HomeNewsLuke “Ming” Flanagan in the European Parliament

Luke “Ming” Flanagan in the European Parliament

Luke “Ming” Flanagan has had a strongly active and independent record in the European Parliament, especially on agriculture, housing, workers’ rights, and civil liberties. He has been an MEP since 2014, representing Midlands–North-West, and was re-elected for a third term in 2024. He sits as an Independent but is aligned with The Left / GUE-NGL group in the Parliament.

He serves on the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development (AGRI) and has also been active in delegations, including the EU-UK Parliamentary Partnership Assembly and relations with Mercosur.

He Has Focused On

He has focused on agriculture and rural Ireland. He has repeatedly spoken on farmers’ working conditions, agricultural policy, and the future of EU agriculture.

He spoke in plenary on “sustainable, decent and affordable housing in Europe”. He has also taken part in debates on Lebanon and the Middle East. His committee work includes the internal market and consumer protection, and fisheries as a substitute member.

Voting record

His recent voting record shows him as an engaged but not automatic party-line voter: from July 2024 to February 2026, he cast 261 votes, with 156 for, 73 against, and 32 abstentions. That record suggests he is active and often aligned with his group, but still willing to diverge when he sees fit.

Political style

Flanagan is best known as a maverick, outspoken, anti-establishment politician who brings a rural Irish perspective to Brussels. In practical terms, his record is strongest where EU policy affects ordinary people directly: farming, rural services, housing, and transparency.

Vote-by-Vote Summary

Here is a vote-by-vote summary of Luke Ming Flanagan’s record on migration, agriculture, EU sovereignty, and gender in the European Parliament, based on the clearest available voting data.

EU-wide list of “safe countries” to speed up asylum processing      Passed 408–184, 60 abstentions Voted AGAINST

Third parties system (non-EU countries where EU could set up migration hubs)          Passed 396–226   Voted AGAINST

(b) “Return hubs” / detention centres outside the EU (March 2026)

Common system for return of third-country nationals – creation of “return hubs” outside the EU for rejected asylum seekers   Passed 418–218, 30 abstentions       Voted AGAINST

Position Summary on Migration

Opposes punitive, externalised migration policies such as safe countries lists, third-country hubs, return hubs with broader detention powers.

He positions himself on the anti-externalisation, anti-detention side of EU migration debates, aligning with Sinn Féin MEPs and some left/Independent MEPs rather than Fine Gael/Fianna Fáil MEPs who supported or abstained.

Targeted review of CAP Strategic Plans Regulation & CAP Horizontal Regulation – cut red tape for farmers       425–130, 33 abstentions         ABSTAINED

Why he said he abstained?      “Proposal is designed to manipulate the farming vote” ahead of an election, not real market reforms needed for farmers to make a decent living.          CAP payment supports for small and young farmers (Oct 2025). Increase lump-sum for small farmers to €5,000; new young farmer grant   Passed        Voted AGAINST.  His allies in this vote were   Kathleen Funchion (SF), Lynn Boylan (SF) – both also voted against.       Criticism from Fine Gael MEP         Called this “voting against simplification in Europe” and against helping small/young farmers.  

His Position Summary on Agriculture

Flanagan is not a classic pro-CAP bulldog: he abstained on CAP “simplification” that he saw as politically timed. His vote against increases in small farmer payments and young farmer grants, suggesting he is critical of the overall CAP design rather than just “more money” under current rules. He focuses on structural reform and decent living for farmers, not just tweaking CAP payments.

EU Sovereignty (sovereignty, Russia, defence, trade)

Resolution condemning Russia’s human rights abuses and annexation of Crimea          494–135, 69 abstentions         He voted AGAINST.  His reasoning “EU has given up the right to lecture anybody on sovereignty”; cited Ireland’s forced vote changes on Nice/Lisbon treaties via Commission pressure     Quote         “This union should shut the hell up about sovereignty until it learns what it really means. You have not got a bloody clue.”

EU–US trade deal (June 2026)

Remove tariffs on all US industrial goods and some US seafood/agricultural goods          440–151     Voted AGAINST

Tariff-free imports on lobster (including processed)      444–152     Voted AGAINST.

He resolutely opposed to EU policy on common defence and sceptical of major trade deals that could undermine national sovereignty

Position summary on sovereignty

He is an open eurosceptic on sovereignty: repeatedly criticises the EU for lecturing on sovereignty while itself undermining it via treaty pressure and trade/defence policy.

