MCC: EU marginalises Brussels thinktank

Brussels 15.06.2026 The Hungarian thinktank MCC Brussels (@MCC_Brussels) faced new disctiminative actions from the behalf of the European insitutuions. The thinktank has been targeted again for the political views, opinions, and utmost because of their prominient investigations on corruption in the EU istutuions.

“MCC Brussels today condemned the decision of the EU Transparency Register Secretariat to suspend its registration, describing the move as the latest attempt by parts of the Brussels establishment to marginalise and silence one of Europe’s most prominent independent conservative voices” the press release of the MCC Brussels reads.

The suspension or removal from the EU Transparency Register strips interest representatives of privileged access to EU institutions, including revoked European Parliament entry badges, canceles speaking invites, and denies high-level meetings with Commissioners, the Council, and the Commission’s management staff.

MCC Brussels originates from Mathias Corvinus Collegium (MCC) – a Hungarian conservative educational institution and research center in Budaptest. However the MCC Brussels has it’s unique profile, and the filed of acitiviy, known the best among broader public for frequently angering the European instututions for addressing the topic of corruption. The MCC Brussels issues the corruption reports and scandals to advocate for institutional reforms to the benefit of the European citizens.

The key perspectives and actions associated with MCC Brussels (@MCC_Brussels)and EU institutional corruption include: critique of EU-NGO Funding: MCC Brussels has actively published analyses claiming that the European Commission misuses billions in taxpayer funds, channeling money into a shadowy network of NGOs and think tanks to promote political agendas.

“The suspension follows a complaint submitted by Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO), an activist organisation that has repeatedly targeted MCC Brussels because of its political views, public influence and willingness to challenge the ideological consensus that dominates much of the Brussels policy establishment.

MCC Brussels rejects both the substance of the decision and the process that led to it.
After more than a year of extensive cooperation with the Transparency Register Secretariat, multiple detailed responses, and sustained engagement in good faith, the Secretariat has nevertheless chosen to suspend MCC Brussels based on a disputed interpretation of the so-called “single registration principle” rather than any allegation of improper conduct, hidden lobbying activity, undisclosed meetings, financial irregularity, or breach of transparency obligations.

“The organisation will immediately challenge the decision through all available appeal mechanisms.
However, MCC Brussels believes this case cannot be viewed in isolation.

“A PATTERN OF ATTEMPTS TO SILENCE MCC BRUSSELS
Taken in isolation, the suspension may be presented as a technical administrative matter.
Viewed in context, it forms part of a wider pattern that has become increasingly familiar over the past four years.
First came efforts to stigmatise and delegitimise MCC Brussels because of its intellectual and political orientation.
Then came organised campaigns designed to pressure venues into cancelling our events and denying platforms to our speakers.
Then came attempts by extremist activist groups, including Antifa-affiliated networks, to intimidate venues hosting legitimate public discussions and conferences.

“Most dramatically, in April 2024, three Brussels mayors attempted to shut down the National Conservatism Conference (NatCon), using police powers to halt a peaceful gathering of elected politicians, academics, journalists and public intellectuals from across Europe and North America.
That decision was swiftly overturned by the Belgian courts, allowing the conference to proceed and drawing widespread criticism of what many regarded as an unprecedented attempt to suppress lawful political debate.

“Now comes an effort to marginalise MCC Brussels through administrative means.
Different methods.
The same objective.
To reduce the visibility, influence and legitimacy of voices that challenge the prevailing consensus within Europe’s political establishment.

DOUBLE STANDARDS AND UNEQUAL TREATMENT
“Throughout its correspondence with the Transparency Register Secretariat, MCC Brussels highlighted comparable case involving large international advocacy organisation operating through multiple entities and registrations.
Most notably, MCC Brussels drew attention to the existence of numerous active registrations maintained by organisations operating under the WWF banner.
The Secretariat acknowledged that it is in correspondence with WWF precisely regarding these kinds of questions.

“Yet while MCC Brussels has been suspended, WWF’s multiple registrations remain active.
Indeed, a WWF-affiliated organisation was granted a separate Transparency Register entry in 2025 while explicitly arguing that its independent legal status justified separate registration despite being part of the wider WWF network.
That principle appears to have been accepted in the WWF case. The WWF European Policy Programme has had over 50 meetings with the Commission since January 2025.
It is now being denied in the case of MCC Brussels.

“This inconsistency raises legitimate questions regarding equal treatment, fairness, and the uniform application of Transparency Register rules.
Administrative rules cannot be applied one way to establishment organisations and another way to organisations that challenge prevailing orthodoxies.
The issue is particularly striking given that organisations within the WWF network have maintained multiple registrations over many years and continue to enjoy extensive access to EU institutions.
MCC Brussels, by contrast, has had no lobbying meetings with EU institutions during the period in question, yet finds itself subjected to an extraordinary level of scrutiny and ultimately suspension.
If transparency is truly the objective, the standards applied must be consistent and universal. MCC Brussels has identified comparable cases involving several large international advocacy organisations operating through multiple entities and registrations.
In all our correspondence with TRS we have replied within the allotted 20 working days whereas they have taken months. We were informed of their decision at 16.50 on Friday 12th of June.

