No Result
View All Result
  • Private Data
  • Membership options
  • Login
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHubHOT
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Subscribe
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHubHOT
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Home COUNTRY FRANCE

5 things startups want out of the European elections

Siftedby Sifted
May 30, 2024
Reading Time: 7 mins read
in FRANCE, VENTURE CAPITAL
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

European startups have traditionally had limited interest in EU politics and policymaking. The pressures of fundraising, building a product and gaining customers, often with limited budgets and small teams, means that advocating for more favourable regulations in the EU bureaucratic jungle has usually been at the bottom of founders’ to-do lists. 

But the last couple of years have shown that EU policies can have a real impact on startups — whether they like it or not. Laws such as the AI Act, Data Act, Digital Services Act (DSA) and Digital Markets Act (DMA) have left founders with additional obligations, but also opportunities. 

So now, as European citizens head to the polls on June 6-9, many European startups and their trade associations have decided it’s time to lodge their requests for the incoming members of the European Parliament and European Commission. 

Advertisement

“The European election is a great opportunity to think ahead of where we are and where we want to go in the next five years,” says Josy Soussan, head of global public affairs and government relations at Klarna, which has written its pre-election manifesto. 

So, what are startups and their lobbyists asking for? 

1/ One contact point 

There’s no single office that represents high-growth tech companies’ interests. As far as EU jargon is concerned, “startups” fit into the same bucket as “small and medium enterprises”. As a result, policies that affect startups are often drafted by several different departments of the European Commission. That means that founders don’t have a single person to advocate for them or reach out to with concerns.  

Having a commissioner or department focused on startups’ particular needs — as exists in France — would be a big help.

“There is really one thing that is working in France — it’s la French Tech and the digital minister. It’s honestly a very unique one-stop-shop for any issue a startup or a scaleup has in France. This does not exist at the European level,” says Hugo Weber, vice president of corporate affairs at Mirakl, a French SaaS unicorn. 

Weber’s request is: “A single point of contact: a vice-president of the European Commission or a commissioner of the European Commission, who would be responsible for helping the European startups navigate the EU bubble, and solve the issues that they have, which can range from social rights, to immigration, to M&As.”

5x a week

~/ Sifted Daily

Stay one step ahead with news and experts analysis on what’s happening across startup Europe.

By Sifted journalists

Allied for Startups, a Brussels-based lobby group for European startups, has also asked for a commissioner for digital entrepreneurship in its pre-election manifesto. “Having a startup commissioner would be ideal,” says Maxime Ricard, the group’s policy manager — although also rather unlikely. “A bit more doable” would be to have a commissioner covering all kinds of digital companies, he adds. 

The group is also working to create a startup intergroup in the European Parliament — where parliamentarians from different committees and political groups could meet to exclusively discuss startup issues. “We would provide the decision-makers with unique access to an invaluable source of information and would equip them with the tools to create innovation friendly-legislation and the right policy ecosystem with tangible benefits,” he says. 

2/ Implementation over regulation

In the last few years, European startups have had to get to grips with numerous new tech policies, many of which have been a real headache to comply with.

So now, startups are calling for policymakers to give them a break — and some time to implement all the new rules. 

“If we had to identify one real priority for the next mandate, I think it would be really simple: that EU policymakers focus on the implementation of the existing legislative texts rather than discussing new regulations and trying to create new ones,” says Ricard. “It’d mean that finally we would have a regulatory environment that would be focusing more on innovating rather than regulating.”

Advertisement

3/ European Delaware Inc.

The need for a stronger European single market is a recurring request from startups. While there are no trade nor people movement barriers within the block, the 27 governments still set up their taxation, business and employment rules individually. Adapting to these various laws can be a real headache for startups that want to scale quickly — and for VCs that want to invest in European companies. 

To get around this, Allied for Startups is calling for the introduction of an EU company status — something that would allow startups to scale their products and services once, rather than 27 times, under a single set of rules.

EU/acc, a community movement of founders and investors, is also calling for the creation of a” standardised legal entity for Europe”.

“Countries with the population of a Chinese office building, or the GDP of an averagely successful computer game, have completely different processes, terms, expectations, constraints and legal dances an investor has to learn,” EU/acc says on its website. 

“To expect that any European investor will learn this for 27 countries is absurd. To expect this from American investors is delusional.”

4/ Easier access to funding and talent

If the European Delaware Inc. idea sounds like a long shot, startups are also calling for more practical changes to make fundraising and hiring easier. 

