EU Commission calls for anti-corruption reforms in Spain, Hungary

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BRUSSELS — The European Commission will urge Spain and Hungary to step up reforms to strengthen judicial, transparency and anti-corruption safeguards.

In its annual Rule of Law report, the EU executive is to criticize Spain for making only limited progress in tightening conflict-of-interest rules and asset declaration requirements for senior public officials, according to the report, part of which was seen by POLITICO.

While Madrid has tabled a draft Public Integrity Law and adopted a State Anti-Corruption Plan, the Commission said the “practical implementation” of the existing rules has not improved, and called for stronger enforcement, including an independent supervisory body with effective investigative and sanctioning powers.

The report, due to be published on Friday, comes out once a year and grades all 27 EU member countries on their compliance with the rule of law, issuing recommendations accordingly. POLITICO has not seen the full report.

It lands days after a Spanish court ruled that civil servants had improperly created a public-sector job for Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s brother, David Sánchez. The prime minister has repeatedly argued that he and his family have been targeted by politically motivated legal proceedings, accusing conservative judges of engaging in “lawfare.”

The Commission also found only limited progress on Spain’s lobbying reforms, noting that draft legislation aimed at increasing transparency around lobbying activities has yet to be approved by parliament. It urged Spain to complete the legislation, including by establishing a mandatory public register of lobbyists.

Revolving doors

Hungary also faces criticism in the report. The Commission said there had been no progress in making the allocation of cases in lower courts more transparent and no further progress in ensuring that pay rises for judges, prosecutors and court staff are implemented in a structured manner.

A general view taken on June 23, 2026 shows members of the Hungarian parliament during an extraordinary session of the National Assembly. | Attila Kisbenedek/AFP via Getty Images

It also criticized the absence of new lobbying and revolving door rules, calling on Budapest to adopt comprehensive legislation to strengthen its integrity framework.

The findings come as Prime Minister Péter Magyar has pledged to restore the rule of law and repair Hungary’s strained relationship with the EU after taking office.

While the Commission acknowledged progress in some areas, including reforms to the asset declaration system and measures affecting civil society, it said significant shortcomings remain and urged the new government to press ahead with judicial and anti-corruption reforms.

A Commission spokesperson declined to comment on the content of the report.