Last week, the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ), together with Media Freedom Rapid Response (MFRR) partner organisations, submitted contributions to the EU’s annual Rule of Law report for 2026, identifying key developments for media freedom and pluralism and outlining recommendations for reform.
MFRR organisations provided submissions on 15 EU Member States and candidate countries: Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Greece, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Serbia, Slovakia and Spain.
Submissions on media freedom and pluralism provided updates about implementation and lack thereof of recommendations from the 2025 Rule of Law report, new legislative or regulatory developments, as well as cases of attacks and threats against journalists and media.
In the year that the EU’s European Media Freedom Act (EMFA) came into full force, the submissions provided detailed updates on the mixed picture for the implementation of the EU regulation across the bloc.
Data was provided from the MFRR’s Mapping Media Freedom (MapMF) platform, which is the largest public database of violations of press and media freedom in Europe, as well as from journalists’ organisations that are members of the EFJ. MapMF recorded 1481 press freedom violations affecting 2377 journalists and other media professionals across the European Union member states and candidate countries during 2025.
Submissions for the report also provided key information gathered by MFRR partner organisations during fact-finding and advocacy missions to EU countries throughout the past year. Information was also provided on cases of Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs), as part of MFRR partner’s regular monitoring.
Ahead of the preparation of the annual report, MFRR partners again call for the report to include significantly strengthened and more detailed recommendations for reform in country chapters, especially those facing systemic attacks on media freedom and pluralism, with recommendations tied to strong enforcement mechanisms in case of non-implementation.
Our organisations again stress that the findings of the report must act as the foundation for sustained action to safeguard EU values and push for strong implementation of the European Media Freedom Act, and feed into the development of the European Democracy Shield. Submissions by MFRR partners will be published and publicly available on the report website.
Source: EFJ


