The Parliament endorsed the trilogue agreement on strengthening farmers' position in the food supply chain by 560 votes to 75 , with 25 abstentions — a majority of 485 votes. The winning coalition was broad, drawing on EPP, S&D, ECR, PfE, ESN, most of Renew, and most of The Left; the Greens/EFA group voted almost unanimously against, while small minorities within S&D, Renew and The Left also opposed or abstained. This is a non-legislative own-initiative file, meaning the resolution carries no direct legal force on its own.
It does, however, represent Parliament's formal political endorsement of the trilogue text and signals the legislature's readiness to advance the agreed package, which is intended to update and reinforce the rules governing commercial relationships between farmers and their larger buyers in the food supply chain. The scale of the majority — more than four-fifths of those voting — underlines that support for stronger protections for farmers commands broad cross-party backing across the political centre and right. The principal source of resistance came from the Greens/EFA, whose near-unanimous opposition was the only bloc-level rejection. A handful of delegations within S&D, Renew and The Left broke with their group majority to vote against, but these deviations were too small to affect the outcome.