EU Parliament Committee Advances Controversial Europol Expansion Amid Privacy Concerns
November 7, 2025
The European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee (LIBE) moved to advance a proposal that would broaden Europol's mandate, enabling more data sharing and biometric processing to combat human trafficking and migrant smuggling.
This LIBE approval follows a September political agreement between Parliament and Council to bolster Europol’s mandate and resources as part of the Facilitators Package aimed at curbing smuggling networks.
The committee's reform signals a wider EU push to strengthen border and migration controls by expanding Europol’s powers.
Civil society groups, including EDri, warn the reforms could create a 'digital police state' with insufficient oversight, transparency, and accountability, harming migrants, aid workers, and journalists.
If cleared in plenary later in November, the reform would move toward final adoption, raising ongoing concerns about privacy, the rule of law, and data practices in the EU.
Advocates like Caterina Rodelli of Access Now described the decision as greenlighting a shift toward a digital police state and urged stronger data privacy and democratic oversight.
The Record’s report indicates the next step is a full parliamentary vote later in the month.
The proposed regulation would significantly expand Europol’s ability to collect, process, and share data, including biometric biometrics such as facial recognition, potentially involving non-EU partners and regimes, heightening privacy and human rights concerns.
Rights groups and the European Data Protection Supervisor criticized the proposal for increasing surveillance and discrimination risks, urging MEPs to reject it.
Critics warn the plan could enable mass surveillance and erode civil liberties by expanding biometric data processing across borders.
The European Commission had already proposed the reform, with a final plenary vote in Parliament and formal Council approval still pending.
Over 120 organizations, including EDri, Access Now, and Equinox, urged MEPs to reject the text as unlawful and unsafe.
Summary based on 4 sources
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Sources

The Record • Nov 6, 2025
EU Parliament committee votes to advance controversial Europol data sharing proposal
Digital Watch Observatory • Nov 7, 2025
LIBE backs new Europol Regulation despite data protection and discrimination warnings | Digital Watch Observatory
Infomigrants • Nov 7, 2025
EU Parliament greenlights stronger Europol powers to combat smuggling, raising privacy concerns
Tony Keefe • Nov 7, 2025
EU panel backs controversial Europol data plan