25/06/2026
On 15 July 2026, the European Commission will publish its seventh annual Rule of Law Report. This exercise has become a familiar ritual aimed at providing a thorough stock-take of where judicial independence, media freedom, anti-corruption efforts and checks and balances stand across the Union, followed by recommendations that too often disappear into the next reporting cycle without consequence.
The report is being published against a backdrop of continued democratic backsliding, shrinking civic space in several Member States, and a geopolitical climate in which rule of law debates risk being pushed to the margins by security and defence priorities. The EU also cannot credibly demand standards of its Member States that it does not hold itself to. The Commission, Council, Parliament and EU agencies need to operate transparently, respect judicial independence, and avoid shortcuts that bypass legal norms or democratic accountability for the sake of political convenience. At the same time, the EU is negotiating its next Multiannual Financial Framework (2028–2034) – a once-in-seven-years opportunity to decide whether respect for the rule of law actually determines who gets EU money, or remains a footnote.
A pivotal moment for the Rule of Law Report
- The MFF negotiations are live. Whatever conditionality framework is agreed for 2028–2034 will shape Member State and candidate country behaviour for the better part of a decade. If rule of law conditions are vague, optional, or politically negotiable, they will not work.
- Enforcement gaps are piling up. The Digital Services Act, the European Media Freedom Act and the Anti-SLAPP Directive all exist on paper. Whether they protect anyone in practice depends on the implementation, which the Commission has been slow to enforce.
- The report still treats candidate countries unevenly. Enlargement only works if the rule of law bar is consistent, measurable, and tied to actual funding decisions – not a parallel, lighter-touch process.
What Needs to Change
Together with 36 other civil society, human rights, journalism and media support organisations, we are calling on the European Commission to treat this year’s report as a turning point rather than a formality. Concretely, that means:
- Making rule of law conditionality central to the next MFF, with clear, public benchmarks Member States must meet before funds are released – not a mechanism that can be watered down through political bargaining.
- Tightening the link between the report and the rule of law toolbox, so recommendations name a responsible authority, a concrete objective and a deadline, and so the status of past recommendations is tracked cycle after cycle.
- Expanding civic space monitoring, including a dedicated chapter on the operating space for civil society and a structured channel for civil society and journalists to flag emerging restrictions before they escalate.
- Acting systematically on court rulings that go unimplemented, including faster use of financial sanctions and infringement proceedings when Member States ignore judgments from the EU’s and Europe’s top courts.
- Enforcing the EU’s media freedom toolkit, from full implementation of the DSA and EMFA to closing the domestic-case gap in the Anti-SLAPP Directive and pushing Member States to decriminalise defamation.
- Building a real roadmap for democratic recovery, drawing on Poland’s experience to support Member States working to reverse backsliding, while keeping pressure on those – including Hungary – still moving in the wrong direction.
- Bringing all candidate countries fully into the report, with recommendations as measurable as those for Member States, and a genuine link between progress on the rule of law and access to pre-accession funds.
A Report That Leads to Action
Our demand is that when the Rule of Law Report documents a problem, something actually follows from it – whether that is a withheld payment, an infringement procedure, or a targeted support package for a government trying to reverse course. The rule of law must become the foundation of EU’s other commitments – to democracy, to fundamental rights, to a credible enlargement process. Stay tuned to hear what we make of this year’s report.