
Taking Back Control: Denmark and Italy To Challenge Human Rights Court on Asylum Rules
“What was once right might not be the answer of tomorrow,” a soon-to-be-released letter argues, still open for other countries to sign.

“What was once right might not be the answer of tomorrow,” a soon-to-be-released letter argues, still open for other countries to sign.

A recent survey indicates that 74% of French doctors would be in favor of allowing a form of “assisted dying.”
The university had planned to scrap masculine Latin forms like magistri to appease non-binary activists.
Trump said EU nations profit off American generosity while shutting out U.S. goods.
Paris accuses Russian operatives of targeting EU peace efforts with lies.
No injuries were reported, but the front of the property was damaged.
A National Grid failure brought parts of the network to a halt.

Police scrutinised his wife’s underwear drawer and described his book collection as “very Brexity.”
Higher tier migration judge swayed by story of a family feud and Islamic values.
Italy and Denmark are building a coalition to challenge the court’s growing role in limiting national control over borders.
In a joint press conference, the Greek Prime Minister and Egyptian President praised their countries’ cooperation and expressed optimism about the region’s future.
No cardinal has yet been chosen to succeed the late Pope Francis; voting will resume tomorrow.
Al-Sharaa confirmed that his country is also indirectly negotiating with Israel to ease tensions between the two nations.
“It’s absurd you’ve had this war going on for too long and the two sides aren’t even talking constructively about what would be necessary for them to end the conflict,” the VP said.
We are “even bigger” than the U.S., the chancellor said, referring to Europe’s consumer market, which surpasses that of North America.
“Schengen must live!” Luxembourg’s interior minister commented, concerned about the impact on his country’s many cross-border commuters
The new Syrian leader has well-known ties to terrorist groups—yet Paris is now backing him, apparently hoping he’s had a change of heart.
Novo Nordisk CEO says the company will abide by U.S. laws in its American operations but not otherwise stray from its diversity goals.
Forget the € 40 billion military aid—the EU couldn’t even collect the two million artillery shells it promised to deliver as a gift while protesting Moscow’s military parade.
The Kremlin said Moscow-Beijing relations are “at their highest point,” with both leaders reaffirming their alliance.
Even the Commission knows the current energy model is failing, but while they stay silent, European families pay the price.
There will be one vote Wednesday evening, followed by four per day on Thursday and Friday.