Allied for Startups’ manifesto calls for a pan-European startup visa, “a startup and scaleup test” that all new legislation would have to pass and pan-European investment instruments. 

Klarna, meanwhile, is calling for greater harmonisation of stock option plans across Europe. “We need to reform the tax system, it needs to be unified,” says Soussan. “Granting equity to employees should be made much easier. If you look at how it’s organised across the union, it’s very complicated. So for a company that’s cross border or that has operations in different markets, it’s very hard to be able to offer the same benefits to its employees.”

5/ Less populism, more unity

Startups are also hoping that conservative, right-wing parties which put nationalism over European unity won’t take over the European institutions. According to recent polls, far-right parties across Europe are on the rise and could become an important voice in the European Parliament. 

“These elections are very important because it’s going to be about reactionary narratives, far-right narratives, against European integration, migration, green policies,” says Miguel Ferrer, vice president of Adigital, a Spanish association for the digital economy. The group has published a declaration in which numerous European startup associations, as well as the founders of startups such as Glovo, SumUp and Cabify, call for a Europe which is more united, open and ready for global leadership based on its values. 

“All ideas that support a single market are the good ones; ideas that look at fragmenting, and everything that is in line with nationalism and protectionism at national level will definitely hurt European startups,” says Weber. “The more European we are, the better it is for startups.”

Read the orginal article: https://sifted.eu/articles/startups-europe-elections-eu-policy/

Gateways to Italy

Gateways to Italy – Offer your services to funds and investors willing to explore opportunities in Italy. Become a partner!

Gateways to Italy – Offer your services to funds and investors willing to explore opportunities in Italy. Become a partner!

by Partner
June 6, 2023

Sign up to our newsletter

SIGN UP

Related Posts

GREEN

“Be.EV is going places” – British EV charging network signs €23 million deal to install charging bays across the UK

May 12, 2025
GREEN

London-based startup Zendo Energy raises €2 million to help data centres decarbonise and adapt to AI boom

May 12, 2025
BENELUX

Belgian BioTech startup Quidditas raises €2.62 million for genome editing technology

May 12, 2025

ItaHub

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

November 4, 2024
Italy’s SMEs export toward 260 bn euros in 2025

Italy’s SMEs export toward 260 bn euros in 2025

September 9, 2024
With two months to go before the NPL Directive, in Italy the securitization rebus is still to be unraveled

With two months to go before the NPL Directive, in Italy the securitization rebus is still to be unraveled

April 23, 2024
EU’s AI Act, like previous rules on technology,  looks more defensive than investment-oriented

EU’s AI Act, like previous rules on technology, looks more defensive than investment-oriented

January 9, 2024

Co-sponsor

Premium

Funds vying for management consulting firm BIP, a CVC portfolio company. All deals in the sector

Funds vying for management consulting firm BIP, a CVC portfolio company. All deals in the sector

March 6, 2025
Private equity, Italy 2024 closes with 588 deals as for investments and divestments from 549 in 2023. Here is the new BeBeez’s report

Private equity, Italy 2024 closes with 588 deals as for investments and divestments from 549 in 2023. Here is the new BeBeez’s report

February 10, 2025
Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

November 4, 2024
Venture capital investments top €1.3bn in 208 rounds as of Sep30  in Italy. They were €1.5 in all 2023. The new BeBeez Report

Venture capital investments top €1.3bn in 208 rounds as of Sep30 in Italy. They were €1.5 in all 2023. The new BeBeez Report

October 28, 2024
Next Post
Italy’s private debt & corporate finance weekly round-up. News from Etra, The European Investment Bank, RedFish, Banca Finint, Marullo, Movinter, Rfltc Inox, and more

Italy's private debt & corporate finance weekly round-up. News from Etra, The European Investment Bank, RedFish, Banca Finint, Marullo, Movinter, Rfltc Inox, and more

Inside Octopus Energy’s deepening relationship with the UAE

EdiBeez srl

C.so Italia 22 - 20122 - Milano
C.F. | P.IVA 09375120962
Aut. Trib. Milano n. 102
del 3 aprile 2013

COUNTRY

Italy
Iberia
France
UK&Ireland
Benelux
DACH
Scandinavia&Baltics

CATEGORY

Private Equity
Venture Capital
Private Debt
Distressed Assets
Real Estate
Fintech
Green

PREMIUM

ItaHUB
Legal
Tax
Trend
Report
Insight view

WHO WE ARE

About Us
Media Partnerships
Contact

INFORMATION

Privacy Policy
Terms&Conditions
Cookie Police

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHub
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Subscribe
  • Login
  • Cart