Voting Record
Notable votes in the current parliamentary term
Financial Declarations
Declared to the European Parliament · Self-reported by the MEP
Estimated outside income
€0–0/year
Based on declared income bands
1 declared activity
0 board memberships
Source: European Parliament declarations · Self-reported · Last updated: 23 Mar 2026
View original declaration on europarl.europa.eu →Track Sibylle BERG's activity for your organisation
Lex monitors MEP activity, lobby meetings, and legislative files — and tells your team exactly what to do about it.
Recent Lobby Meetings
Meetings disclosed on the EU Transparency Register — last 6 months
About Sibylle BERG
Sibylle Berg is a German Member of the European Parliament serving as one of the Non-attached Members, politicians who do not belong to any of the major political groups in the legislature. Berg is primarily known as an acclaimed author and playwright who has written numerous novels, plays, and columns, making her transition from literature to politics relatively unusual among MEPs. The Non-attached Members represent diverse political positions that do not align with the established European political families, often including eurosceptic, nationalist, or ideologically distinct viewpoints. Berg's attendance record falls below the European Parliament average, participating in 66.1% of sessions compared to the typical 82%, and she has voted in 66% of recorded votes, casting 1,238 ballots out of 1,873 possible votes during her term. Her literary background brings a distinctive perspective to European politics, though she operates outside the traditional party structures that typically influence parliamentary work and coalition-building within the institution.
AI-generated summary · Verify with official EP sources
View official profile on europarl.europa.eu →More MEPs from Germany
More MEPs in Non-attached Members (Non-attached)
Methodology
Attendance is calculated based on roll-call votes in plenary sessions of the European Parliament. Committee votes are excluded. Abstaining counts as present; not voting counts as absent. Notable votes are selected based on significance, close outcomes, and high participation.
