In its early history, from about 2000 to 2012, the possibility of activating Article 7 was debated but official recommendations were not made. Events for which activation of Article 7 was debated include the aforementioned Austrian coalition with the far right in 2000, the
French government expulsion of thousands of Roma in 2009 and a political struggle in Romania between
Traian Băsescu and
Victor Ponta in 2012. On 12 September 2018, the European Parliament voted for action against Hungary, alleging breaches of core EU values.
UK Conservative MEPs supported the right wing Hungarian leader,
Viktor Orbán, against a motion to censure him in the
European Parliament.
Pablo Casado, leader of
Spain's People's Party, directly ordered the PP members of the
European Parliament to abstain in the voting of the
Sargentini report calling for triggering Article 7 proceedings against the Hungarian government of Viktor Orbán. On 30 March 2020, in response to the
coronavirus pandemic, the Hungarian Parliament approved a bill to make the
state of emergency indefinite and grant the ability for Prime Minister Orbán to
rule by decree. The bill also makes the deliberate distribution of "
misleading information that obstructs responses to the pandemic" punishable by up to five years in prison. The bill faced opposition for containing indefinite restrictions on these powers, as well as concerns over the possibility that the "fake news" prohibition in the bill could be abused for censorship of independent media outlets. As a result,
European Parliament group leaders raised concerns, in a meeting of the
Conference of Presidents, about the emergency measures and a majority of groups asked
Parliamentary President David Sassoli to relay their concerns in a letter to the Commission and to consider activating the Article 7 procedure. In June 2020, the Hungarian parliament voted to end the rule by decree, but this left the government more powerful than before the crisis. Usage of Article 7 was discussed again in January 2024 when Hungary blocked unanimous EU support for Ukraine. , in 2019.
Use against Poland From the end of 2015, the Polish government
became subject to European Union criticism over its media and judiciary changes and the European Commission began action against Poland in January 2016. ==Expulsion==