The European Parliament approved its Digital Omnibus package on 16 June by 423 votes to 57, with 174 abstentions 1. The Left bloc voted heavily against. The Digital Omnibus is a single bill amending several EU laws, including the AI Act's rules for employers, and Tuesday's vote advanced the 93-4 committee approval covered earlier this month . It pushes the AI Act's high-risk employment obligations to December 2027 for standalone systems and August 2028 for AI embedded in safety components.
One verb carries the worker-facing cost. The employer AI-literacy duty, which would have required firms to make sure staff understood the systems deployed on them, was downgraded from "ensure" to "support" . The European Trade Union Confederation, the bloc's main labour federation, calls that a collapse of the legal threshold rather than a drafting tidy-up: "ensure" creates a duty a worker can test in court, while "support" describes an aspiration with no standard attached.
Until December 2027, a European employee in an AI-augmented but non-high-risk job has no statutory right to an explanation of the system making decisions about their work. The Council has still not formally adopted the text, which leaves one chokepoint before the August 2026 deadline. The Commission argues the delay relieves a genuine compliance burden on European business.
