EU Democracy First agenda reinforces the role of the EESC

The launch of the European Democracy Shield on 12 November 2025 marks a watershed moment in the EU’s defence of its democratic infrastructure against disinformation, foreign interference, and manipulation of public opinion. In an era where digital platforms and generative AI increasingly shape how Europeans think, vote, and engage, democracy itself demands new forms of protection.

Foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI) operations, particularly those originating from Russia, have grown sophisticated, blending propaganda, cyber tactics, and social media manipulation. These campaigns do more than distort facts; they are engineered to corrode public trust in democratic institutions. Meanwhile, algorithm-driven platforms reward outrage over accuracy, amplifying noise while suffocating reasoned debate. Disinformation now travels faster than truth, leaving societies polarised and citizens cynical.

The European Democracy Shield is Europe’s answer: a framework to repair, reinforce, and future-proof democracy. It anchors freedom of expression in responsibility, transparency, and digital integrity — signalling the EU’s determination to protect the public sphere from both malign interference and systemic opacity.

Built on three pillars, safeguarding the integrity of the information space, reinforcing democratic institutions and media independence, and fostering societal resilience and civic engagement, the Shield introduces the European Centre for Democratic Resilience, a new hub for threat detection and coordinated responses across Member States. The Rapid Alert System will also be upgraded with faster and smarter tools to counter emerging disinformation waves.

Crucially, the Shield tackles the elephant in the room: artificial intelligence. New EU guidelines will set boundaries for AI use in political campaigns, curbing algorithmic manipulation before it can distort electoral outcomes.

Launched alongside the Shield, the EU Strategy for Civil Society addresses a deeper democratic concern Europe’s shrinking civic space. Civil society organisations across the continent face restrictive laws, funding gaps, and harassment. The new strategy responds with stronger legal safeguards, multiannual funding frameworks, and mechanisms for structured dialogue and participation.

Here, the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) steps into a pivotal role, co-organising the Civil Society Platform and bridging citizens, organised civil society, and EU policymakers. Its involvement underscores a core principle: democratic resilience is built not only through institutional safeguards but through active civic participation.

The European Democracy Shield is a call to collective action. No single institution or Member State can confront digital disinformation alone. It demands a holistic societal approach — uniting governments, EU institutions, media, tech companies, and civil society.

Europe’s democratic model is grounded in transparency, fairness, and rights and it cannot be taken for granted. It must be defended and reimagined for a digital age where trust is fragile and information fluid. In this new geopolitical climate, the Shield serves as both armour and roadmap — a test of Europe’s capacity to adapt, innovate, and ensure democracy thrives amid digital disruption.

Christa Schweng, EESC Employers' Group member.