European Ombudsman Emily O’Reilly | Stephanie LeCocq/EFE via EPA | Stephanie Lecocq/EPA EU’s public watchdog calls for more lawmaking transparency Ombudsman Emily O’Reilly wants more disclosure about informal legislative deals between institutions.

The EU’s public watchdog Thursday called on the union’s main institutions to be more open about their lawmaking processes.

European Ombudsman Emily O’Reilly said the closed-door talks known as “trilogues” — in which representatives from the European Commission, Parliament and member countries meet to pre-cook agreements on legislation — were “efficient” but too cloaked in secrecy.

After a year-long investigation, O’Reilly called the trilogues “an important tool for reaching agreement” between the EU institutions, “allowing 85 percent of laws to be agreed at an early stage.” But she said there needed to be more public information about them.

“It is difficult to find out when trilogues are taking place, what is being discussed and by whom without a great deal of time and effort,” she said.

While stopping short of demanding that those meetings be public, she called for more disclosure about them before and after they occur. That includes publishing the dates and agendas of the meetings beforehand, as well as the names of the decision-makers present in the meetings.

O’Reilly also said the institutions should be more open about detailing the Parliament and Council negotiating positions on Commission proposals — information that lobbyists would also find enlightening.

“Making this information available should enable citizens to hold their representatives to account and to engage effectively in the legislative process,” O’Reilly said, adding that she did want to slow down the EU’s lawmaking machine. “My proposals also allow for legislators to have the political space they need to negotiate, deliberate and to come to agreement.”

The ombudsman asked the institutions to respond before the end of 2016 on her proposals.

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