Hungarian health Commissioner-designate Oliver Varhelyi faces further questions having last night offered MEPs no clear reassurance he would deliver long-overdue alcohol health labelling proposals.
“We have just introduced a couple of labelling conditions for wine: ingredients, alergen content, but also the energy content. Let’s see how they sink in on the use,” he said when Alessandra Moretti of Italy’s centre-left Democratic Party asked if he would commit to producing proposals on alcohol labelling.
“I believe that we need to reflect on how to change the narrative on risk factors, including alcohol, and the economic determinants of health. Social attitudes can be a key driver for change,” he earlier wrote in a written answer to the same question.
He will be asked another set of written questions by MEPs who were unhappy with his answers, including those on protecting abortion rights, lack of clear plan for health and ties to his country’s authoritarian leader Viktor Orban. He won applause for defending the effectiveness of vaccines.
The Commission was meant to produce a proposal on nutrition and ingredients labels by the end of 2022 and warning labels by the end of 2023, according to the Beating Cancer Plan. Delivering this plan is part of the mission set out by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in September.
Varhelyi is the first of the proposed commissioners to face such a redo. He will have to deliver his written answers by Monday. ■