...

Logo Yotel Air CDG
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

Denmark aims to break EU privacy chief deadlock before year's end

Business • Nov 19, 2025, 11:09 AM
4 min de lecture
1

Denmark is working to find a solution to the ongoing standoff between EU lawmakers and national governments over who should be the EU institutions' top privacy official, officials have told Euronews.

The mandate of the current European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) expired on 5 December 2024. Denmark, which holds the rotating chairmanship of the national governments for one more month, said it wants to conclude the EDPS talks by year's end.

However, no meeting with EU lawmakers has yet been scheduled, people familiar with the matter told Euronews.

The EDPS, a role established in 2004, publishes opinions on EU legislative proposals and weighs in on upcoming digital legislation. It also checks whether EU institutions themselves respect personal data rules.

The European Parliament and the member states have not been able to agree on a successor for the outgoing EDPS, Wojciech Wiewiórowski, since early this year, when the European Commission held hearings with a shortlist of candidates.

The Commission shortlisted four contenders who appeared in hearings last January, and the Parliament’s LIBE committee voted to appoint long-time Commission official Bruno Gencarelli, from Italy. However, the member states are backing Wiewiórowski for another mandate.

Wiewiórowski, a former head of the Polish data protection office who has been in the job since 2019, remains in office for the time being.

Gencarelli spent 12 years working in managerial roles on data protection at the Commission, and was formerly a head of the executive's International Affairs and Data Flows Unit. His last job was to advise EU Justice Commissioner Didier Reynders, whose mandate ended in December last year.

He has been on leave from the EU civil service while the selection process continues.

Simplification efforts

The EDPS's job has increased in importance over the past years. The appointee is expected to play a supervisory role as the European Commission works to simplify tech legislation with measures like the digital omnibus package presented this week, which will amend the existing AI Act.

Isabelle Roccia, Managing Director Europe at the IAPP, told Euronews that “whoever gets the job will find himself in a key advising position as the Commission kick-starts its digital simplification agenda.”

“That voice of reason will matter to ensure a nuanced debate to reconcile competitiveness objectives with the European value-based acquis in the data protection space,” Roccia added.

It remains to be seen if Denmark can schedule any meeting with lawmakers in the midst of a tight end-of-year schedule. The last meeting with representatives of the Parliament that tried to break the deadlock took place early this summer.

The office of Spanish centre-right lawmaker Javier Zarzalejos, the chair of the Parliament's Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs Committee (LIBE), who is in charge of arranging the meetings on the Parliament side, did not respond to Euronews when asked for comment.

The Commission previously told Euronews that it is not in a position to comment on the current state of the procedure, and that there is no legal deadline for the selection process.

It is not the first time that the appointment of a new EDPS has been held up. In 2014, the selection panel concluded that none of the candidates proposed at the time had the qualities required for the job.


Today

Europe’s tech at ‘crossroads’. AI, defence and climate tech will define bloc’s future, report
Business • 11:56 AM
5 min
Europe will have to invest in climate tech, artificial intelligence and defence to keep developing its tech ecosystem.
Read the article
FlyDubai orders 75 Boeing aircrafts in deal worth $13 billion
Business • 11:39 AM
6 min
FlyDubai and Emirates have made major investments in Boeing and Airbus to accomodate booming passenger growth at Dubai's International Airport.
Read the article
Amazon loses legal challenge to imposition of EU's strictest digital rules
Business • 11:35 AM
3 min
The EU's highest court has ruled that US tech giant will remain subject to the toughest measures of the Digital Services Act.
Read the article
Denmark aims to break EU privacy chief deadlock before year's end
Business • 11:09 AM
4 min
An impasse between EU lawmakers and national governments has held up the Data Protection Supervisor selection process for nearly a year.
Read the article
Chipmaker Nexperia said it halted China shipments on payment refusal
Business • 10:58 AM
3 min
Dutch chipmaker Nexperia said it stopped sending wafers to its Chinese unit because of a payment refusal — the latest twist in Europe’s semiconductor standoff with Beijing.
Read the article
Europe’s R&D defence spending surges amid Ukraine war. Which EU country splurges the most? 
Business • 9:00 AM
5 min
Defence research and development spending in the EU has risen by 90% over the past five years. Experts link this surge to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Read the article
Meta wins historic FTC antitrust trial focused on WhatsApp, Instagram
Business • 8:46 AM
6 min
Meta's acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp don't violate US antitrust law, ruled district judge James Boasberg on Tuesday.
Read the article
Listening to music most days could lower dementia risks for older adults, study suggests
Business • 8:37 AM
2 min
Dementia risks may be lower among ageing music fans, new research suggests.
Read the article
Ultra-processed foods fuelling global health crisis and experts urge worldwide policy reform
Business • 6:30 AM
7 min
Experts have linked high UPF consumption to higher risk of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, depression, and early death.
Read the article
Epstein files cast long shadow over global business elite
Business • 6:00 AM
15 min
Newly released emails show top finance and business figures maintained contact with Jeffrey Epstein years after his initial conviction, raising questions over judgement and corporate governance.
Read the article
Europe is rolling out AI in health care without sufficient patient protections, WHO warns
Business • 5:00 AM
3 min
Just four out of 50 surveyed countries have national strategies for AI in health care.
Read the article
TikTok adds digital well-being features to help teens manage screen time and limit doomscrolling
Business • 12:17 AM
3 min
Users can earn badges by avoiding the app at night, using the meditation tool during that time, keeping within their daily screen time limit, checking their weekly usage and encouraging others to take part.
Read the article
Dutch government suspends takeover of Chinese-owned Nexperia
Business • 12:15 AM
3 min
In a major u-turn, the Dutch government has backed away from the chip supplier, which plays a strategic role in Europe’s automotive industry.
Read the article
Eating disorders may raise health risks up to a decade after diagnosis, study finds
Business • 12:01 AM
3 min
A range of health risks remained elevated both five and 10 years after patients were diagnosed with eating disorders.
Read the article