The center right joined the right and far right to block a recommendation to lift Matej Tonin’s immunity.
Tonin has denied the allegations in comments to Slovenian media. The legal affairs committee “identified elements of political persecution” in the Slovenian authorities’ case, Tonin told POLITICO after the vote.
Slovenian prosecutors argue the lawmaker obtained information from the police on whether investigators had wiretapped several individuals linked to a bribery case, “not in the manner intended by law but rather with the intent of securing benefits for themselves and others.”
According to the legal affairs committee report, Tonin also tried to obtain information about pre-trial proceedings.
“The request to lift the immunity was baseless and unfounded,” said someone in the EPP familiar with the matter, granted anonymity to discuss the group’s confidential thinking. “Several political groups, including the EPP Group, identified chronological inconsistencies in the material submitted with the request. In light of these inconsistencies, it was considered appropriate not to recommend the waiver of immunity.”
Tonin said: “I am pleased that [the legal affairs committee] took sufficient time to carefully review the documentation submitted to the European Parliament by the Slovenian Specialized Prosecutor’s Office and then reached a final decision today.”
The decision not to lift the lawmaker’s immunity now needs to be ratified in the Parliament’s plenary in September by a simple majority of votes cast.



