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WEBVTT
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The leadership of the Commission during this
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state for the moment for Europe, for our service.
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Good morning.
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First of all, Prime Minister Fredrickson,
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it's a pleasure to be here.
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Dear former Prime Minister and NATO Secretary General Vazmussen,
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thank you very much for the invitation.
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Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
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it is a great pleasure to be with you today
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at this Copenhagen Democracy Summit.
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And, dear Anders, I'm sure that every year
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all of your speakers say the same thing,
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which is basically that the Democracy Summit could not come at a better time.
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And while I will spare you with that line,
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I want to make a case for why this year it really is true.
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The first and perhaps most obvious reason is
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that we are coming up to some very important landmarks
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for our European democracy.
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Europeans will very soon start taking to the polls
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in what is perhaps the most important European elections ever.
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I say that because what is at stake in this election
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will define the future of our continent.
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Elections, as you know, are never about one narrow issue.
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But they are about giving a clear sense of direction for our society.
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So, the question we all have to ask ourselves is,
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do we want a strong Europe that fights for our values and our democracy?
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Or, on the other hand, do we let our democracies be hijacked
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by depropses or puppets of authoritarianism?
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Do we let them erode and corrode everything we have built over more than 70 years?
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To some, this may sound dramatic or even a false dichotomy.
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But I believe it is the stark choice in front of us.
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So, we need to show that democracy is not just a nice to have,
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but that it is the best and fairest way to deliver on the things
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that matter the most for the people.
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And we need to build a strong coalition of this centre
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to fight for our values and our democracy.
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And to put that into a wider perspective, I believe we can draw inspiration
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from an anniversary on the eve of the elections.
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Because the 5th of June will be another important landmark for our democracy.
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And I want to congratulate all of Denmark for what will be the 175th anniversary of your constitution.
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It will be a moment to reflect on the central premise and the central promise of this constitutional act.
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It is the promise of freedom.
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The personal freedom to believe and think what you want.
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The freedom of speech to say what you want.
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Or the freedom to protest and to demonstrate your views.
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These freedoms and responsibilities that come with them are still some of the hallmarks of our modern democracies.
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Which brings me to the second point on the timing of this event.
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Those core tenets of our democracy are under attack today like never before.
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What we once thought was for granted is now being openly threatened in so many different ways.
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And while this is true everywhere around the world, it is also an urgent issue here in the European Union.
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We are of course seeing this in Ukraine, with Russia's brutal view of Ukraine.
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And we should gather no illusion about what this war is for Putin.
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It is of course about winding off a free and independent Ukraine of the man.
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But it is also worn the entire international rules-based system as an existential threat for the European Union and Europe.
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And it is an existential threat to our freedoms and democracies.
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I am in particular concerned about the rise of foreign interference and manipulation in our societies, our democracies and our elections.
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Just think of what we have seen play out in the last few weeks across you.
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We have seen swarms of negative disinformation, targeting different issues and individual candidates.
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Like for example, the fake video posted under the logo of Agil Fransky National, falsely claiming an epidemic of tuberculosis was imminent because of Ukrainian soldiers in French hospitals.
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And it is not just fakes of fabricated content.
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It is also buying, inference, and policy days.
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We have seen far-right politicians and lead candidates from AFD in Germany in the pockets of Russia.
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They are selling their souls on Russian propaganda objects and videos.
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A close collaborator of a far-right politician was even arrested, accused of spying for China and giving it information from the European Parliament.
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We have also seen a huge spike in Malaysia's cyberattacks, like the one on Danish energy infrastructure last year.
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Or again in the last weeks in Sweden, Germany, and Estrania, Czechia, Poland, and others.
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My own campaign website was attacked by cyberattacks just last week.
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The aim of all this is to divide our societies from within.
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And it is this deeper in person society which I am most concerned about.
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Because the point about this malign interference is not just what is being said or done in each individual case.
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It is about sowing division and firing the flames of extremism.
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It is about weakening our resilience or commitment to a cause, for example, supporting Ukraine.
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It is about eroding trust in our institutions and elections.
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It is about confusing people so they don't know who to believe or if they can even believe anyone at all.
