Influencing politicians: data leak reveals aggressive lobbying by Uber

influencing politicians
Data leak reveals aggressive lobbying by Uber

The US transport service provider Uber encountered high hurdles at the beginning of its European expansion. A report now reveals the company’s massive lobbying work. According to the research, there was close contact with current French President Macron and the EU.

According to a media report, a data leak exposed the aggressive lobbying campaign of the US transport service provider Uber in its efforts to enter the European market. More than 124,000 internal documents from 2013 to 2017 showed how Uber “attempted to influence politicians, civil servants and journalists”, reported NDR, WDR and “Süddeutsche Zeitung”. Current French President Emmanuel Macron, an FDP MP and a former EU Commissioner maintained close contacts with the company.

According to the report, an exchange of text messages suggests that in 2015, when Macron was the economy minister, he opposed an Uber-critical decree from a French police prefect at the company’s request. “I will look at the matter personally,” Macron wrote, according to NDR, WDR and “SZ” – after which the regulation was relaxed the same evening.

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In Germany, according to the report, the FDP politician Otto Fricke coordinated Uber’s lobbying campaign. Fricke was a member of the Bundestag from 2002 to 2013, then worked as a lobbyist and returned to politics and the Bundestag in 2017. According to internal Uber documents, his political contacts helped push through a change in the Passenger Transport Act in the sense of the driving service provider.

Benevolent newspaper article?

Also explosive is the case of the renowned economist Justus Haucap, who, according to research, is said to have placed a commissioned study and an Uber-friendly newspaper article in the “Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung” in December 2014. Haucap is a member of the Board of Trustees of the FAZIT Foundation, which aims to ensure the journalistic independence of the “FAZ”.

At the EU level, Uber secured the support of EU Commissioner for Digital Affairs Neelie Kroes, according to the report. After leaving Brussels in 2014 and after an 18-month waiting period imposed by the Commission, the Dutchwoman took on a well-paid consultant job at the US company. However, documents from the data leak suggest that there was contact between Kroes and Uber during the waiting period in connection with a police raid on Uber in Amsterdam in March 2015. The company was therefore very keen to keep this secret. According to the media, there is a risk that Kroes will spark a debate about “the political revolving door and nepotism”.

The dataset was leaked to UK newspaper The Guardian and includes emails, presentations, briefings, text messages and charts that were evaluated in collaboration with other international media. Initially, Uber encountered massive resistance and legal hurdles in European countries. According to the documents, the group estimated a lobby budget of 90 million euros in 2016 alone to clear them out.

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