The European Commission’s recent decision to withdraw the Equal Treatment Directive has sparked outrage among civil society organisations across Europe. The directive aimed to close significant legal gaps in EU anti-discrimination laws, ensuring equal protection for all, regardless of gender, sexual orientation, disability, religion, age, or ethnic background. By scrapping this proposal without an alternative, the Commission is effectively abandoning its commitment to a Union of Equality at a time when marginalised communities need protection the most.

Currently, EU anti-discrimination laws create a hierarchy of protection, where some forms of discrimination are more effectively addressed than others. The Equal Treatment Directive sought to harmonise these protections, ensuring that LGBTIQ+ individuals, people with disabilities, religious minorities, older persons, and young people are safeguarded when accessing goods, services, housing, healthcare, and education. Its withdrawal leaves these groups vulnerable, reinforcing systemic inequalities.
The decision has been widely condemned by ILGA-Europe, TGEU, IGLYO, the European Disability Forum, and other key civil society organisations. Their concerns are clear: at a time when the far right is gaining ground across Europe, scrapping this directive is a dangerous political gamble. Instead of reinforcing human rights, the Commission is sending a message that discrimination will go unchecked.
Advocates are now demanding that the Polish EU Presidency and the European Parliament take urgent action. The Commission must either reinstate the directive or propose a stronger, intersectional alternative. The EU has a responsibility to protect its citizens—now is not the time to backtrack on equality.
You may also like
-
Brussels Pride’s Safer Pride is what makes the celebration truly shared
Brussels Pride is built around visibility, protest and celebration, but it also depends on something
-
Brussels Pride 2026 shines brighter with Rainbow Village
Brussels Pride is not only a march or a party: it is also a chance
-
Gay and bi Latinos are meeting at Yuca Latina this Sunday
Brussels’ Latin queer community has a new excuse to gather this weekend. On Sunday 3 May, Gays
-
Brussels Dyke March returns to the streets on 15 May
Brussels’ Dyke* March returns on Friday 15 May 2026, bringing lesbians, trans, bi, pan and questioning dykes* back
-
Brussels Pride 2026: the key moments in one clear agenda
Brussels Pride 2026 stretches across a full week, not just a single march. With its 30th