Opposes EU–US trade deals and EU common defence, aligning with left/eurosceptic positions rather than mainstream pro-integration MEPs.

Gender & LGBTI Issues (trans rights, gender equality)

(a) Trans women as women resolution (Feb 2026)

Resolution recognising “trans women as women” – calls for trans women to have access to women-only spaces   340–141, 68 abstentions         Voted FOR

Irish MEPs in favour     12 of 14 MEPs: Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, Labour, Sinn Féin, and Independent Luke Ming Flanagan all voted in favour.  

Opposition Barry Andrews, Lynn Boylan, Nina Carberry, Regina Doherty, and some others voted against or abstained.

He sees gender equality as part of social justice and equality, consistent with sitting with The Left (GUE/NGL) group. He has been described as a pro-social justice, left-wing politician who supports women’s and LGBTI rights alongside economic and farm issues. He is supportive of trans rights: voted in favour of recognising trans women as women and access to women-only spaces. He could be described as consistent with left-wing pro-equality positioning rather than gender-critical or conservative stances.

Area  Core Stance         Typical Voting Pattern

Migration    Anti-externalisation, anti-detention, anti “return hubs” AGAINST punitive migration measures

Agriculture Reform-first, not just more CAP money     ABSTAINED or AGAINST CAP tweaks seen as political.

EU Sovereignty    Open eurosceptic on sovereignty, defence, trade  AGAINST Russia resolution, EU–US trade deals, common defence

Gender / LGBTI   Pro-equality, pro-trans rights  FOR trans women as women resolution

Luke Ming Flanagan is not a straightforward “pro-EU” or “anti-EU” MEP: he is strongly left-wing and socially progressive on gender and migration, but eurosceptic on sovereignty, defence and trade, and critical of CAP as currently structured, not just for more money. Openly eurosceptic on sovereignty issues: “We need the EU to go back to being a community… It is a project, if taken to its logical conclusion, which will wipe out any meaningful capacity for individual countries to exercise sovereignty over their affairs”

Not euro-sceptic anymore (as of 2024): “I can see the merits of the European Parliament. I’m not euro skeptical anymore… From the point of view of feeding ourselves, I think it’s important we do it together. From the point of view of climate, it’s important we do it together. From the point of view of biodiversity, it’s important that we do it together.” He is all over the place. He must be smoking too much ganga.

Flanagan still opposes EU common defence: “The 2024 version of Flanagan has not, it should be said, abandoned euroskepticism entirely: He is resolutely opposed… to any kind of EU policy on common defence” On trade deals: “Yet at the same time, you want to do a trade deal with Mercosur. One which will undermine our food sovereignty.” Opposes EU Migration Pact (aligned with Sinn Féin MEPs): “The EU Migration Pact is not in Ireland’s interests. That is why I spoke out against it, voted against it and why we brought forward more than…”

Voted AGAINST “return hubs” (detention centres outside EU): Did not support EU migration curbs that create external detention/deportation centres

Vote on safe countries list: Voted AGAINST EU-wide safe countries list for asylum processing

His position on migration:

Opposes punitive externalisation: Voted against “return hubs” and safe countries lists because they are punitive, not because he opposes limits. Supports “rules based immigration”: “Sinn Féin believes Ireland needs a rules based immigration system”. Not a migration restrictionist: His voting record shows he opposes punitive migration measures (detention, external hubs) but there’s no evidence he opposes national sovereignty over migration

Food Sovereignty

Sees food sovereignty as important: “I think it’s really important when people talk about food sovereignty that they’re practical”. Opposes Mercosur trade deal: “One which will undermine our food sovereignty, reduce the price our suckler farmers get for their beef, deepen our dependency on imported feed, and lead to this destruction of the environment”. Food security must be practical: “when it comes to food security I would agree it has to be practical”

National sovereignty over migration Supports Irish control but opposes EU migration pact & punitive measures.  EU migration limits  Opposes punitive externalization (detention, return hubs) but supports rules-based immigration

Food sovereignty Strongly supports – “very important when people talk about food sovereignty”  EU common defence   Resolutely opposed – “abandoned euroskepticism entirely… except common defence”

EU trade deals      Opposes Mercosur, EU-US deals that undermine sovereignty

Bottom line: Flanagan supports national sovereignty (especially on food, migration, defence, trade) and opposes EU common defence and trade deals, but does not oppose migration itself – he opposes punitive, externalized migration policies (detention, return hubs) rather than national limits on migration numbers. He supports “rules-based immigration” under Irish control, not necessarily unlimited migration.

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