A POLITICALLY MOTIVATED COMPLAINT
“MCC Brussels notes that the complaint which initiated this process was submitted by Corporate Europe Observatory, an organisation that has publicly campaigned against MCC Brussels and whose political objectives are fundamentally opposed to those defended by our institution.
The original complaint itself reveals its political character.
Rather than focusing narrowly on transparency issues, it attacked MCC Brussels for its views, its participation in debates surrounding farmers’ protests, and its organisation of discussions challenging prevailing assumptions on climate policy.
The complaint objected not merely to administrative matters, but to the existence of a successful and growing conservative think tank in Brussels.
This was not simply a complaint about transparency.
It was a complaint about ideas.

MCC BRUSSELS WILL NOT BE SILENCED
“At the heart of the dispute lies MCC Brussels’ status as an autonomous legal entity established under Belgian law.
MCC Brussels rejects the Secretariat’s interpretation of the single registration principle and believes the decision represents a serious departure from principles of legal certainty, equal treatment and institutional neutrality.

“This decision is not simply about an administrative disagreement,” said Frank Furedi, Executive Director of MCC Brussels.
“For four years MCC Brussels has faced relentless attempts to marginalise, isolate and silence our work because we challenge prevailing orthodoxies.”
“We have seen pressure campaigns against venues. We have seen attempts to cancel our events. We have seen politicians use state power to try to shut down conferences. Now we are witnessing an attempt to exclude us through bureaucratic means.”
“The attempt to shut down NatCon was a defining moment. The courts ultimately rejected that abuse of authority. Today we are confronted with a different mechanism, but the underlying impulse is disturbingly familiar.”
“Those who believe democracy is strengthened by suppressing dissenting voices fundamentally misunderstand democracy itself.”

John O’Brien, Communications Director of MCC Brussels added:
“The complaint that triggered this investigation was political from the beginning.”
“Its authors openly disagree with our worldview and have repeatedly campaigned against our activities. The complaint itself focused extensively on our ideas, our events and our influence in public debate.”
“At the same time, organisations with comparable structures continue to enjoy active registrations without facing the same consequences. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that some organisations are scrutinised differently depending on the causes they support and the opinions they express.”
“The complaint that triggered this process did not come from a neutral watchdog. It came from an activist organisation that has campaigned against MCC Brussels, has received support from networks associated with George Soros’s Open Society Foundations, and openly opposes the ideas we defend.”
“Nobody should be surprised that such organisations want to diminish our influence. The more important question is why a politically motivated complaint appears to have been given such weight, despite our extensive cooperation and despite the existence of comparable cases elsewhere in the Transparency Register.”
“The original complaint devoted remarkable attention to our views, our conferences, our role in public debate and our supposed political influence. That is not the language of a neutral transparency complaint. It is the language of an ideological campaign against an organisation whose ideas the complainant dislikes.”

WE ARE JUST GETTING STARTED
MCC Brussels remains fully committed to transparency, open debate and democratic accountability.
However, the organisation rejects any attempt to weaponise administrative procedures against legitimate political and intellectual participation in European public life.
The suspension will be appealed.
But the organisation’s response will not be defensive retreat.
It will be renewed determination.
Research will continue.
Publications will continue.
Conferences will continue.
Engagement with European institutions will continue.
And MCC Brussels’ voice will become louder, not quieter.

Frank Furedi concluded:
“Every attempt to silence us has failed.”
“Those who tried to intimidate venues failed. Those who attempted to shut down NatCon failed. Those who sought to marginalise our work failed.”
“This attempt will fail too.”
“If the expectation is that MCC Brussels will now retreat from public debate, reduce its activities, or soften its arguments, the answer is simple: absolutely not.”
“We will appeal this decision. We will challenge it publicly. We will challenge it legally. And we will intensify our efforts to ensure that genuine intellectual diversity and democratic debate have a place in Europe.”
“We will not be intimidated. We will not be silenced. We are just getting started.”

What is the EU Transparency Register?
The European Transparency Register (TR), was launched on 23 June 2011 as a joint instrument for the European Parliament and European Commission. Subsequently, a mandatory transparency register, governed by the Interinstitutional Agreement between the European Parliament, the Council of the European Union and the European Commission, entered into force on 1 July 2021. The ‘IIA on the Transparency Register’, sets out the rules and principles governing the Transparency Register. The register is a public database set up for the registration of interest representatives and their activities carried out with the objective of influencing the formulation or implementation of policy or legislation, or the decision-making processes of the EU institutions.

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