The Gig Economy Project revealed this week the lobbying influence of digital labour platforms over the European Commission's work on designing regulation on platform work. The Commission has been lobbied by one company, Bolt, 10 times on this specific issue in the past 12 months.
Bolt are proud that they can get the ear of Commissioner Nicolas Schmit and his cabinet on a regular basis. The company's regulation and public policy head, Dominick Moxon-Tritsch, happily re-tweeted GEP's article to highlight their lobbying fire-power.
The question for the rest of us - and platform workers in particular - is: should we have any trust in a system where platform companies are so brazen about their ability to buy influence with unelected bureaucrats, who have the power to design regulations which could shape labour rights in the gig economy for decades to come?
A draft Directive is due to be published by the Commission before the end of the year. If it does not include an unambiguous statement of a presumption of an employment relationship between platform worker and platform, and a burden of proof on the platform company to prove otherwise, we will know that corporate power has won out once again over democracy in Brussels. Any talk of 'wage portage', 'third status' or 'not a one-size-fits-all solution' will be a sure sign that Moxon-Tritsch and co have Nicolas Schmit, EU jobs and social rights Commissioner, in their pocket.
Whatever the outcome of the Directive, in the long-run platform workers will need to build strong industrial power if they are ever going to attain reliable political influence. Wasn't it ever thus?
Ben Wray, Gig Economy Project co-ordinator