The Hungarian economy cannot afford to be forced into a one-size-fits-all monetary policy.
The question is no longer whether migration should be embraced or rejected in the abstract. The question is which forms of migration a state considers legitimate, under what conditions, and for what purpose.
A silent, threatening fragmentation of the Catholic Church would be more difficult to correct than an open schism.
A new report points to signs of looming credit problems for the EU’s deeply indebted governments. Ignoring these signs is not an option.
With two-thirds of Greek voters favoring stricter immigration policies and arrivals still exceeding deportations, the ruling New Democracy party faces an uphill battle to rebuild trust before next year’s elections.
Brussels is celebrating the temporary pause of Middle East hostilities while remaining dependent on foreign energy, vulnerable trade routes, and outside protection.
States cooperate when their interests converge and diverge when they do not. The Western alliance system has never been an exception.
More and more signs indicate that Europe is preparing for a large-scale war. Have the planners considered the enormous economic destruction that would follow?
The Brussels- and Kyiv-aligned ecosystem that produces inflated polling numbers is now preparing the next step: if Péter Magyar wins, it is democracy; if he loses, it must be fraud or ‘foreign interference.’
The case is another example of the EU using legal mechanisms to press ideological change on a reluctant member state.
Like an abusive spouse, the central bank is rewarding compliance by the country that it beat into a depression 15 years ago.
The European Court of Justice is preparing a substantive legal basis for potentially unlimited interference in the laws of member states.
The European Commission’s well-intended initiative to make life easier for entrepreneurs comes with some surprising weaknesses.
Tehran’s new demand for peace with the U.S. includes shifting oil trade to the Chinese yuan.
The difference between the German Synodal Path and the synodal reform initiated by the late Pope Francis appears today, more than ever, to be a mere difference of speed.
By highlighting France’s strategic capabilities without committing to sustained military operations, the current approach allows Macron to project strength while avoiding deeper involvement in conflict.
The social democrat prime minister is hinging her re-election bid on a tax that can take more from ‘the rich’ than they earn.
The national right strengthens its positions, but the far left still holds significant sway.
An unlikely political alliance opens for a reversal of the no-euro outcome from 2003. But the currency switch would not benefit the Swedish economy.
The parties see the mayoral elections as a barometer of public opinion ahead of the 2027 presidential election
Born from one government decree, the People’s Car is now slowly succumbing to another government decree.
The EU’s blacklist of low-tax jurisdictions is growing. Brussels goes out of its way to protect its high-tax cartel.
What is occurring in Germany is a true attempt at ecclesiological subversion.
The European Commission’s report on the Industrial Accelerator Act recognizes some of Europe’s economic problems. Unfortunately, that’s where the good stuff ends.
Christine Lagarde is probably the first major European policymaker to speak openly about why the EU is falling behind globally. But her plan for fixing the problem falls way short.
The French president is redoubling his efforts to give the impression that he remains at the centre of the international stage, but in doing so, he is selling off French military sovereignty.
When aerial systems associated with Middle Eastern conflict physically reach the territory of an EU member state, the distinction between external instability and internal security begins to erode.
Pressured by the EU on excessive budget deficits, Helsinki needs to rethink the very purpose of its government.
Any efforts to promote abortion at the EU level violate its constitutional boundaries.
Contrary to what seems to be the prevailing wisdom, this was not a universal knockdown of Trump’s use of tariffs.