PRESS RELEASE From Maastricht to Brussels: Hundreds march through Europe to stop deregulation wave
September 24th, 2025
by Sabela Gonzalez Garcia

Wednesday 24, 2025, Brussels. Hundreds of marchers and supporters filled Brussels’ EU quarter yesterday after a 3-day, 60 km protest walk from Maastricht. The “Back to the Future” march brought together affected communities, trade unions, NGOs, and political leaders demanding an end to the EU’s deregulation wave, which puts workers, the environment and human rights at risk.

Deregulation threatens rights and protections

Hard-won rights rights are under threat as the European Commission pushes to slash environmental and social rules in rushed, top-down procedures. Concerned politicians and citizens – including Dutch MEP Lara Wolters, UN rapporteur Olivier de Schutter, and human rights lawyer Steve Bilko (Leigh Day) – have walked alongside affected communities, NGOs, and trade unions with a clear message for Commission President von der Leyen: drop the deregulation agenda and protect rules that hold companies accountable.

Quotes
“I am marching because I belong to the billions whose lives are disrupted by climate change and flawed models of ‘development’ sold as sustainability. I march to remind Europe that the Global South deserves democracy, human rights, and freedoms; not as charity, but as a right. I march to expose the hypocrisy of governments that back dictators for vested interests. Today I am marching because silence is complicity, and I refuse to be silent.”

Zia ur Rehman, Pakistani human rights defender and founder of AwazCDS-Pakistan

“I am marching in the European #BackToTheFuture march for three reasons. First, because a sustainability-driven agenda is the only meaningful human response to the crises we face today. Second, as a Bulgarian and proud EU citizen, I believe our shared values and actions must prove real. And third, as a professor of corporate sustainability, I want to walk the talk for my children and students. Doing the right thing, for the right reasons, at the right time is the most powerful driver of change, and now in Brussels, we will deliver that message of responsible leadership.”

Marina Stefanova, Associate dean at Sofia University

“Workers already pay the heaviest price of insufficient European regulation. When social dumping is not the direct reason for these chains, workers’ rights are directly threatened. The EU Omnibus and 28th regime are not about bureaucracy, but about corporate capture by big lobby groups against better legislation for us all. We must win back precious time, for decent work for all and climate policies at the height of our times.”

Thomas Miessen, Trade Union Official at Algemeen Christelijk Vakverbond (ACV)

21-23 September 2025 Anti-deregulation march to demand EU institutions protects human and environmental rights.
Anti-deregulation march to demand EU institutions protects human and environmental rights. Pictures by Gabriela Carvalho Nascimento

From Maastricht to Brussels: why history matters

The march retraced a symbolic route: from Maastricht, where the 1992 treaty gave the EU a stronger social and environmental mandate, to Brussels, the heart of EU decision-making. The Maastricht Treaty for Social Europe designated the environment as an official policy area and it modified the EU’s objectives to include “respecting the environment”, as well as assigning EU responsibility for improving living and working conditions and social protection.

But marchers warn that this progress is now at stake. What started as a supposed simplification of sustainability regulations by President von der Leyen, has become an unprecedented rollback of social and environmental legislation in a sweeping deregulation agenda, under the vague banner of “competitiveness”.[1]

“When industry becomes Europe’s fourth power, stronger than Parliament or Council, democracy itself is sidelined. Workers, communities, and climate-hit families are already losing ground to corporate lobbies. Von der Leyen’s call for industry to ‘bring clout to the table’ lays bare a dangerous truth: corporate capture has reached the heart of EU decision-making. And this is not the Europe we want”.
Nele Meyer, director of the European Coalition for Corporate Justice
“What the Commission is doing here is a disgrace. They leave companies, responsible for most climate emissions, off the hook and they block access to court for people that are harmed by European multinationals. Von der Leyen couldn’t give a stronger signal that she prioritises corporate profits over citizens' well-being”.
Paul de Clerck, economic justice coordinator at Friends of the Earth Europe
“The due diligence laws the Commission wants to weaken are a matter of life and death for people in the supply chains of European multinationals. They are what stand between us and another Rana Plaza disaster. Our laws must put people and the planet before profit: workers are not commodities. Europe’s social market economy was built to respect workers' rights, not to serve corporate profits”.
Isabelle Schömann, Deputy General Secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC)

Early this year, the European Commission initiated a deregulation wave wiping away recent advances of the just transition in EU policy. The omnibus legislative packages[2] take a chainsaw to the core policies of the Green Deal. These policies are being repealed and muddled in rushed, undemocratic processes under intense pressure from the Commission. Among the losses are emission reductions targets from cars, anti-deforestation policies; sustainable reporting rules; prevention of corporate disasters; the ability of victims of corporate negligence to seek justice in court; fact-checking on greenwashing; the advance of renewable energy; and standards against toxic chemicals such as PFAS … and the list is still developing.

Europe’s global credibility on the line. Marchers stressed that deregulation is not just an internal EU matter. If Europe weakens protections, others will follow; undermining the EU’s role as a global climate and social leader.

 

This “Back to the Future” march was organised by Friends of the Earth Europe, the European Coalition for Corporate Justice, and the European Trade Union Confederation.

Pictures and videos from the march are available HERE.

Day 3 - 23 Sept, closing event at Woluwe-Saint-Pierre and Schuman. Images taken by Gabriela Carvalho Nascimento
Day 3 - 23 Sept, closing event at Woluwe-Saint-Pierre and Schuman. Images taken by Gabriela Carvalho Nascimento