by José Antonio Moreno Díaz

Women's right to abortion in safe, decent conditions and in a calm, trustworthy environment has long been the subject of debate and continues to be so today. The issue being debated is the freedom and autonomy that women should have over their own bodies – their privacy and personal autonomy and their sexual and reproductive freedom.

By José Antonio Moreno Díaz

Women's right to abortion in safe, decent conditions and in a calm, trustworthy environment has long been the subject of debate and continues to be so today.

It would be a mistake to try and link this right and the peaceful, safe exercise thereof to moral issues or religious or ethical beliefs that are completely outside the scope of the debate.

The issue being debated is the freedom and autonomy that women should have over their own bodies – their privacy and personal autonomy and their sexual and reproductive freedom. This is clearly part of their personal dignity as human beings.

The exercise of this right also involves health issues and the personal health of the women concerned.

Therefore, the right to abortion and the right to the genuine, free, safe exercise of abortion should be considered a fundamental right, as already recognised in some EU countries, and included in the European Charter of Fundamental Rights.

In this regard, the situation varies across the EU, where some Member States completely prohibit abortion (even criminalising it) while others severely limit this right through very restrictive regulatory frameworks on the basis of time limits or other criteria. Other countries recognise the right but it is extremely difficult to exercise due to organisational or functional problems with health and/or administrative services. In other countries, access is free without restrictions.

The question is how it can be possible that in an environment of rights and freedoms and with respect for Article 2 of the EU Treaty, these disparities continue to exist, affecting the fundamental rights of women, who make up approximately 50% of the EU population.

The proposal of the European citizens' initiative My Voice, My Choice – formally and verifiably supported by more than one million EU citizens – seeks to open this debate in a pragmatic way.

Given that the EU does not have competence in health matters and harmonisation is difficult in this field, it is proposed to create an EU budget fund to facilitate travel to another EU country and health coverage for the proper exercise of the right to abortion in that other EU country. Experience shows that only women with financial means in countries where abortion is prohibited or restricted can afford the costs of such travel, while thousands of other women who lack the financial wherewithal must either undergo unwanted pregnancies or resort to unsafe, clandestine or risky abortion practices, with serious risks to their health and integrity.

The EESC opinion fully supports the My Voice, My Choice initiative and endorses the arguments put forward by civil society in promoting this initiative, which has already been approved by the European Parliament. We hope that the Commission will shoulder its responsibility, listen to civil society, take note of this initiative and the underlying debate and take the initiative to design an EU policy instrument that facilitates access to abortion rights for all women in the EU.

Home Affairs funds: Migration, Borders, Security

Download — EESC-2025-03434-00-00-PA-TRA — (SOC/0844)

Agenda of the rentrée Académique on 14 January

Download — EESC-2025-04416-00-00-TCD-REF

Minutes of CCMI meeting on 16 December

Download — EESC-2025-04416-00-00-PV-REF — (Minutes)

Minutes of the NAT Section meeting of 15 December 2025

Download — EESC-2025-04034-00-00-PV-TRA — (Minutes)

By Alena Mastantuono, Vice President of the EESC in charge of Budget, member of the EESC Employers’ Group

Today, laws are drafted on computers, stored in official journals and published online. Yet despite these modern tools, the approach to regulation remains stubbornly analogue. Laws accumulate over decades, producing unintended bureaucratic burdens and rendering the system opaque. 

By Alena Mastantuono, Vice President of the EESC in charge of Budget, member of the EESC Employers’ Group

Today, laws are drafted on computers, stored in official journals and published online. Yet despite these modern tools, the approach to regulation remains stubbornly analogue. Laws accumulate over decades, producing unintended bureaucratic burdens and rendering the system opaque.

RegTech – regulatory technology – is a digital solution that promises to transform this spaghetti bowl into a coherent plate. RegTech tools can visualise the regulatory landscape, trace interactions between laws and reduce the time and cost of compliance.

Some EU Member States have already made strides. In Czechia, for example, the public administration uses a single e-tool covering the entire process of creating legislation – from the initial idea to publication in the Collection of Laws. Its legislative process also includes an obligation that new law must include a summary of the obligations it introduces.

This innovative step allows legislative language to be converted into actionable obligations, forming the foundation of a metadata database that can be used to automate understanding and compliance.

Estonia also offers another model – sourcing data directly from business registers rather than requiring companies to submit it repeatedly.

So why is RegTech not the standard at EU level?

The challenge is not technical but institutional. RegTech solutions must be embedded into the regulatory process, and that requires leadership and coordination – something currently lacking at EU level.

Responsibilities are fragmented and innovators in the private sector, where most RegTech ideas originate, often find themselves shuffled between departments, with no clear point of contact or leadership.

Embracing RegTech requires a mental shift – from seeing digital tools as optional add-ons to recognising them as foundational to effective governance. Not only would regulators benefit, but so too would citizens and businesses alike.

Globally, RegTech is a rising force and whoever masters it will gain a strategic advantage.

(Originally published in The Brussels Time.)

Location
Atrium 6

16:00 – 17:30

 

Location
JDE 62

11:30 – 13:00

Location
Atrium 6

09:00 – 11:00