Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
AI: Jobs, Power & Money
9JUL

EU Digital Omnibus second trilogue collapses

2 min read
12:12UTC

The EU Digital Omnibus second trilogue ended on 28 April without a deal; the third is scheduled for 13 May with the binding employer AI literacy clause still contested between Council and Parliament.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The EU has failed twice to agree the lightest workplace AI clause; 13 May is the next test.

The EU Digital Omnibus second trilogue ended on 28 April 2026 without a deal 1. The third trilogue is scheduled for 13 May 2026. The binding AI literacy clause, which would require employers to ensure workers understand the AI systems they interact with, remains contested between the European Parliament and the Council, with the Parliament pushing for a binding obligation and the Council preferring non-binding encouragement language. The 28 April session was flagged as the second trilogue in the run-up and originally placed on the early-April schedule .

Council and Parliament differ on a single procedural word, but the operational gap that word opens is wide. The literacy clause does not regulate AI deployment; it regulates whether the people interacting with AI in the workplace must be told what they are interacting with and how. The Council's preferred non-binding language would let member states decide whether to enforce the obligation. The Parliament's binding version would force employers to provide minimum AI training across the bloc. Neither version creates the kind of dismissal-protection precedent the Hangzhou Intermediate People's Court issued in days; even the literacy clause, if it survives, takes effect at a multi-year horizon.

The procedural map across the three jurisdictions tells the briefing's clearest story. Beijing's court ruled in December 2025; Hangzhou's appellate bench affirmed in April 2026; both rulings are citable in any Chinese labour court tomorrow. Brussels' second trilogue collapsed without a deal on a non-binding training obligation. Washington's most viable vehicle, the Warner-Rounds commission, would not deliver an interim report until autumn. Three regulatory routes run at three speeds, with speed inversely correlated to the political pluralism of the system.

European workers face the same protection regime they faced a month ago. The General Data Protection Regulation and the AI Act provide some protection against algorithmic decision-making in specific contexts; neither addresses AI-driven dismissal as such. The 13 May trilogue tests whether the EU's slowest legislative cycle can produce even the lightest workplace protection inside a calendar year.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The European Union passes laws through a negotiation process between two bodies: the European Parliament, which represents voters, and the Council, which represents national governments. When they disagree, they hold meetings called trilogues to find a compromise. The Digital Omnibus is a large EU legislative package covering digital rules. One clause in it would require employers to ensure their workers understand the AI systems being used in their workplaces, such as AI tools that evaluate their performance or help decide their schedules. The second attempt to agree on the package, on 28 April 2026, failed. The third attempt is scheduled for 13 May. The specific sticking point is that clause on worker AI literacy: national governments (the Council) generally want it weaker or removed; elected MEPs generally want it kept or strengthened. If the clause survives into law, any company operating in the EU would have to train its workers to understand the AI tools affecting their jobs. This would apply to UK companies with EU operations too.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The literacy clause's controversy reflects a structural division in EU employment law that predates the Omnibus. The Works Council Directive and the Information and Consultation Directive already require employers to inform and consult workers on major changes, including technology changes. The literacy clause extends this to a positive obligation to ensure worker comprehension, moving beyond notification to a measurable outcome obligation.

Council opposition comes primarily from Germany, France, and Poland, each of which has industry lobbies arguing that the clause increases compliance costs without specifying what counts as adequate literacy. Parliament support comes from MEPs in countries with stronger works council traditions (Austria, the Netherlands, Sweden) who view the clause as a natural extension of existing consultation rights to the AI context.

The Omnibus timetable pressure also matters: both sides want the broader digital package finalised before the summer recess. Both the Parliament and Council have confirmed the literacy clause remains the unresolved item blocking the broader Omnibus package. A deal before summer recess requires one side to concede.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If the literacy clause survives into the 13 May deal, UK companies with EU operations will face a new compliance requirement to document and demonstrate worker AI literacy programmes, likely requiring third-party assessment vendors.

    Medium term · 0.68
  • Risk

    If the trilogue fails a third time, the Omnibus may be split, with the literacy clause deferred to a standalone instrument, which would delay any binding EU AI worker protection by 12-18 months beyond the current timeline.

    Short term · 0.6
  • Precedent

    An EU binding AI literacy obligation for workers would be the world's first binding employer obligation specific to AI, creating a template that Japan, South Korea, and potentially the UK could adopt under their own digital legislation.

    Long term · 0.55
First Reported In

Update #8 · Beijing court bans AI sackings as Big Tech burns cash

European Parliament· 2 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Barclays
Barclays
Barclays economist Pooja Sriram flagged a 28,000-a-month bleed in finance and information roles the same week Microsoft disputed that AI drove its own 4,800 cuts. The bank treats Challenger's AI-attribution share as a lagging indicator against faster erosion visible in raw labour-market data.
European Commission
European Commission
Brussels deferred the Digital Omnibus's Annex III employment-compliance deadline from 2 August 2026 to December 2027, even as California advanced three binding AI-hiring bills the same week. The 17-month delay leaves EU workers without the algorithmic-hiring safeguards the regulation already promises.
OpenAI
OpenAI
OpenAI proposed a 5% US government equity stake worth $42.6bn, structured as a public wealth fund modelled on the Alaska Permanent Fund, with Sam Altman pitching it directly to Trump, Bessent and Lutnick. The offer pre-empts Sanders' rival one-time 50% AI-stock tax, which has not yet reached committee.
India's IT and outsourcing sector
India's IT and outsourcing sector
BAT's transfer of 3,500 roles to Accenture on 29 June fits a delivery model Indian IT firms increasingly run: consultancies win Western contracts, then execute through offshore centres. The sector expects more Fit2Win-style transfers, not straight redundancies, as employers absorb AI without cutting outsourced headcount.
European Trade Union Confederation
European Trade Union Confederation
ETUC says the Council's shift from 'ensure' to 'support' in the AI-literacy duty, confirmed in the Digital Omnibus's final adoption on 29 June, is a collapse of the legal threshold, not a drafting tidy-up. It expects EU workers to face AI-driven hiring and monitoring decisions with a statutory right to explanation that exists in name only.
British American Tobacco's Fit2Win workforce
British American Tobacco's Fit2Win workforce
BAT is cutting 9,000 roles under Fit2Win, transferring 3,500 to Accenture rather than making them redundant, to reach roughly £500m in AI-driven savings by 2027. For affected staff, that distinction decides whether they keep a job at all, just not at BAT.