TransparenSEE

Power behaves differently when money is public and transparency is treated as optional.

Who watches the watchdogs?

This is where public records, institutional replies, court documents, FOIA files, and cross-registry data are turned into readable, citable reporting on how EU-funded organisations, oversight bodies, and public authorities actually operate.

The method is simple: follow the money, the labour, the paper trails.
The question is always the same: what can the public actually verify?

I am unapologetically pro-European, which is exactly why I cannot look away. Transparency is not what auditors can access. It is what the public can verify.

Top most read article:

Flags2
Europe tells whistleblowers to speak up. Then it asks them to prove what the system cannot see.

What is OLAF hiding? Two mandates and a Transparency HIT

In the 2018 annual report, OLAF still published a country-by-country table of incoming complaints from Member States (Figure 27 – page 57). Belgium: 18. Romania: 58. Spain: 32. Germany: 29. By the 2019 reporting year, that table

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