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And it is about giving cover and encouragement to the more dangerous extremes in our societies.
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And this leads to some of the shocking attacks and threats we have seen in this election, which I utterly condemn.
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And it leads to many promising young candidates that I speak to during this campaign, wondering whether they should get involved in politics at all.
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Ladies and gentlemen, we cannot tolerate peace.
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And we have to very stop to this.
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And the good news is that we have done a lot in the last years on defense of democracy.
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We have regulated the digital platforms, and we have taken big steps on disinformation, media freedom, or the rules of political parties.
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And the point is not that disinformation or malign interference is new.
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It is that the technology and the techniques used are currently moving faster when society can adapt and react.
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So it is now time to take our action to the next level.
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We must be as ambitious as the threat is serious.
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And this is why, if I am elected as president, the Commission will put forward the European Democracy Shield as one of the key priorities of the next Commission.
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And this should be an ambitious European project that focuses on the biggest threats from foreign interference and manipulation.
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And allow me to give you some of the first elements of the European Democracy Shield.
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The first is about detection, because nothing is as powerful as unwaving information manipulation.
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This requires first and foremost a free medium.
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And in addition, we need to build up public expertise in order to detect information manipulation.
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And this means, on one hand, better information threat intelligence sharing from the various agencies that are dealing with this at national levels.
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But it also means creating new common capabilities at European level.
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There are very good examples on national level.
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Take the Sweden Psychological Defense Agency.
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Or in France there is Virginia.
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And I believe Europe now needs its own dedicated structure on country and foreign interference.
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It will pool the necessary expertise and think up and coordinate with existing national agencies.
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The second element is about treatment.
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We have already made progress with, let's say, the Digital Services Act.
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So, once we have detected malign information or propaganda, we need to ensure that it is swiftly removed and blocked.
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And this is the role of online platforms.
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Now they have a set of responsibilities with this DSA.
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We must be now very vigilant and uncompromising when it comes to ensuring that it is properly enforced.
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It is not just a moral responsibility the platform has.
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It is European law that has to be divided.
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Now, as things divide, because we have to assess if this is sufficient.
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And, of course, I am referring to artificial intelligence.
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Artificial intelligence, as you know, now allows for the creation of incredibly realistic deep fates,
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which can have a very destabilizing role in electoral campaigns.
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And we have already seen that in Europe.
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And this is why our AI Act has some transparency requirements built in.
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And I am very much welcoming that the political charges sign the voluntary code of conduct ahead of these elections.
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It is on the classical use of AI campaign tools.
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But as we look ahead, we need to consider how to strengthen our approach to AI content, and in particular, these things.
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And finally, it takes resilience.
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As technology evolves, we need to build our societal immunity around information and equation.
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Because research has shown that pre-banking is much more successful than debunking.
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Pre-banking is basically the opposite of debunking.
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In short, prevention is preferable to cure.
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Perhaps if you think of information manipulation as a virus, instead of treating an infection once it is taken hold, that is debunking.
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It is much better to vaccinate so that the body is inoculated.
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Tree-banking is the same approach.
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Because disinformation relies on people passing it on to others.
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It is essential that people know what malign information's influence is, and what the techniques are that are behind it.
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And as the knowledge goes up, our chances of being influenced goes down, and that builds up the society's resilience that we will need.
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So, ladies and gentlemen, this is Europe's moment of truth in so many ways, whether it is on victory, whether it is on defense, whether it is on competitiveness or democracy.
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And this is a message I hear everywhere as I travel around Europe before these elections.
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The challenges and the threats may appear daunting.
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And, as I've mentioned, the truth is that we do have a fight on our hands.
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But we have shown in the last years that when we are united, Europe is stronger and much more resilient than we give it credit for.
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So, let's not cite the authoritarians or the extremes at their own game.
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Let's cite them by offering a positive vision of the future.
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One which protects what we hold dear, our democracy and our values.
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One which builds a European democracy shield against foreign interference.
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One which steps up when and when and where it matters.
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One which steps up for our security, for our prosperity and, of course, for our democracy.
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So long live Europe and long live European democracy.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you very much.
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We hear a lot from elected officials.
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Exactly.
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We've heard a lot.