Europe

Sirpa Rautio: Governments are increasingly hostile to scrutiny

Conflict lead: While the European Union’s Charter of Fundamental Rights remains a robust legal instrument, its practical application faces a growing backlash from national governments. Sirpa Rautio, director of the European Agency for Fundamental Rights, warns that authorities are increasingly viewing independent advocacy and public accountability as direct threats to their political agendas.

Sirpa Rautio: Governments are increasingly hostile to scrutiny

The core issue is not the Charter itself, which provides a comprehensive framework for human rights, but the uneven and often resistant implementation at the member-state level. Lawmakers frequently bypass necessary rights assessments, creating a gap between legal obligations and state practice. While the Luxembourg Court’s jurisprudence has significantly bolstered the Charter’s influence, transforming it from a theoretical document into a practical tool for national courts, the political climate has shifted toward confrontation.

Recent data from the Civic Space Update highlights a troubling trend: 67 percent of surveyed organizations report online threats, while 39 percent face politically motivated funding cuts. These pressures represent a broader effort to relegate civil society to a mere service-provider role, stripping groups of their ability to advocate for policy changes. Rautio notes that this aversion to scrutiny is no longer limited to niche issues like migration or LGBTI+ rights but has expanded to target trade unions and social organizations that challenge the ruling majority's perspective.

Despite these systemic risks—ranging from rising racism to the erosion of the rule of law—Rautio maintains that legal architecture and persistent grassroots resistance remain the primary defenses. Success, she argues, depends on the interplay between independent judicial oversight and the mobilization of citizens who demand accountability from their leaders.

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