Israeli-Hamas War Reveals Deep European Divisions
Eastern and Central European countries, aside from Austria, have yet to witness the large-scale pro-Hamas, anti-Israel protests commonplace in Western Europe.
Eastern and Central European countries, aside from Austria, have yet to witness the large-scale pro-Hamas, anti-Israel protests commonplace in Western Europe.
The Polish prime minister has two weeks to put together a government with support of individual MPs after other parties have ruled out a coalition with his party.
“The part that we live is really small. All the rest of existence is not life but merely time.” People with no hobbies read Seneca’s words as a kind of profit and loss spreadsheet.
If Macron cannot win the support of conservatives, the Left could end up watering the bill down.
Incidents have skyrocketed since Hamas attacked Israel.
We have a fifth column in our midst. Now we see the true face of the enemy: radical Islam.
The demonstrations are becoming more widespread and decentralized.
Organisers have refused to change their plans and claim police are responsible for escalating violence.
The new Albanian reception facilities should be able to process up to 36,000 migrants per year.
Tunisians could face life in prison for repeat offences under a proposed bill.
The doom-and-gloom pundits are wrong. The U.S. economy is in good shape, but there are three dark clouds lurking on the horizon.
The Nordic ministers also agreed to offer voluntary repatriation programmes to migrants along with resettlement assistance.
Mayor of the 14th arondissement says the antisemitic incidents “recall the events of the 1930s.”
This flood cannot be escaped, only survived. This is why we must build arks: to carry us across the raging waters to dry land in the future.
The prison break comes just weeks the terror attack in Brussels by a Tunisian who escaped prison in 2011.
The action comes amid a surge in antisemitic incidents across Britain and Europe.
The U.S. dismissed the claim as “classic Russian rhetoric.”
The Commission seems unaware if it still has boots on the ground in Niger and Mali.
If successful, the move would do much to prevent unelected technocrats, often with leftist and/or globalist sympathies, from being appointed.
Austria, Croatia, Czechia, and Hungary opposed the UN resolution that failed to condemn the Hamas massacres.
Although the meeting failed to deliver some extreme progressive proposals, liberals hope next year’s meeting could be different.
Opponents warn the measure could diminish protections for children.