After the European Parliament adopted the Copyright Directive last week without even considering changes, one final step remains: Its approval by the Council of Ministers.

(cc) by-nc Michael Gubi

Last chance to stop upload filters

The Council vote is now scheduled for Monday, April 15. That day’s meeting happens to be the Agriculture and Fisheries Council – so it will be the member states’ ministers of agriculture who will seal the deal on upload filters and the “link tax”.

A rejection on that day would be the final chance to make improvements to the Directive: If a big member state like Germany or the UK joined the opposition against it, negotiations would need to resume after the EU elections in May.

Germany remains the best chance

In Germany, the fact that 200,000 people took to the streets in protest hasn’t changed the government’s plans to vote for the law – but it did cause both coalition parties to try their hardest to deny responsibility:

Minister of Justice Katarina Barley (SPD) has said she wants to “prevent upload filters“, determined that Article 17 would lead to them and expressed regret at the outcome of the Parliament’s vote – and yet, she acts as if her hands are bound.

The CDU meanwhile tried to placate protesters by committing to implementing the law without upload filters – only to have their own EU Commissioner, who initiated the project in the first place, state right after the vote that this would be impossible.

At the request of the opposition, the German Parliament will consider demanding that the government vote against the Directive in Council later tonight.

Keeping up public pressure in Germany remains our best chance to stop the Directive. Another round of protests has already been announced for multiple cities this Saturday, April 6 – see SaveTheInternet.info for a list.

Other countries

In the United Kingdom, Conservative politician Boris Johnson has called the Copyright Directive “terrible for the internet”, claiming it was a “classic EU law” that the UK should not implement. Of course, he neglected to mention that 15 out of 19 of his party’s MEPs just voted in favour of it, and that the UK government could by itself still stop the project in Council. Helping the Directive pass and then blaming the EU for their own mistakes: That’s Brexit in a nutshell.

In Sweden, where most MEPs voted against the law, efforts are underway in the national Parliament to force the government to vote against the Directive in Council – while Sweden alone will not make the difference, this is an important sign that things can still change.

In February, the Directive was opposed by Italy, Poland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Finland. There’s a voting calculator tool on the Council website.

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How the Parliament vote broke down

You can check how your country’s MEPs voted on SaveYourInternet.eu. Pledge2019 has also published whether MEPs who pledged to vote against Article 13 actually did. Here’s the aggregate data by country and political group:

By Country

Scale:
Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czechia
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Netherlands  
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
UK

By Political Group

Scale:
EPP
S&D
ALDE
ENF
ECR
EFDD
GUE/NGL
Greens/EFA  

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