![](https://europeanconservative.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/edward-pretsi-_74ytw0p8Cc-unsplash-scaled-e1718798989810-1024x576.jpg)
Women’s Rights Activist Says London Police “Bullying” Her Over Trans Doctor Tweet
The feminist campaigner considers legal action after almost a year of incomplete investigation.
The feminist campaigner considers legal action after almost a year of incomplete investigation.
Islamist leaders are turning neighbourhoods into ghettos.
The Sánchez government will change its assisted suicide guidelines, going against a Constitutional Court ruling.
Hungarian opposition Tisza party accepted despite opposing weapons and troops to Ukraine, contrary to EPP stance.
“AUR has no interest in promoting the common good,” says MEP representing Romania’s ethnic Hungarian community in Brussels during a time of growing tensions back home.
Ubiquitous porn use has transformed sex, dating, and marriage across the world.
The EU Commission wants to punish France for fiscal recklessness. But the EU is full of budget violators, so why France—and why now?
There are more political prisoners in Cuba than in all other South American nations combined.
Migration, competitiveness, defence, enlargement and a farmer-oriented agricultural policy will be at the forefront of the upcoming EU Presidency.
With a record of radical tax reform, Trump could indeed end the income tax. But the road to such a reform is filled with bumps. Here are three of them.
President Zelensky declared the one-sided peace conference a “success” despite BRICS heavy-weights like China and India refusing to sign the final declaration.
While the media paints him as a “moderate,” Sir Keir Starmer could be about to push through irreversible constitutional change.
Bullish PVV politician Marjolein Faber―the confirmed candidate-minister for Asylum and Migration―is facing a campaign to turn her into a pariah.
Jules Massenet’s opera invites dreamy fantasies of a lost and better world.
Provisional top job nominations stitched up by main national leaders during last week’s G7 Summit.
Despite what EU technocrats say, sovereign states—not the EU—will have to take action to expand their militaries into forces worthy of the global stage.
Previous French governments were effectively exempt from EU fiscal rules, but this may change following parliamentary elections.
The university is offering the course despite the practice being illegal in Spain.
Breakthrough electoral performance by the Flemish nationalists last week prompts militants to attack the party’s Brussels headquarters.
The outcome of the next World Health Assembly will be an historic turning point in the conflict between global health governance and national sovereignty.
Deutsche Welle is meant to convey Germany’s image, so why is it staffed by Anglophones who dislike the nation so much?
Is Congress willing to recognize the major problems a mandatory draft will create?